fhtx-20230109false000182246200018224622023-01-092023-01-09
UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
FORM 8-K
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CURRENT REPORT
Pursuant to Section 13 or 15(d)
of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
Date of Report (Date of earliest event reported): January 9, 2023
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Foghorn Therapeutics Inc.
(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)
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Delaware | | 001-39634 | | 47-5271393 |
(State or other jurisdiction of incorporation) | | (Commission File Number) | | (IRS Employer Identification No.) |
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| 500 Technology Square, Ste 700 | | | |
| Cambridge, | MA | | 02139 | |
| (Address of principal executive offices) | | (Zip Code) | |
(Registrant’s telephone number, including area code): (617) 586-3100
Not Applicable
(Former name or former address, if changed since last report)
Check the appropriate box below if the Form 8-K filing is intended to simultaneously satisfy the filing obligation of the registrant under any of the following provisions: | | | | | |
☐ | Written communications pursuant to Rule 425 under the Securities Act (17 CFR 230.425) |
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☐ | Soliciting material pursuant to Rule 14a-12 under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.14a-12) |
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☐ | Pre-commencement communications pursuant to Rule 14d-2(b) under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.14d-2(b)) |
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☐ | Pre-commencement communications pursuant to Rule 13e-4(c) under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.13e-4(c))
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Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act: | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
Title of each class | | Trading Symbol(s) | | Name of each exchange on which registered |
Common Stock, $0.0001 par value per share | | FHTX | | The Nasdaq Global Market |
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is an emerging growth company as defined in Rule 405 of the Securities Act of 1933 (§230.405 of this chapter) or Rule 12b-2 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (§240.12b-2 of this chapter). Emerging growth company ☒
If an emerging growth company, indicate by check mark if the registrant has elected not to use the extended transition period for complying with any new or revised financial accounting standards provided pursuant to Section 13(a) of the Exchange Act. ☐
Item 7.01 Regulation FD Disclosure.
On January 9, 2023, Foghorn Therapeutics Inc. (the “Company”) issued a press release, a copy of which is furnished as Exhibit 99.1 to this Current Report on Form 8-K. Additionally, the Company is furnishing as Exhibit 99.2 hereto a presentation, dated January 2023, which the Company intends to use in meetings with or presentations to investors.
The information in this Item 7.01 (including Exhibits 99.1 and 99.2 attached hereto) is being furnished and shall not be deemed “filed” for purposes of Section 18 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the “Exchange Act”), or otherwise subject to the liabilities of that section, nor shall it be deemed incorporated by reference into any filing by the Company under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, or the Exchange Act, except as expressly set forth by specific reference in such filing.
Item 9.01 Financial Statements and Exhibits.
(d) Exhibits
SIGNATURES
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned hereunto duly authorized.
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| FOGHORN THERAPEUTICS INC. |
| By: | | /s/ Allan Reine |
| | | Allan Reine, M.D. |
| | | Chief Financial Officer |
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Date: January 9, 2023
DocumentFoghorn Therapeutics Highlights Recent Clinical and Research Progress and Provides Strategic Objectives for 2023
- Phase 1 dose escalation study of FHD-286, a BRG1/BRM inhibitor, in metastatic uveal melanoma continues to progress with initial efficacy and safety data expected in the first half of 2023
- Phase 1 dose escalation study of FHD-609, a selective degrader of BRD9, in synovial sarcoma continues to progress with initial data on safety and clinical activity expected mid-2023
- Continue to advance preclinical pipeline targeting key regulators of gene expression, including Selective BRM, ARID1B, and CBP programs and other undisclosed targets, both independently and through our collaborations
- Foghorn anticipates at least six new INDs targeting significant oncology patient populations over the next four years, reflecting the continued productivity of its precision medicine platform
- Cash, cash equivalents and marketable securities of $373.5 million, as of September 30, 2022, provides significant cash runway into the second half of 2025
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. -- (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- January 9, 2023 -- Foghorn® Therapeutics Inc. (Nasdaq: FHTX), a clinical-stage biotechnology company pioneering a new class of medicines that treat serious diseases by correcting abnormal gene expression, today announced its strategic objectives for 2023.
“We enter 2023 positioned to advance our broad pipeline of clinical and preclinical precision medicines with multiple clinical study results, which have the potential to demonstrate that by targeting the chromatin regulatory system, it is possible to treat cancers in a fundamentally new way. These clinical results include the Phase 1 study evaluating FHD-286 in metastatic uveal melanoma, with initial data expected in the first half of 2023, and our FHD-609 Phase 1 program in synovial sarcoma, where we anticipate data in mid-2023,” said Adrian Gottschalk, President and Chief Executive Officer of Foghorn.
Mr. Gottschalk continued, “Foghorn is a leader in targeting chromatin biology, which has unique potential to address underlying dependencies of many genetically defined cancers. Both independently and with major pharmaceutical partners, we are advancing a robust pipeline with more than 15 programs in R&D aimed at BRM, CBP, ARID1B, and other chromatin regulatory targets – all of which could address significant unmet medical need in the treatment of cancer. Over the next four years, we anticipate the filing of at least six new INDs, reflecting the productivity of our precision medicine platform. This is all supported by our cash and equivalents position of approximately $373.5 million as of September 30, 2022.”
•FHD-286 mUM Update. The dose escalation Phase 1 study of FHD-286, an inhibitor of BRG1/BRM, in metastatic uveal melanoma (mUM) continues to enroll patients per protocol. Initial Phase 1 clinical data is expected in the first half of 2023.
•FHD-286 AML/MDS Update. In August 2022, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) placed a full clinical hold on the Phase 1 dose escalation study of FHD-286 in relapsed and/or refractory acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) and myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS). The full clinical hold in the AML/MDS study is due to the observation of suspected fatal cases of differentiation syndrome that are believed to be associated with FHD-286. Differentiation syndrome is associated with AML/MDS therapeutics that induce differentiation, an effect that has been seen with, and is believed to be on-target for the proposed mechanism of action for, FHD-286. The Company anticipates providing clarity on the development path for FHD-286 in AML/MDS in the first half of 2023.
•FHD-609 Update. Patient enrollment is continuing in the Phase 1 dose escalation clinical study of FHD-609, a potent and selective heterobifunctional protein degrader of BRD9, being developed for the treatment of synovial sarcoma and SMARCB1-loss tumors, with initial efficacy and safety data expected in mid-2023.
•Pipeline Advancement. Foghorn continues to expand its platform and pipeline. The Company anticipates at least six potential new molecular investigational new drug applications (INDs) in the next four years. The Company continues to progress programs for multiple targets which include chromatin remodeling complexes, transcription factors, helicases, and chromatin binding proteins. High-value targets include Selective BRM, CBP, and ARID1B as well as other undisclosed targets.
•Strategic Collaborations. Foghorn continues to achieve its objectives within its two strategic collaborations with Loxo Oncology at Lilly and Merck by advancing novel oncology targets using Foghorn’s proprietary Gene Traffic Control® Platform.
•Strong Balance Sheet and Cash Runway. As of September 30, 2022, the Company had $373.5 million in cash, cash equivalents and marketable securities, providing cash runway into the second half of 2025.
