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Weekly Biotech Report Covering Epizyme Inc (NASDAQ:EPZM)

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Epizyme Inc (NASDAQ:EPZM)

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On June 19, 2016, Epizyme Inc (NASDAQ:EPZM) presented a study update from its ongoing phase II trial in its lead oncology candidate, Tazemetostat.

The Science

Tazemetostat is an oral administration oncology candidate that is part of a family of drugs called small molecule EZH2 inhibitors. The science behind this one seems a little counterintuitive at first glance, but stick with us. EZH2 is involved in cell reproduction and proliferation. At its core, it helps cells to divide. It’s also a transcription suppressor in many cases, however. This means it turns off the genes associated with transcription, which is the core process that underlies cell reproduction. All this sounds good, right? Well, not exactly. It doesn’t act directly on cancer cells, so the benefit associated with what might otherwise be a suppressing of cancer cell reproduction doesn’t come from EZH2 expression. Instead, an overexpression of EZH2 leads to a suppressing of the genes that would normally, in turn, suppress cancer cell reproduction. This suppression leads to what is essentially uninhibited reproduction of solid tumor cells. This is where Tazemetostat comes in. The drug inhibits EZH2, which in turn, stops it from having the suppressive impact on the genes that are normally responsible for tumor cell suppression. This leaves the latter free to suppress tumor cells (and in turn, inhibit proliferation). Or at least, that’s the theory.

The Data

So far there has been relatively little data to support this hypothesis – that is, directly related to Tazemetostat as opposed to the EZH2 inhibition concept – aside from a bit of preclinical study and a safety and proof of concept phase I. The concept itself, however, is pretty well supported by outside investigation, so the Epizyme trials are far from a complete stab in the dark. The latest data detailed study enrollment, safety and a look at clinical activity in the patient populations that have surpassed what is called their futility hurdle. Futility hurdle here just relates to some predetermined impact criteria. In this instance, this criterion is defined by seeing at least one objective response in the first ten patients enrolled, across two diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) arms.

So essentially, we’re looking for a confirmation of the meeting of this futility hurdle (we’ve already had some indication it’s been met) and, beyond that, a suggestion that there is some clinical impact on the progression of the DLBCL solid tumors in patients.

How did the data perform against these expectations? Well, across four separate patient groups, Tazemetostat showed a response in each group. Of 47 patients studied, the drug translated to a partial response in nine, a complete response in four and a stabilization (just meaning the cancer didn’t progress) in thirteen. This is a decent outcome, but not perfect for Epizyme. Yes, a complete and a partial response in any number of patients is good. but the company would have been hoping for a slightly higher response rate. That said, the data warrants a continuation, and from a hurdle perspective, we can consider this one cleared – barely, but cleared.

The Market

It’s still early days, and there’s a good while to go (likely not before the end of the decade) until we can start thinking about a potential commercialization strategy for Tazemetostat. Having said this, what’s the size of the target market when the time comes? DLBCL is the most common form of Non Hodgkin’s lymphoma, accounting for between 30-40% of all NHL cases. Approximately 5000 patients receive a DLBCL diagnosis every year in the US. The cost for NHL drugs (based on approvals across the last half decade) come in at anywhere between $10,000 to $30,000 per month, which gives a $120,000 to $360,000 annual cost. The potential for multi billion dollar revenues from a drug that promises to halt DLBCL tumor progression is clear. Epizyme would only need to pick up 20% penetration in the new diagnosis population in the US, and charge at the very low end of the average cost, to generate $1.2 billion annually from Tazemetostat.

Trading Strategy and Valuation

The market currently values Epizyme at a little over $657 million. The company has more than $312 million cash on hand (at March 31, 2016) which should easily fund its ongoing trial through to the end of 2018 and likely beyond. The data did little to impact the Epizyme’s market cap based on the fact that it was mixed in its inference. That is, the efficacy readout offered up some bullish sentiment, but the relatively low response rate tempered any potential gains.

Going forward, look out for an announcement that relates to a potential fifth trial arm. If Epizyme announces the initiation of said arm, there’s a bit of upside to be had. That aside, however, chances are the company won’t move too much ahead of topline.

BY: Samuel Rae and Rafi Farber

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