BTK degraders work despite most kinase inhibitor resistance mutations. However, resistance to degraders themselves alters the BTK binding pocket so significantly that subsequent targeting with any BTK kinase inhibitor is unlikely to be effective, positioning them as a potential end-of-line therapy.
While pirtobrutinib works after covalent BTK inhibitors, no data shows covalent inhibitors work after pirtobrutinib failure. This uncertainty about future options makes clinicians cautious about using it as an initial therapy, especially for younger CLL patients who will need multiple treatments over their lifetime.
Non-covalent BTK inhibitors like pirtobrutinib are currently approved for use after covalent BTK inhibitors fail. Moving them to the frontline setting, as studied in BRUIN-313, disrupts the established treatment pathway and creates uncertainty for managing relapsed disease, as the standard 'next step' is removed.
Step Pharma's synthetic lethality approach targets two redundant enzymes in the same pathway. Deleting one makes cancer cells entirely dependent on the other. This direct dependency is harder for biology to circumvent compared to approaches targeting different, interconnected pathways, creating a "cleaner" kill mechanism.
The degradation mechanism is fundamentally superior to inhibition because it removes the entire protein, addressing both its enzymatic and scaffolding functions. This allows degraders to hit targets harder and more completely, suggesting they could become the dominant modality across oncology and other therapeutic areas.
The DAYBREAK pivotal study focuses on third-line plus patients who have already failed both BTK and BCL2 inhibitors. By enrolling this high unmet need population, particularly those resistant to the newest non-covalent inhibitors, Neurix aims for an accelerated regulatory approval to get its drug to market faster.
The BRUIN-313 trial successfully compared pirtobrutinib to bendamustine-rituximab (BR). However, BR is no longer the frontline standard of care. This 'straw man' comparator makes it difficult to position pirtobrutinib against current preferred treatments like other BTK inhibitors or venetoclax regimens, limiting immediate clinical applicability.
While pirtobrutinib is effective after covalent BTK inhibitors, the reverse is unproven. Starting with pirtobrutinib frontline raises a critical unanswered question about whether patients will still respond to older covalent inhibitors, complicating sequencing decisions, especially for younger patients.
Rather than moving through distinct lines of therapy, a future strategy could involve an "ADC switch." When a patient progresses on an ADC-IO combination, the IO backbone would remain while the ADC is swapped for one with a different, non-cross-resistant mechanism, adapting the treatment in real-time.
A single degrader molecule can destroy thousands of target proteins per hour, a massive improvement over the 1-to-1 stoichiometry of traditional inhibitors. This extreme potency makes them ideal payloads for Degrader-Antibody Conjugates (DACs), combining the precision of antibodies with the power of catalytic degradation.
Clinicians are hesitant to use newer, potentially safer non-covalent BTK inhibitors before established covalent inhibitors. While it's known that non-covalents work after covalents fail, the reverse is unproven, creating a one-way treatment path that reserves these newer agents for later lines of therapy.