About FHD-286
FHD-286 is a highly potent, selective, allosteric and orally available, small-molecule, enzymatic inhibitor of BRG1 and BRM, two highly similar proteins that are the ATPases, or the catalytic engines across all forms of the BAF complex, one of the key regulators of the chromatin regulatory system. In preclinical studies, FHD-286 has shown anti-tumor activity across a broad range of malignancies including both hematologic and solid tumors. To learn more about these studies, please visit ClinicalTrials.gov. (Link here for metastatic uveal melanoma and here for AML and MDS).
About Uveal Melanoma
Uveal (intraocular) melanoma (UM) is a rare eye cancer that forms from cells that make melanin in the iris, ciliary body and choroid. It is the most common eye cancer in adults. It is diagnosed in about 2,000 adults every year in the United States and occurs most often in lightly pigmented individuals with a median age of 55 years. However, it can occur in all races and at any age. UM metastasizes in approximately 50% of cases, leading to very poor prognosis.
About AML
Adult acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is a cancer of the blood and bone marrow and the most common type of acute leukemia in adults. AML is a diverse disease associated with multiple genetic mutations. It is diagnosed in about 20,000 people every year in the United States.
About FHD-609
FHD-609 is a potent, selective, intravenously administered protein degrader of BRD9, a component of the ncBAF complex. Preclinical studies have demonstrated tumor growth inhibition in synovial sarcoma, a cancer genetically dependent on BRD9. To learn more about this study, please visit ClinicalTrials.gov.
About Synovial Sarcoma
Synovial sarcoma is a rare, often aggressive soft tissue sarcoma that originates from different types of soft tissue, including muscle or ligaments. Synovial sarcoma can occur at any age but is most common among adolescents and young adults. It represents around 5-10% of all soft tissue sarcomas, with ~800 new cases
each year in the United States. Surgery remains the most effective treatment for synovial sarcoma, and there are limited therapeutic treatment options.
About Foghorn Therapeutics
Foghorn® Therapeutics Inc. is discovering and developing a novel class of medicines targeting genetically determined dependencies within the chromatin regulatory system. Through its proprietary scalable Gene Traffic Control® platform, Foghorn is systematically studying, identifying and validating potential drug targets within the chromatin regulatory system. The Company is developing multiple product candidates in oncology. Visit our website at www.foghorntx.com for more information on the company, and follow us on Twitter and LinkedIn.
Forward-Looking Statements
This press release contains “forward-looking statements” regarding the Company’s clinical programs for FHD-286 and FHD-609, including its efforts to resolve the full clinical hold relating to FHD-286 in AML and MDS, the anticipated timing of release of clinical data, its collaborations with Lilly and Merck and its research pipeline, including the filing of IND’s, and its protein degrader efforts. Forward-looking statements include statements regarding the Company’s clinical trials, product candidates and research efforts and other statements identified by words such as “could,” “may,” “might,” “will,” “likely,” “anticipates,” “intends,” “plans,” “seeks,” “believes,” “estimates,” “expects,” “continues,” “projects” and similar references to future periods. Forward-looking statements are based on our current expectations and assumptions regarding capital market conditions, our business, the economy and other future conditions. Because forward-looking statements relate to the future, by their nature, they are subject to inherent uncertainties, risks and changes in circumstances that are difficult to predict. As a result, actual results may differ materially from those contemplated by the forward-looking statements. Important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those in the forward-looking statements include regional, national or global political, economic, business, competitive, market and regulatory conditions, including risks relating to our clinical trials and other factors set forth under the heading “Risk Factors” in the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2021 and subsequent Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q, as filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Any forward-looking statement made in this press release speaks only as of the date on which it is made.
Contact:
Ben Strain, Foghorn Therapeutics Inc. (Media and Investors)
bstrain@foghorntx.com
Karin Hellsvik, Foghorn Therapeutics Inc. (Media)
khellsvik@foghorntx.com
Michael Lampe, ScientPR (Media)
michael@scientpr.com
Hans Vitzthum, LifeSci Advisors (Investors)
hans@lifesciadvisors.com
exhibit992fhtx_corpdeckx
CORPORATE OVERVIEW January 2023 Leveraging unique insights into the chromatin regulatory system to pioneer a new class of precision therapies in oncology and beyond Exhibit 99.2
