In a groundbreaking advancement in the fight against pancreatic cancer, researchers at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center have unveiled promising results from a Phase 1/2 clinical trial investigating daraxonrasib, a novel oral multi-selective RAS inhibitor developed by Revolution Medicines. Published in the prestigious New England Journal of Medicine, this study signals a significant shift in therapeutic approaches for pancreatic adenocarcinoma, a notoriously aggressive cancer that has long resisted effective treatment.
Pancreatic cancer, comprising over 90% pancreatic adenocarcinomas, remains one of the deadliest malignancies, with dismal survival rates largely due to late-stage diagnoses and the limited efficacy of existing treatment modalities. Conventional chemotherapies provide minimal benefit, especially in second-line settings where response rates plummet below 10% and median overall survival rarely exceeds seven months. Central to the pathogenicity of the majority of these tumors are mutations in the RAS oncogene family, specifically KRAS, which drive unchecked cellular proliferation and tumor progression.
What distinguishes daraxonrasib from prior targeted therapies is its capacity to inhibit RAS proteins in their active “on” state, a vital characteristic considering that KRAS predominantly exists in this conformation in pancreatic cancers. Unlike earlier agents that primarily targeted the KRAS G12C mutation — a variant relatively uncommon in pancreatic tumors — daraxonrasib exhibits multi-selectivity, effectively targeting multiple RAS variants, thereby broadening its therapeutic applicability. This biochemical precision allows daraxonrasib to disrupt oncogenic signaling cascades more comprehensively and with greater potency.
In the trial, 38 patients with previously treated advanced RAS-mutant pancreatic cancer received a daily dose of 300 mg daraxonrasib. The results demonstrated a compelling response rate of 29%, a remarkable improvement over historic controls, coupled with a median overall survival of 15.6 months. These efficacy endpoints underscore daraxonrasib’s potential to significantly extend survival in a patient population with severely limited options and underscore the clinical benefit of targeting RAS in its active conformation.
Safety and tolerability profiles are paramount in oncology drug development, and daraxonrasib exhibited manageable toxicity. Although the majority of patients (96%) encountered adverse events of any grade, predominantly rash, diarrhea, mucositis, and fatigue, only 30% experienced severe (grade 3 or higher) toxicities. Importantly, no patient discontinued treatment due to adverse effects, and dose adjustments were feasible in half of the participants. This contrasts favorably with the high toxicity burden frequently associated with second-line chemotherapies, potentially enhancing patient quality of life during treatment.
Daraxonrasib’s unique mechanism of action has generated considerable enthusiasm in the oncology community. By inhibiting active RAS signaling, it disrupts a critical oncogenic driver responsible for tumor growth and maintenance in pancreatic adenocarcinoma. This represents a sophisticated mode of therapeutic intervention, grounded in precise molecular targeting that may overcome historical challenges posed by RAS ‘undruggability.’ The findings thrust daraxonrasib to the forefront of precision oncology and exemplify the paradigm of tailoring treatments to the genetic landscape of tumors.
The study prompted the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to grant orphan drug designation for daraxonrasib, as well as for the ongoing Phase 3 RASolute trial. This regulatory recognition highlights the urgent unmet medical need and the promise harbored by daraxonrasib’s development. Orphan status expedites drug development pathways and encourages investment toward novel therapies for rare, life-threatening diseases such as pancreatic cancer.
While these results remain preliminary, they offer a beacon of hope in tackling one of the toughest oncology challenges. Further investigation in larger randomized controlled trials is warranted to confirm these findings and evaluate long-term efficacy and safety. The ongoing Phase 3 study aims to elucidate how daraxonrasib stacks against current second-line standard therapies and whether its integration into treatment algorithms can redefine clinical outcomes.
From a mechanistic standpoint, daraxonrasib represents a breakthrough in RAS biology. Previous therapeutic efforts faltered due to the RAS protein’s high affinity for GTP/GDP and its dynamic active-inactive cycling, eluding traditional small-molecule inhibition. Daraxonrasib’s ability to toggle the RAS protein’s “on” state inhibition circumvents these obstacles by directly targeting signaling pathways essential for cancer cell survival, thus attenuating oncogenic drive.
Moreover, the trial’s comprehensive safety evaluation affirms that molecularly targeted agents can achieve efficacy without prohibitive toxicities, marking an important stride toward patient-centric cancer therapy. The manageable adverse event profile and absence of treatment discontinuations signal potential for sustained administration, which is critical in chronic disease management and improving overall survival trajectories.
These findings underscore the imperative of developing RAS inhibitors that are broadly active across multiple variants, especially in malignancies where the RAS pathway is a central tumorigenic hub. This approach may catalyze transformative shifts not only in pancreatic cancer therapeutics but also in other malignancies characterized by RAS mutations, potentially reshaping oncology practice and patient prognoses.
As the oncology field grapples with aggressive cancers like pancreatic adenocarcinoma, the advent of daraxonrasib exemplifies the promising horizon of precision medicine — harnessing molecular insights to devise targeted, effective, and less toxic therapies. With continued research and validation, daraxonrasib may well become a cornerstone in the therapeutic armamentarium against pancreatic cancer, reshaping hope for patients facing this formidable diagnosis.
Subject of Research: People
Article Title: Daraxonrasib in Previously Treated Advanced RAS-Mutated Pancreatic Cancer
News Publication Date: 6-May-2026
Web References: https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa2505783
References: New England Journal of Medicine, DOI: 10.1056/NEJMoa2505783
Image Credits: The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center
Keywords: Pancreatic cancer, RAS mutations, daraxonrasib, targeted therapy, KRAS, clinical trial, oncology, drug development

