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Home Diseases Cancer

New trial offers hope to patients with advanced cancers

The trial is testing a new combination involving an investigational compound

EditorbyEditor
June 14, 2018
in Cancer, Drugs, Featured, International, News, Researches
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Post Views: 2,160

The trial could help the growing number of patients who have not responded to checkpoint inhibitors

Apexigen, Inc. and Yale Cancer Center today announced a clinical trial collaboration to evaluate a new drug combination in patients with advanced solid tumors.

During the trial, the team will be testing Apexigen’s APX005M in combination with cabiralizumab and Opdivo in patients with advanced solid tumors.

APX005M is an investigational compound that is designed to activate CD40, a key immune co-stimulatory receptor essential to regulating the activation of both innate and adaptive immune responses against cancer. Cabiralizumab (FPA008) is an antibody that inhibits colony stimulating factor-1 receptor (CSF1R) and depletes immunosuppressive tumor associated macrophages (TAMs).

Preclinical data from Yale researchers and others have demonstrated that treatment with a combination of CD40 activation and inhibition of CSF-1R modifies tumor-associated macrophages and activates T cells in tumors. This results in converting a “cold” into an “inflamed” tumor microenvironment capable of eliciting protective T cell responses in tumors that are either unresponsive or insensitive to immune checkpoint blockade.

The Phase 1/2 clinical trial will evaluate the safety, tolerability, and preliminary activity of APX005M in combination with cabiralizumab and Opdivo in metastatic NSCLC, metastatic melanoma and RCC patients whose disease has progressed on prior anti-PD-1/PD-L1 therapy.

In addition to providing funding, Bristol-Myers Squibb will supply Opdivo and cabiralizumab, an investigational antibody being developed in partnership with Five Prime Therapeutics.

“There is an urgent need to find effective therapies for the growing number of patients who have not responded to checkpoint inhibitors,” said Xiaodong Yang, M.D., Ph.D., President and Chief Executive Officer of Apexigen. “CD40 has a fundamental role in the activation of both innate and adaptive immunity, and we believe that CD40 activation by APX005M will become a key component of a number of promising new I-O therapeutic regimens for treating cancer patients.”

“This most exciting collaboration between Apexigen and Yale is a result of studies with tumor bearing mice that are poorly responsive to inhibitors of PD-1/PD-L1. Based on these studies, we believe that activation of the innate immune system by APX005M in combination with cabiralizumab will enhance the activity of nivolumab, leading to a novel therapeutic approach for the increasing population of cancer patients who progress on currently approved immune checkpoint inhibitors. This is the first time this combination of drugs has been given to patients and we are eager to initiate this new clinical trial,” said Harriet Kluger, M.D., Professor of Medicine at Yale Cancer Center and Principal Investigator of the trial.

Tags: cancersolid tumors
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