This presentation contains forward-looking statements. All statements other than statements of historical facts contained in this presentation are forward-looking statements. In some cases, you can identify forward-looking statements by terms such as “could,” “may,” “might,” “will,” “likely,” “anticipates,” “intends,” “plans,” “seeks,” “believes,” “estimates,” “expects,” “continues,” “projects” or the negative of these terms or other similar expressions, although not all forward-looking statements contain these words. Forward-looking statements include, but are not limited to, statements concerning: the potential outcomes from our collaboration agreements with Lilly and Merck; the initiation, timing, progress and results of our research and development programs and preclinical and clinical trials, including the potential resolution of the full clinical hold and anticipated timing of release of clinical data; our ability to advance product candidates that we may develop and to successfully complete preclinical and clinical studies; our ability to leverage our initial programs to develop additional product candidates using our Gene Traffic Control Platform; the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic and other exogeneous factors on our and our collaborators’ business operations, including our research and development programs and preclinical studies; developments related to our competitors and our industry; our ability to expand the target populations of our programs and the availability of patients for clinical testing; our ability to obtain regulatory approval for FHD-286, FHD-609 and any future product candidates from the FDA and other regulatory authorities; our ability to identify and enter into future license agreements and collaborations; our ability to continue to rely on our CDMOs and CROs for our manufacturing and research needs; regulatory developments in the United States and foreign countries; our ability to attract and retain key scientific and management personnel; the scope of protection we are able to establish, maintain and enforce for intellectual property rights covering FHD-286 and FHD-609, our future products and our Gene Traffic Control Platform; and our use of proceeds from capital-raising transactions, estimates of our expenses, capital requirements and needs for additional financing. Any forward-looking statements represent the Company’s views only as of today and should not be relied upon as representing its views as of any subsequent date. The Company explicitly disclaims any obligation to update any forward-looking statements. The Company’s business is subject to substantial risks and uncertainties. Forward-Looking StatementsFORWARD LOOKING STATEMENTS 2
| LARGE MARKET POTENTIAL WELL- FUNDED COLLABORATIONS WITH MAJOR ONCOLOGY PLAYERS SIGNIFICANT VALUE DRIVERS IN 2023 Chromatin biology is implicated in up to 50% of tumors, potentially impacting ~2.5 million patients Foghorn’s current pipeline potentially addresses more than 500,000 of these patients $374.5 million in cash and equivalents (as of 9/30/2022) Provides runway into H2’2025 Strategic collaboration with Loxo Oncology at Lilly; $380 million upfront; 50/50 U.S. economic split on two lead programs Merck collaboration to drug single specified transcription factor target; $15 million upfront and up to $410 million in milestones Initial clinical data in uveal melanoma with FHD-286 expected H1’23 Initial clinical data in synovial sarcoma with FHD-609 expected mid-2023 AML/MDS study with FHD- 286 on full clinical hold, development clarity anticipated in H1’23 FIRST-IN-CLASS PRECISION MEDICINES TARGETING MAJOR UNMET NEEDS IN CANCER 3 LEADER IN NEW AREA OF CANCER BIOLOGY Foghorn is a leader in targeting chromatin biology, which has unique potential to address underlying dependencies of many genetically defined cancers Broad pipeline of over 15 programs across a range of targets and modalities
| FOGHORN: SIGNIFICANT VALUE CREATION OPPORTUNITIES 4 >500K PATIENTS >2M PATIENTSBy 2026 POTENTIAL PATIENTS IMPACTED BY PIPELINE Today 2 NME INDs 8 NME INDs NEW MOLECULAR ENTITIES TO IND / CLINIC• Validated platform with first-in-class targets in the clinic (FHD-286 and FHD-609), with Phase 1 dose escalation data expected in H1 2023 for FHD-286 and mid-2023 for FHD-609 • At least 6 additional potential NME INDs by 2026 • >20 genetically defined tumor types in over 500K patients – includes lung, prostate, bladder, ovarian, colorectal, breast • Opportunity for additional partnerships Potential Impact in >500K Patients Across More Than 20 Tumor Types with 6 Potential New INDs by 2026
| UNIQUE INSIGHTS INTO CHROMATIN BIOLOGY Transcription Factor Mutations / Overexpression Chromatin Remodeling Complex Mutations / Overexpression Helicases & Other Chromatin Binding Proteins involved in gene expression / function Enzymatic Inhibitors Highly selective and allosteric small molecule inhibitors Transcription Factor Disruptors Disrupt interactions between chromatin remodeling complexes and transcription factors Potential druggable sites ATP ADP TAILORED DRUGGING APPROACHESCHROMATIN REGULATORY SYSTEM CRITICAL FOR GENE EXPRESSION NOVEL TARGETS GUIDED BY GENETIC DEPENDENCIES Targeted Protein Degradation Molecular glue and bi-functional protein degraders Untapped Area for Novel Targets and Therapeutics 5 Chromatin – compacted form of DNA inside the nucleus of the cell Chromatin Remodeling Complex – specialized multiprotein machineries that allow access to DNA Transcription Factor – proteins that help turn specific genes "on" or "off" by working in concert with the chromatin remodeling complex to bind to DNA
| FOGHORN’S VALIDATED GENE TRAFFIC CONTROL® PLATFORM Integrated, Scalable, Efficient – Repeatable Paradigm Deep Mechanistic Understanding of the Chromatin Regulatory System Small Molecule and Degrader Platform Biochemistry, Biophysics and Assays of Large Complexes and Proteins UNIQUE TARGETS SPECIALIZED APPROACH SELECTIVE THERAPEUTICS What to Drug: Identify disease dependencies How to Drug: Biology first - small molecule modality agnostic Where to Drug: Engineer selectivity via unique assays and protein capabilities Transcription Factor Disruptors Enzymatic Inhibitors Targeted Protein Degraders 6
