Daily Newsletter

22 August 2023

Daily Newsletter

22 August 2023

Phio’s partners dose first patient in cancer combo therapy trial

The study intends to assess the safety of AgonOx’s AGX148 alone and combined with Phio’s PD-1 silencing PH-762.

August 22 2023

Phio Pharmaceuticals’ clinical development partners AgonOx and Providence Cancer Institute of Oregon in the US have dosed the first patient in an adoptive cell therapy trial evaluating AGX148 alone and combined with PH-762 in patients with melanoma and other advanced solid tumours.

The randomised, open-label study is being carried out at Providence Cancer Institute in Portland, Oregon.

It is conducted by principal investigator Brendan Curti and Providence’s division Earle A Chiles Research Institute endowed chair for clinical research Robert Franz.

The first-in-human study intends to assess the safety and determine the therapeutic potential of AgonOx’s AGX148 double positive (DP) CD8 tumour-infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL) alone and combined with Phio’s PD-1 silencing PH-762.

Nearly 18 participants aged 18 years and older with histologically confirmed metastatic or unresectable advanced solid tumours and whose disease progressed on standard therapy are included in the study.

The study and three cohorts will receive autologous adoptive T-cell therapy along with supportive subcutaneous IL-2 therapy for one, two or three weeks.

Each cohort will then be randomised to receive DP CD8 TIL or DP CD8 TIL having PD-1 expression reduced by silencing RNA during in vitro cell expansion.

AgonOx founder and CSO Andrew Weinberg said: “TIL therapies hold the promise of clinical benefit in patients with solid malignancies.

“This product is different from current TIL therapies as we are selectively expanding the tumour-reactive T cells and potentially increasing their potency by reducing PD-1 suppression.”

Multiple Myeloma (MM) pipeline is dominated by CAR-T cells

The success of CAR-Ts in MM has fueled R&D investment into this class of therapy, with more CAR-Ts in development than all other cell and gene therapy classes combined. The approval of the autologous CAR-T cell therapies Abecma and Carvykti sees the CAR-T pipeline mostly constituted of autologous drugs. However, there are also multiple allogeneic CAR-Ts in the pipeline, with these therapies having an “off-the-shelf” advantage over autologous therapies.

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