Positive Median Overall Survival Data from Phase 2 Trial of the Darovasertib and Crizotinib Combination in First-line Metastatic Uveal Melanoma
On October 17, 2025, IDEAYA Biosciences, Inc. (the “Company”) announced the first reported median overall survival (“OS”) results from its Phase 1/2 clinical trial (OptimUM-01) evaluating darovasertib, the Company’s investigational oral protein kinase C (“PKC”) inhibitor, in combination with Pfizer’s crizotinib, a c-MET inhibitor, as a first-line treatment for patients with metastatic uveal melanoma (“mUM”). The data will be presented on Sunday, October 26, 2025 by Dr. Justin Moser at the 2025 Society for Melanoma Research Congress (“SMR”) taking place in Amsterdam, Netherlands.
Data reported at SMR were from 44 first-line (“1L”) mUM patients, including both HLA*A2:01-negative and HLA*A2:01-positive patients, in the single-arm Phase 1/2 OptimUM-01 trial with a median follow-up time of 25 months as of the cut-off date of May 28, 2025. Across all 44 patients treated with the darovasertib and crizotinib combination, a median OS of 21.1 months and a median progression free survival (“PFS”) of 7.0 months was observed. In 41 efficacy-evaluable patients, the confirmed overall response rate by RECIST 1.1 was 34% (14/41) with a 9.0 month median duration of response. A disease control rate of 90% (37/41) was also observed, with 85% (35/41) of patients achieving ‘any reduction’ in target lesions. The combination continued to have manageable tolerability with the most common treatment-related adverse events (“TRAEs”) (TRAEs >30%) of diarrhea, nausea, edema, vomiting, dermatitis, hypoalbuminemia, and fatigue. Grade ≥3 TRAEs were iron-deficiency anemia and pulmonary embolism (both 5%). The proportion of patients enrolled in the OptimUM-01 study that had baseline ECOG performance status scores (“PS”) of 0 and 1 was 61% (27/44) and 39% (17/44), respectively. The proportion of patients with ECOG PS 1 in the OptimUM-01 study is approximately two times higher than an earlier published registrational study in mUM.
Metastatic uveal melanoma is a rare and aggressive form of ocular cancer with poor prognosis, where historical median OS reported in published meta-analysis from patients in the treatment naïve setting is approximately 12 months. The Company is conducting a registration-enabling Phase 2/3 trial (OptimUM-02) of the darovasertib and crizotinib combination in 1L HLA*A2:01-negative mUM and is targeting to report median PFS data from this trial by year-end 2025 to Q1 2026 to support a potential U.S. accelerated approval filing.
Pursuant to the Clinical Trial Collaboration and Supply Agreement with Pfizer to evaluate darovasertib and crizotinib as a combination therapy in mUM, Pfizer provided the Company with a defined quantity of crizotinib at no cost, as well as an additional defined quantity of crizotinib at a lump-sum cost.
A presentation summary of the SMR data will be available on the Investor Relations tab of the Company’s corporate website after the presentation.
Positive Phase 2 Data for Darovasertib in the Neoadjuvant Setting of Primary Uveal Melanoma
On October 20, 2025, the Company presented positive clinical data from its ongoing Phase 2 OptimUM-09 trial of neoadjuvant darovasertib in patients with primary uveal melanoma (“UM”). The data were presented in a Proffered Paper oral presentation by Dr. Marcus Butler, M.D., Associate Professor, Princess Margaret Cancer Center at the University of Toronto, at the 2025 European Society of Medical Oncology (“ESMO”) in Berlin, Germany.
Data presented at ESMO for neoadjuvant darovasertib were from a total of 95 patients with primary UM, including 56 patients recommended for enucleation (“EN”) (surgical eye removal; Cohort 1) and 39 patients eligible for plaque brachytherapy (“PB”) (Cohort 2) as of a data cut-off date of June 13, 2025. Patients were enrolled into Cohort 1 or Cohort 2 based on investigator recommended primary local therapy at baseline determined by tumor size and proximity to critical eye structures. All patients received neoadjuvant darovasertib for up to 12 cycles (or maximum benefit) prior to definitive primary local therapy. As of the cut-off date, only 94 patients were evaluable for efficacy, which reflects one patient in Cohort 2 that was excluded per protocol based on not yet receiving at least one dose of study drug and at least one post-baseline tumor assessment. Patients who derived benefit from darovasertib in the neoadjuvant setting were then eligible to receive darovasertib for up to six additional cycles as adjuvant therapy and monitored for disease recurrence and changes in visual acuity.