| BROAD PIPELINE ACROSS A RANGE OF TARGETS AND MODALITIES Modality Program Discovery Phase 1 Phase 2 Phase 3 Patient Population* Enzyme Inhibitors Transcription Factor Disruptors Partnered Program AML & MDS Uveal Melanoma BRG1 Mutated Cancers, e.g. , NSCLC & Bladder Undisclosed Undisclosed FHD-286 (BRG1/BRM) FHD-286 (BRG1/BRM) Selective BRM Undisclosed Undisclosed 3 Discovery Programs UndisclosedUndisclosed Undisclosed 3 Undisclosed Programs Precision Oncology / Breadth and Depth / Over 15 Programs Protein Degraders FHD-609 (BRD9) Selective BRM Selective ARID1B Synovial Sarcoma & SMARCB1-Loss Tumors BRG1 Mutated Cancers, e.g., NSCLC & Bladder ARID1A Mutated Cancers, e.g., Ovarian, Endometrial & Colorectal 7 Selective CBP EP300 Mutated Cancers, e.g., Prostate, Bladder, Colorectal, Breast Commercial Rights Over 27,000 Over 5,000 Over 100,000 Over 100,000 Over 2,800 Over 175,000 Over 100,000 * Incidence in the U.S., EU5, Japan
Inhibition of the BRG1 and BRM Subunits of the BAF Complex FHD-286 is a Potent, Selective, Allosteric, Small Molecule Inhibitor of the BRG1 and BRM subunits of the BAF complex IN PHASE 1 DOSE ESCALATION FOR METASTATIC UVEAL MELANOMA & AML/MDS FHD-286 is a Potent, Selective, Allosteric, Small Molecule Inhibitor of the BRG1 and BRM Subunits of the BAF Complex
| TARGETING BAF DEPENDENCY IN CANCER BRG1 AND BRM SUBUNITS BRMBRG1 BAF CHROMATIN REMODELING COMPLEX • BRM / BRG1 is the engine (ATPase) of the BAF chromatin remodeling complex • Dependency on BRM / BRG1 is well- established with multiple tumor types, including uveal melanoma, AML / MDS, NSCLC and prostate • Foghorn’s lead asset targeting BRM / BRG1, FHD-286, is a potent, selective, allosteric, small molecule inhibitor of the BRG1 and BRM subunits of the BAF complex • In Phase 1 dose escalation for uveal melanoma & AML / MDS 9
| SIGNIFICANT UNMET NEED IN UVEAL MELANOMA Most Common Form of Eye Cancer 10 UVEAL MELANOMA OVERVIEW Market Opportunity: • Over 2,500 new metastatic UM patients impacted per year in the U.S. / over 5,000 U.S. and E.U. • Potential additional opportunity in the adjuvant and neo- adjuvant settings Limited Treatment Options: • Treatment options include enucleation, checkpoint inhibitors, KIMMTRAK and chemotherapy/radiation • KIMMTRAK is indicated for HLA-A2+ haplotype (~40% of the metastatic patient population) New UM patients per year over 5,000 mUM - Metastatic patients Over 2,500 HLA-A2+ ~ 50% of patients develop metastases over time ~ 40% UVEAL MELANOMA MARKET ~ 40% ~ 60% HLA-A2-
| POTENTIAL DEFINITIVE EFFICACY TRIALS & INDICATION EXPANSIONPHASE 1 DOSE ESCALATION STUDY PHASE 1 EXPANSION STUDIES 11 • Evaluate identified dose(s) • Consider refined patient population, if necessary • Consider exploration of combination partners • Assess safety, PK, biomarkers and therapeutic activity • Potential for entry into definitive efficacy trials in metastatic UM • Potential for indication expansion FHD-286 FOR METASTATIC UVEAL MELANOMA Clinical Development Plan Initial clinical data in uveal melanoma with FHD-286 expected H1’23 • 3+3 cohort design • Retrospective biomarker analysis to further evaluate safety and efficacy • Assess safety, PK, biomarkers and therapeutic activity • Identify dose(s) for expansion
| THERAPEUTIC RATIONALE FOR UVEAL MELANOMA Dependency on Two Lineage Transcription Factors: MITF / SOX10 SOX10 MITF OVER 85% OF UVEAL MELANOMA CANCERS HAVE GNAQ OR GNA11 MUTATIONS VALIDATION OF DEPENDENCY AND APPROACHBIOLOGY CANCER CELL LINES CANCER CELL LINES 12 MITF CHIPseq SOX10 CHIPseq
| DOSE-DEPENDENT TUMOR REGRESSION IN UVEAL MELANOMA CDX MODELS AT TOLERATED DOSES WITH FHD-286 MP-46 UVEAL MELANOMA CDX MODEL o Dose-dependent tumor growth inhibition o Well-tolerated 92-1 UVEAL MELANOMA CDX MODEL o Dose-dependent tumor growth inhibition o Tumor regression at 1.5 mg / kg, PO, QD o Well-tolerated 0 7 14 21 28 0 300 600 900 1200 Days Post Treatment Tu m or V ol um e (m m 3 ) 0 7 14 21 28 80 90 100 110 120 Days Post Treatment Bo dy W ei gh t C ha ng e (% ) 0 5 10 15 20 0 150 300 450 600 750 900 Days Post Treatment Tu m or V ol um e (m m 3 ) 0 5 10 15 20 80 90 100 110 120 Days Post Treatment Bo dy W ei gh t C ha ng e (% ) 13 Tumor Volume Tumor Volume Body Weight Body Weight
| SIGNIFICANT UNMET NEED REMAINS IN R/R AML & MDS Most Common Type of Acute Leukemia in Adults 14 AML OVERVIEW Mutation: • Elevated BRG1-BAF / TF activity in AML blast cells Market Opportunity: • Over 27,000 relapsed and/or refractory patients impacted per year* Treatment Options: • Limited options for relapsed and/or refractory patients without actionable mutations Relapsed and/or refractory AML patients per year ~ 8% ~ 40% over 20,0 00 AML MARKET ~ 20% ~ 40% R/R segment with actionable mutations Unfit R/R segment without actionable mutations Fit R/R segment without actionable mutations Over 27,00 * * Incidence in the U.S., EU5, Japan
| POTENTIAL DEFINITIVE EFFICACY TRIALS & INDICATION EXPANSIONPHASE 1 DOSE ESCALATION STUDY PHASE 1 EXPANSION STUDIES 15 • Evaluate identified dose(s) • Consider refined patient population if necessary • Consider exploration of combination partners • Assess safety, PK, biomarkers and therapeutic activity • Potential for entry into definitive efficacy trials in AML / MDS • Potential for indication expansion FHD-286 FOR RELAPSED/REFRACTORY AML & MDS Clinical Development Plan AML / MDS study with FHD-286 on full clinical hold, development clarity anticipated in H1’23 • 3+3 cohort design • Retrospective biomarker analysis to further evaluate safety and efficacy • Assess safety, PK, biomarkers and therapeutic activity • Identify dose(s) for expansion
| AML: DEPENDENCY ON BRG1 / LINEAGE TF INTERACTIONS HSC AML blasts stuck in BAF / TF dependent proliferative phase Loss of blast phenotype/Apoptosis Differentiation Cancerous blast cells rely on BRG1 containing BAF / TF activity BAF - TF activity BAF - TF activity DISEASE STATE TREATMENT WITH FHD-286 16
| FHD-286 SHOWS EFFECT ACROSS A BROAD RANGE OF MUTATIONS IN AML PATIENT-DERIVED SAMPLES DNMT3A FLT3 IDH1 IDH2 KIT NF1 NPM1 NRAS RUNX1 TET2 TP53 IC 50 (n M ) 17 Mutation Type
| Notable Patient ID Deep Response Pathology Review Disease Status 1690AML1 Y AML Secondary 1695AML1 Y AML/MDS Secondary 1696AML1 Y AML Secondary 1701AML1 Y AML Secondary 1893AML1 Y AML R/R 1899AML1 Y AML R/R 1990pAML1 Y AML R/R 1991pAML1 Y AML de novo 2041AML1 Y N/A de novo 2043pAML1 Y AML R/R 2059AML1 Y AML R/R 1682AML1 ~ N/A N/A 1689AML1 ~ AML/MDS de novo 1684AML1 N CML R/R 1924AML1 N AML/MDS R/R Y = Deep reduction in blast cells ~ = Partial reduction N = No response • Response observed in a majority of primary AML samples, irrespective of prior treatment or disease stage • Additional data set from patient-derived samples demonstrates mutation-agnostic responses PRECLINICAL FHD-286 DATA SHOWS EFFICACY ACROSS AML PATIENT-DERIVED SAMPLES 1695AML1 – BM-secondary AML Aza + venetoclax 7+3 Pro-differentiation effect 18
| DOSE-DEPENDENT TUMOR GROWTH INHIBITION OBSERVED WITH FHD-286 TREATMENT IN AML CDX MODELS MV4-11 CDX Model (FLT3 ITD, MLL-AF4) OCI-AML2 CDX MODEL (MII-AF6, DNMT3A MUT.) 0 7 14 21 0 250 500 750 1000 1250 Days Post Treatment Tu m or V ol um e (m m 3 ) 0 7 14 21 0 800 1600 2400 3200 Days Post Treatment Tu m or V ol um e (m m 3 ) 0 7 14 21 80 90 100 110 120 Days Post Treatment Bo dy W ei gh t C ha ng e (% ) 0 7 14 21 80 90 100 110 120 Days Post Treatment B od y W ei gh t C ha ng e (% ) 19 Tumor Volume Tumor Volume Body Weight Body Weight
| TUMOR GROWTH INHIBITION WITH FHD-286 TREATMENT OBSERVED BY BIOLUMINESCENCE GENE TRAFFIC CONTROL PLATFORM PROTEIN DEGRADER CAPABILITIES Imaging in a Disseminated AML Model VEHICLE FHD-286 1.5 MG / KG QDX28 FHD-286 1.5 MG / KG, BID (5ON / 8OFF) X3 SORAFENIB 15 MG / KG, QDX14 FHD-286 SURVIVAL ADVANTAGE IN DISSEMINATED AML MODEL 20
Degrading the BRD9 Subunit of the BAF Complex FHD-286 is a Potent, Selective, Allosteric, Small Molecule Inhibitor of the BRG1 and BRM subunits of the BAF complex IN PHASE 1 DOSE ESCALATION FOR SYNOVIAL SARCOMA AND SMARCB1-LOSS TUMORS FHD-609 is a Selective, Potent, Protein Degrader of the BRD9 Component of the BAF Complex
| DEGRADING THE BRD9 SUBUNIT OF BAF B R D 9 D ep en de nc y Sc or e CANCER CELL LINES Project DRIVE shRNA data BRD9 IS REQUIRED FOR THE SURVIVAL OF SYNOVIAL SARCOMA CELLS * U.S., EU5, Japan 22 • Dependency on BRD9 well established with multiple tumor types including synovial sarcoma and SMARCB1-loss tumors • Foghorn’s lead asset targeting BRD9, FHD-609, selective, potent, protein degrader of the BRD9 subunit of the BAF complex • In Phase 1 dose escalation for synovial sarcoma and SMARCB1- loss tumors
| SIGNIFICANT UNMET NEED IN SYNOVIAL SARCOMA Synovial Sarcoma Accounts for ~10% of Soft-Tissue Sarcoma Tumors 23 SYNOVIAL SARCOMA & SMARCB1-LOSS TUMORS OVERVIEW • Mutation: 100% of patients harbor SS18-SSX1 / SSX2 / SSX4 protein fusions • Patient Numbers*: • Synovial sarcoma: Over 1,800 • SMARCB1-Loss Tumors: ~1,000 • Limited Treatment Options: • No approved therapies • Current standard of care includes surgical resection, chemotherapy/radiation and pazopanib • Adaptimmune’s cell therapy in development for synovial sarcoma, only applicable to ~25% of patient population TARGETED PROTEIN DEGRADATION TO REGULATE CHROMATIN AND GENE EXPRESSION IN DISEASE SS18-SSX1 / SSX2 / SSX4 MUTATED SUBUNIT BRD9 SUBUNIT * Incidence in the U.S., EU5, Japan
| POTENTIAL DEFINITIVE EFFICACY TRIALS & INDICATION EXPANSIONPHASE 1 DOSE ESCALATION STUDY PHASE 1 EXPANSION STUDIES FHD-609 FOR METASTATIC SYNOVIAL SARCOMA AND SMARCB1-LOSS TUMORS 24 • Metastatic synovial sarcoma expansion cohorts • SMARCB-1 deleted tumors and potentially other indications • Evaluate identified dose(s) • Consider refined patient population if necessary • Consider exploration of combination partners • Assess safety, PK, biomarkers and therapeutic activity • Potential for entry into definitive efficacy trials in metastatic synovial sarcoma • Potential for indication expansion beyond metastatic synovial sarcoma • 3+3 cohort design • Assess safety, PK, therapeutic activity, target engagement and biomarkers • Identify dose(s) for expansion • Biomarkers: SS18-SSX1, SS18-SSX2 or SS18-SSX4 translocation for synovial sarcoma Initial clinical data in synovial sarcoma with FHD-609 expected mid-2023 Clinical Development Plan
| ON-TREATMENT TUMOR BIOPSIES WITH FHD-609 DEMONSTRATE TARGET ENGAGEMENT WITH DEGRADATION OF BRD9 25 Pre-Treatment On-Treatment Pre-Treatment On-Treatment Paired Biopsies Patient A Paired Biopsies Patient B SIGNIFICANT BRD9 DEGRADATION OF ~60-70% WITH LOW DOSE OF FHD-609
| ROBUST IN VIVO ACTIVITY OBSERVED IN SYNOVIAL SARCOMA MODEL AND BRD9 DEGRADATION ASSOCIATED WITH FHD-609 TREATMENT SUSTAINED BRD9 DEGRADATION o Mutation: SS18-SSX2 o Inhibited tumor growth o Dose-dependent BRD9 degradation correlated with anti-tumor activity Weekly Dosing of FHD-609 Achieved Sustained BRD9 Degradation SY01 SYNOVIAL SARCOMA CDX MODEL Tumor Volume 26
| SUPERIOR TUMOR GROWTH INHIBITION WITH FHD-609 IN A SYNOVIAL SARCOMA MODEL AS COMPARED TO IFOSFAMIDE AND PAZOPANIB o Mutation: SS18-SSX1 o Superior tumor growth inhibition compared to ifosfamide and pazopanib o Complete suppression observed over 30 days at 2 mg / kg of FHD-609 ASKA CDX MODEL Tumor Volume Body Weight 0 7 14 21 28 80 90 100 110 120 Days Post Treatment % Bo d y W ei gh t C ha ng e 0 10 20 30 40 0 700 1400 2100 2800 Days Post Treatment Tu m or Vo lu m e ( m m 3 ) 27
| FHD-609 IS HIGHLY SELECTIVE KINETIC DEGRADATION PROFILING 28 No Off-Target IMiD Neosubstrate Degradation Activity Observed ENDPOINT DEGRADATION PROFILING 0 3 6 9 1 2 1 5 1 8 2 1 2 4 0 .0 0 .5 1 .0 1 .5 IKZF1-HiBiT CRISPR Jurkat Time (hr) Fr ac tio na l Lu m in es ce nc e (R LU ) DMSO 1uM 100nM 10nM 0 3 6 9 12 15 18 21 24 0.0 0.5 1.0 1.5 HiBiT-GSPT1 CRISPR HEK293 Time (hr) Fr ac tio na l Lu m in es ce nc e (R LU ) DMSO 1uM 100nM 10nM 0 3 6 9 1 2 1 5 1 8 2 1 2 4 0 .0 0 .5 1 .0 1 .5 CSNK1A1-HiBiT CRISPR HEK293 Time (hr) Fr ac tio na l Lu m in es ce nc e (R LU ) DMSO 1uM 100nM 10nM 0 3 6 9 1 2 1 5 1 8 2 1 2 4 0 .0 0 .5 1 .0 1 .5 HiBiT-IKZF2 CRISPR Jurkat Time (hr) Fr ac tio na l Lu m in es ce nc e (R LU ) DMSO 1uM 100nM 10nM HiBiT-GSPT1 HiBiT-CSNK1A1 HiBiT-IKZF1 HiBiT-IKZF2 DMSO 10nM 100nM 1uM 0.0 0.5 1.0 1.5 HiBiT-IKZF3 CRISPR MM.1S 6hrs [Compound] Fr ac tio na l Lu m in es ce nc e (R LU ) DMSO 10nM 100nM 1uM 0.0 0.5 1.0 1.5 SALL4-HiBiT CRISPR SK-N-DZ 6hrs [Compound] Fr ac tio na l Lu m in es ce nc e (R LU ) DMSO 10nM 100nM 1uM 0.0 0.5 1.0 1.5 HiBiT-IKZF3 CRISPR MM.1S 24hrs [Compound] Fr ac tio na l Lu m in es ce nc e (R LU ) DMSO 10nM 100nM 1uM 0.0 0.5 1.0 1.5 SALL4-HiBiT CRISPR SK-N-DZ 24hrs [Compound] Fr ac tio na l Lu m in es ce nc e (R LU ) HiBiT-IKZF3 HiBiT-IKZF3 HiBiT-SALL4 HiBiT-SALL4 Fr ac tio na l L um in es ce nc e (R LU ) Fr ac tio na l L um in es ce nc e (R LU ) Fr ac tio na l L um in es ce nc e (R LU ) Fr ac tio na l L um in es ce nc e (R LU ) Fr ac tio na l L um in es ce nc e (R LU ) Fr ac tio na l L um in es ce nc e (R LU ) Fr ac tio na l L um in es ce nc e (R LU ) Time ( r) Ti ( ) 6 hrs 6 hrs 24 hrs rs [Co po[Compound] [Compound] [Compound] 1uM 100nM 10nM DMSO 1u 100nM 0nM MSO 0n 1uM 100nM 10nM DMSO Fr ac tio na l L um in es ce nc e (R LU ) Ti r) Ti ( r)
| FHD-609 SELECTIVELY DEGRADES BRD9 IN SYNOVIAL SARCOMA GLOBAL PROTEOMICS ANALYSES BRD9 Is the Only Protein Significantly Degraded at Multiple Concentrations and Time Points 29 16nM (200x DC50) 4hrs in SYO1 78nM (1000x DC50) 4hrs in SYO1 16nM (200x DC50) 24hrs in SYO1 FHD-609 16nM 4h FHD-609 78nM 4h FHD-609 16nM 24h Enhanced Volcano Enhanced Volcano Enhanced Volcano Total = 7,437 Total = 7,437 Total = 7,437 log2 FC log2 FC log2 FC -l og 10 (p -v al ue ) -l og 10 (p -v al ue ) -l og 10 (p -v al ue ) negative FC positive FC not significant
SELECTIVE BRM MODULATORS FOR BRG1 MUTATED CANCERS Enzymatic Inhibitor and Protein Degrader Programs Targeting BRG1 Mutated Cancers (e.g., NSCLC), 30+ Cancers with BRG1 Mutations FHD-286 is a Potent, Selective, Allosteric, Small Molecule Inhibitor of the BRG1 and BRM subunits of the BAF complex
| BRG1 MUTATIONS CREATE A GENETIC DEPENDENCY ON BRM BRG1 B R M D ep en de nc y Sc or e CANCER CELL LINES Selective BRM Modulators Overview BRM Target / Approach • BRM • Enzymatic inhibitor • Targeted protein degrader Indications • BRG1 mutated cancers (e.g., NSCLC), 30+ cancers with BRG1 mutations Mutation / Aberration • BRG1 Stage • Pre-clinical New Patients Impacted / Year* • > 100,000 Economics of Lilly Collaboration • 50/50 U.S. economics • Tiered ex-U.S. royalties starting in the low double-digit range and escalating into the twenties * Per year incidence in U.S., EU5, Japan 31
| Cancer Of Unknown Primary Skin Cancer, Non-Melanoma Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer Bladder Cancer Endometrial Cancer Colorectal Cancer Melanoma Cervical Cancer Thymic Tumor Esophagogastric Cancer Peripheral Nervous System Small Cell Lung Cancer 0% 5% 10% 15% BRG1 MUTATED ACROSS RANGE OF TUMORS BRG1 MUTATED IN UP TO 10% OF NSCLC TUMORS, MINIMAL OVERLAP WITH OTHER MUTATIONS BRG1 MUTATED IN ~5% OF ALL TUMORS Broad Addressable Patient Population 32
| BRM SELECTIVE INHIBITOR IN VIVO EFFICACY Demonstrates PK / PD and In Vivo Efficacy in a BRG1 Mutant Lung CDX Model Plasma Exposure BRG1 cellular IC50 BRM cellular IC50 A549-BRG1 MUTANT NSCLC MODEL Cisplatin 4 mg / kg (IP) FHT-BRMi 15 mg / kg (BID) FHT-BRMi 30 mg / kg (BID) Vehicle Control (BID) 33 Tumor Volume Tu m or v ol um e (m m 3 ) Days after implantation B od y w ei gh t ( % D ay 0 ) M ea n un bo un d pl as m a co nc (n M ) Time (h) Days after implantation Body Weight
| ENZYMATIC SELECTIVITY APPROACHING 200X ACHIEVED BRG1 vs BRM ATPase activity BRM IC50 (uM) B R G 1 IC 50 (u M ) 34
| DEGRADERS CAUSE TIME- AND DOSE-DEPENDENT BRM DEGRADATION, ANTIPROLIFERATIVE EFFECTS IN A549 BRG1 MUTANT NSCLC LUNG MODEL ADVANCING BRM SELECTIVE DEGRADERS Achieving Complete BRM Degradation BRM / BRG1 HIBIT DATA A549 TEN-DAY PROLIFERATION ASSAY 35 0.01 0.1 1 10 100 -50 0 50 100 150 FHX-NSXLX Conc (uM) % in hi bi tio n FHT-BRMd BRM BRG1 % Inhibition of Cell Growth % d eg ra da tio n (% ) % in hi bi tio n Concentration (uM) Concentration (uM)
SELECTIVE CBP PROTEIN DEGRADER FOR EP300 MUTATED CANCERS Implicated in Subsets of Cancers Including Bladder, Colorectal, Breast, Gastric and Lung
| ADVANCING HIGHLY SELECTIVE CBP PROTEIN DEGRADER FOR EP300 MUTATED CANCERS Selective CBP Protein Degrader Overview * Per year incidence in U.S., EU5, Japan Target / Approach • CREB binding protein (CBP) • Targeted protein degrader Initial Indication • EP300 mutated cancers (e.g., subsets of prostate, bladder, colorectal, breast, gastric and lung cancers) Mutation / Aberration • EP300 mutated cancers Stage • Pre-clinical New Patients Impacted / Year* • Over 100,000 37 C B P D ep en de nc y Sc or e CANCER CELL LINES
| ADVANCEMENT OF HIGHLY SELECTIVE CBP DEGRADERS 38 SELECTIVE CBP DEGRADATION Osteosarcoma Cell Line Endogenous IF 0 1 2 3 4 5 0 25 50 75 100 125 Selective CBP Degrader U2OS log[nM] av er ag e in te ns ity no rm al iz ed to D M S O CBP EP300 Av er ag e In te ns ity No rm al iz ed to D M SO Log [nM] l tive CBP Degrader U2OS EP300 HiBiT-EP300 U2OS 0 5 1 0 1 5 2 0 2 5 0 .0 0 .5 1 .0 1 .5 Time (hr) Fr ac tio na l Lu m in es ce nc e (R L U ) DMSO 3 uM 1 uM 370 nM 123 nM 41 nM 13 nMFr ac tio na l L um in es ce nc e (R LU ) Ti e (hr) DMSO 3 nM 1 nM 23 nM 0 nM uM 3 uM Dmax: 88% 0 5 1 0 1 5 2 0 2 5 0 .0 0 .5 1 .0 1 .5 Time (hr) Fr ac tio na l Lu m in es ce nc e (R LU ) DMSO 3 uM 1 uM 370 nM 123 nM 41 nM 13 nM HiBiT-CBP U2OS Fr ac tio na l L um in es ce nc e (R LU ) Ti e (hr) DMSO 13 nM 1 nM 123 nM 370 nM 1 uM 3 uM
| HIGHLY SELECTIVE DEGRADER OF CBP DEMONSTRTES CBP-DEPENDENT CELL KILLING ACROSS MULTIPLE CANCERS 39 Colorectal CancerGastric Cancer 0.1 1 10 100 1000 10000 100000 0 50 100 150 Cmpd[nM] RKO (EP300 mutant) HT29 (CBP/EP300 Wt) % C el l V ia bi lit y Cmpd [nM] HT29 (CBP/EP300 WT) RFO (EP300 mutant) % C el l V ia bi lit y 0.1 1 10 100 1000 10000 100000 0 50 100 150 Cmpd[nM] AGS (EP300 mutant) IM95 (CBP/EP300 Wt) Cmpd [nM] IM95 (CBP/EP3 0 WT) AGS (EP300 mutant) 0.001 0.01 0.1 1 0 25 50 75 100 125 Cmpd [uM] % C el l V ia bi lit y 647V (CBP dependent) 639V (CBP dependent) UM-UC-3 (Dual dependent) ScaBER (Dual dependent) % C el l V ia bi lit y Cmpd [u ] UM-UC-3 (CBP/EP300 WT) ScaBER (CBP/EP300 WT) 647V (EP300 mutant) 639V (EP300 mutant) Bladder Cancer CELL PROLIFERATION ASSAYS
SELECTIVE ARID1B PROTEIN DEGRADER FOR ARID1A MUTATED CANCERS Protein Degrader Targeting ARID1A Mutated Cancers, the Most Mutated Subunit in the BAF Complex (e.g., Ovarian, Endometrial, Colorectal, Bladder and Other Cancers)
| ARID1A: MOST MUTATED SUBUNIT IN BAF COMPLEX – CREATES DEPENDENCY ON ARID1B Selective ARID1B Protein Degrader Overview * Per year incidence in U.S., EU5, Japan ARID1A ARID1B AR ID 1B D ep en de nc y Sc or e CANCER CELL LINES Target / Approach • ARID1B • Targeted protein degrader Initial Indication • ARID1A mutated cancers Mutation / Aberration • ARID1A mutations (e.g., ovarian, endometrial, colorectal, bladder and other cancers) Stage • Pre-clinical New Patients Impacted / Year* • > 175,000 41
| ~5% of all solid tumors harbor ARID1A mutations ARID1A MUTATED CANCERS: SIGNIFICANT OPPORTUNITY ARID1A Mutated Across Range of Tumors Cancer Types C om pl ex s ub un its ACTL6A ACTL6B ARID1A ARID1B ARID2 BCL11A BCL11B BCL7A BCL7B BCL7C BRD7 BRD9 BAF45B BAF45D BAF45C PBRM1 BAF45A BRM BRG1 BAF47 BAF155 BAF170 BAF60A BAF60B BAF60C BAF57 SS18 SS18L1 BAF Complex Uterine Bladder Stomach Cholangiocarcinoma Liver Esophageal Ovarian Colorectal Melanoma 0% 10% 20% 30% 40% Hodges et al. 2017 42
| TARGETING ARID1A MUTATED CANCERS: ARID1B PROTEIN DEGRADER GENE TRAFFIC CONTROL PLATFORM PROTEIN DEGRADER CAPABILITIES • Platform produces BAF complexes and subcomplexes containing either ARID1A or ARID1B at scale • Enables proprietary screens against ARID1B • Utilize protein degrader toolbox to create ARID1B hetero-bifunctional degraders PROGRAM STATUS • Validated selective chemical binders of ARID1B • In process of expanding binders into novel selective protein degraders • Assessing outcomes of ARID1B degradation and impact on BAF complex formation ARID1B Highly purified ARID1B / BAF complex Advantaged by Gene Traffic Control Platform and Protein Degrader Capabilities 43
TRANSCRIPTION FACTORS A NOVEL APPROACH FHD-609 is a Selective, Potent, Protein Degrader of the BRD9 component of the BAF complex
| TFS ARE COMPELLING DRUG TARGETS… …BUT HISTORICALLY DIFFICULT TO TARGET • Highly involved in gene expression • Implicated in range of cancers and other diseases • Featureless surface: no druggable binding pocket • Tight interactions with DNA: undruggable affinities A NEW APPROACH TO DRUGGING TRANSCRIPTION FACTORS Enabled by Proprietary Ability to Purify and Synthesize Chromatin Regulatory System Components HISTORICAL FOCUS POTENTIAL DRUGGABLE SITES FOGHORN’S FOCUS FOGHORN HAS A NEW APPROACH FOCUSING ON INTERACTION WITH BAF • Druggable binding pockets • Druggable affinities 45
| TF BTF A TF C TF D TRANSCRIPTION FACTORS BIND TO BAF DIRECTLY WITH HIGH DEGREE OF SPECIFICITY 46 Unique Insights into Where and How Transcription Factors Bind MASS SPEC. FOOT-PRINTING PULL-DOWN ASSAYS Foghorn’s collection of BAF sub-complexes and domains BIOPHYSICAL BIOCHEMICAL STRUCTURAL AUC / SPR / ITC TR-FRET / FP Crystal / NMR SPI1 MAPPING THE TF-BAF INTERACTION VALIDATING THE TF-BAF INTERACTION SPI1 TFB TFC TFD
| • >100 TFs estimated associated with BAF • Foghorn pursuing multiple TFs in parallel • Approach highly scalable and potential broad application – other chromatin remodeling complexes and other diseases HIGHLY SCALABLE APPROACH TO ADDRESS SIGNIFICANT UNMET MEDICAL NEED DRIVES MERCK COLLABORATION Potential to Drug > 100 TFs Associated with BAF • Merck collaboration to drug single specified transcription factor target • $15 million upfront; up to $410 million in research, development, regulatory and sales-based milestones • Up to low double-digit royalties on product sales TRANSCRIPTION FACTOR DISRUPTORS Potential druggable sites 47
| BROAD PIPELINE ACROSS A RANGE OF TARGETS AND MODALITIES Modality Program Discovery Phase 1 Phase 2 Phase 3 Patient Population* Enzyme Inhibitors Transcription Factor Disruptors Partnered Program AML & MDS Uveal Melanoma BRG1 Mutated Cancers, e.g. , NSCLC & Bladder Undisclosed Undisclosed FHD-286 (BRG1/BRM) FHD-286 (BRG1/BRM) Selective BRM Undisclosed Undisclosed 3 Discovery Programs UndisclosedUndisclosed Undisclosed 3 Undisclosed Programs Precision Oncology / Breadth and Depth / Over 15 Programs Protein Degraders FHD-609 (BRD9) Selective BRM Selective ARID1B Synovial Sarcoma & SMARCB1-Loss Tumors BRG1 Mutated Cancers, e.g., NSCLC & Bladder ARID1A Mutated Cancers, e.g., Ovarian, Endometrial & Colorectal 48 Selective CBP EP300 Mutated Cancers, e.g., Prostate, Bladder, Colorectal, Breast Commercial Rights Over 27,000 Over 5,000 Over 100,000 Over 100,000 Over 2,800 Over 175,000 Over 100,000 * Incidence in the U.S., EU5, Japan
| LARGE MARKET POTENTIAL WELL- FUNDED COLLABORATIONS WITH MAJOR ONCOLOGY PLAYERS SIGNIFICANT VALUE DRIVERS IN 2023 Chromatin biology is implicated in up to 50% of tumors, potentially impacting ~2.5 million patients Foghorn’s current pipeline potentially addresses more than 500,000 of these patients $374.5 million in cash and equivalents (as of 9/30/2022) Provides runway into H2’2025 Strategic collaboration with Loxo Oncology at Lilly; $380 million upfront; 50/50 U.S. economic split on two lead programs Merck collaboration to drug single specified transcription factor target; $15 million upfront and up to $410 million in milestones Initial clinical data in uveal melanoma with FHD-286 expected H1’23 Initial clinical data in synovial sarcoma with FHD-609 expected mid-2023 AML/MDS study with FHD- 286 on full clinical hold, development clarity anticipated in H1’23 FIRST-IN-CLASS PRECISION MEDICINES TARGETING MAJOR UNMET NEEDS IN CANCER 49 LEADER IN NEW AREA OF CANCER BIOLOGY Foghorn is a leader in targeting chromatin biology, which has unique potential to address underlying dependencies of many genetically defined cancers Broad pipeline of over 15 programs across a range of targets and modalities
APPENDIX FHD-286 is a Potent, Selective, Allosteric, Small Molecule Inhibitor of the BRG1 and BRM subunits of the BAF complex
STRATEGIC PARTNERSHIP LOXO ONCOLOGY AT LILLY FHD-609 is a Selective, Potent, Protein Degrader of the BRD9 component of the BAF complex
| 50/50 U.S. ECONOMICS ON TWO PROGRAMS 50/50 U.S. economic split on BRM-Selective and another undisclosed program Tiered ex-U.S. royalties starting in the low double-digit range and escalating into the twenties based on revenue levels $380 MILLION UPFRONT $300 million cash payment $80 million investment in Foghorn common stock at a price of $20 per share THREE UNDISCLOSED DISCOVERY PROGRAMS Option to participate in a percentage of the U.S. economics Tiered ex-U.S. royalties from the mid- single digit to low-double digit range $1.3 billion in potential milestones STRATEGIC COLLABORATION WITH LOXO ONCOLOGY AT LILLY Foghorn to Lead Discovery and Research Activities 52
THE CHROMATIN REGULATORY SYSTEM ORCHESTRATES GENE EXPRESSION FHD-286 is a Potent, Selective, Allosteric, Small Molecule Inhibitor of the BRG1 and BRM subunits of the BAF complex
| THE CHROMATIN REGULATORY SYSTEM ORCHESTRATES GENE EXPRESSION Two Major Components Work in Concert: Chromatin Remodeling Complexes and Transcription Factors CHROMATIN Chromatin – compacted form of DNA inside the nucleus of the cell 1 | CHROMATIN REMODELING COMPLEX AND TRANSCRIPTION FACTOR Work together to orchestrate gene expression 2 | RIGHT GENES TFs guide chromatin remodeling complexes to the right locations 3 | NORMAL GENE EXPRESSION Once chromatin is unpacked, gene expression can occur 54
| Mutation or overexpression in chromatin remodeling complex results in abnormal gene expression Mutated or overexpressed TF hijacks chromatin remodeling complex to wrong location DISEASE Abnormal Gene Expression DISEASE Abnormal Gene Expression BREAKDOWNS IN THE CHROMATIN REGULATORY SYSTEM CAN LEAD TO DISEASE 55
| BAF Complex Subunits Mutated and Dysregulated in Cancer 28 Chromatin Remodeling Complexes and >1,000 TFs CHROMATIN REGULATORY SYSTEM Estimate >100 Transcription Factors Associated with Just the BAF Complex BAF COMPLEX AND ASSOCIATED TRANSCRIPTION FACTORS Abundance of Targets within the BAF Complex 56
PLATFORM & DRUGGING CAPABILITIES FHD-286 is a Potent, Selective, Allosteric, Small Molecule Inhibitor of the BRG1 and BRM subunits of the BAF complex
| PRODUCTION OF CHROMATIN REGULATORY SYSTEM COMPONENTS PLATFORM IS POWERED BY ABILITY TO PRODUCE COMPONENTS AT SCALE Drives Drug Discovery Pipeline with Cutting Edge Technology BENEFITS Surface Mapping Assembly Affinity Screening & Validation HTS Biophysics/SPR Characterize TF / BAF Binding Sites Synthesize subcomplexes to enable drug discovery ASMS on full complex to yield novel degraders Multiple screening options with full complex Validation of novel small molecule binders FEATURES 58
| CURRENT APPROACH OPTIMIZATION OF DEGRADER DRUG PROPERTIES DEGRADER CHEMICAL TOOLBOX • A leader in developing heterobifunctional degraders for clinical evaluation in oncology • Employing PROTAC and non-CRBN based molecular glue degradation approaches • Guidelines for both of oral and IV-administered degraders • PK / PD, efficacy and safety modeling to optimize dosing and scheduling • Proprietary library of drug-like linkers, E3 ligase binders and potential glues • Chemistry to rapidly identify and optimize degraders PROTEIN DEGRADER PLATFORM ADVANCED MECHANISTIC CHARACTERIZATION • Native target turnover understanding • Cellular degradation kinetics and rates • Structural, biochemical and cellular ternary complex characterization • Global proteomics and ubiquitination studies • Computational modeling of degraders • Degradation efficacy across multiple cell types Molecular Glue PROTAC 59
Leadership Team, Board & Advisors FHD-286 is a Potent, Selective, Allosteric, Small Molecule Inhibitor of the BRG1 and BRM subunits of the BAF complex EXPERTISE ACROSS DRUG DISCOVERY, CLINICAL DEVELOPMENT AND COMMERCIALIZATION
| PROVEN LEADERSHIP TEAM ADRIAN GOTTSCHALK President & CEO SAM AGRESTA, M.D., M.P.H & TM Chief Medical Officer MICHAEL LACASCIA Chief Legal Officer ALLAN REINE, M.D. Chief Financial Officer STEVE BELLON, PH.D. Chief Scientific Officer FANNY CAVALIE Chief Strategy and Business Operations Officer CARLOS COSTA Chief People Officer BEN STRAIN VP, Investor Relations & Corporate Communications CHONG-HUI GU, PH.D. VP, CMC and QA NICOLA MAJCHRZAK VP, Clinical Development Operations SCOTT INNIS VP, Program Leadership MURPHY HENTEMANN, PH.D. VP, Program Leadership JACQUELINE CINICOLA VP, Regulatory Affairs KEVIN WILSON VP, Chemistry MARINA NELEN, PH.D. VP, Drug Discovery DANETTE L. DANIELS, PH.D. VP, Protein Degrader Platform SAURABH SEWAK VP, Corporate Development KARIN HELLSVIK VP, Corporate Affairs 61 ANDREW GERMAIN, PH.D. VP, Legal
| INDUSTRY-LEADING BOARD OF DIRECTORS AND ADVISORS DOUG COLE, M.D. Flagship Pioneering – Board Chair; Founder BOARD OF DIRECTORS SCOTT BILLER, PH.D. Former CSO and Strategic Advisor, Agios SIMBA GILL, PH.D. Evelo Biosciences, Partner at Flagship Pioneering ADRIAN GOTTSCHALK Foghorn President & CEO CIGALL KADOCH, PH.D. Dana-Farber, Broad, HMS, HHMI; Founder ADAM KOPPEL, M.D., PH.D. Bain Capital Life Sciences MICHAEL MENDELSOHN, M.D. Cardurion Pharmaceuticals IAN SMITH Exec. Chair of Solid Bio., Former COO of Vertex CHARLES SAWYERS, M.D. MSKCC, HHMI – SAB Chair SCIENTIFIC & OTHER ADVISORS CRAIG PETERSON, PH.D. Professor, UMass Medical School GERALD CRABTREE, M.D. Stanford, HHMI; Founder DAVID SCHENKEIN, M.D. General Partner, GV TONY KOUZARIDES, PH.D. Gurdon Institute – University of Cambridge 62 B. LYNNE PARSHALL, ESQ. Senior Strategic Advisor, Ionis Pharmaceuticals THOMAS J. LYNCH, JR., M.D. Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center