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Data on Naptumomab Estafenatox (NAP) Enhancing CAR-T cells Potency Presented by NeoTX at SITC 2021 Annual Meeting.

Rehovot, Israel — November 30, 2021 – NeoTX Therapeutics (NeoTX), a clinical-stage immuno-oncology company, announced that the preclinical data on naptumomab estafenatox (NAP) enhancing the potency of CAR-T cells was presented on Nov 12th at the Society for Immunotherapy of Cancer’s (SITC) 36th Annual Meeting at the Walter E. Washington Convention Center, Washington D.C.

Clinical CAR-T therapy currently has limited efficacy against solid tumors due to low trafficking to the tumor, limited cell expansion in patients, tumor antigen heterogeneity, and an immunosuppressive microenvironment. NeoTX presented data that shows that NAP generates more potent CAR-T cells and acts synergistically against tumor cell lines in vitro. NAP is a fusion protein that consists of genetically engineered Superantigens (Sag) linked to Fragment antigen-binding (Fab) moieties directed to tumor-associated antigens, turns “cold tumors hot” and, in preclinical models, can lead to long-term memory responses.

The ability of NAP administration to activate T cells outside of the immunosuppressive microenvironment, promote T cell infiltration into the tumor and induce long-term memory responses strongly suggests that the combination of CAR-T cells with NAP may overcome the limited effect of CAR-T therapy against solid tumors. To access the presented poster, please click here.

 

About NeoTX

NeoTX is a clinical-stage immuno-oncology company which is developing targeted anticancer immunotherapies utilizing its proprietary Tumor Targeted Superantigen (TTS) platform. TTS binds a genetically engineered bacterial determinant to the tumor surface while simultaneously activating and expanding tumor specific immune cells that are then redirected from the periphery to the tumor to mount an immune response. The company’s lead TTS molecule, naptumomab estafenatox (NAP) is currently in clinical development for non-small cell lung cancer and other solid tumors. For more information, please visit www.neotx.com

 

Media Contact:
Aviram Uzi
Head of PR and Communications
Gelbart-Kahana Investor Relations
aviram@gk-biz.com
+972-525329103

Investor Contact:
Robert Harow, CFOO
NeoTX Therapeutics Ltd
robert@neotx.com 
609-718-2305 x204

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NeoTX Therapeutics to Present at the Society for Immunotherapy of Cancer’s 36th Annual Meeting

REHOVOT, Israel – November 9, 2021 – NeoTX Therapeutics (NeoTX), a clinical-stage immuno-oncology company, today announced a presentation on the company’s lead program, naptumomab estafenatox (NAP), at the Society for Immunotherapy of Cancer’s (SITC) 36th Annual Meeting being held November 10-14, 2021 at the Walter E. Washington convention Center, Washington D.C.  The poster presentation will highlight preclinical data demonstrating that NAP enhances CAR-T cells potency and can boost CAR-T efficacy against solid tumors.

Details on the poster presentation are as follows:

  • Title: Tumor Targeted Superantigen (TTS), Naptumomab Estafenatox (NAP), enhances CAR-T cells potency and can boost CAR-T efficacy against solid tumors
  • Abstract Number: 576 (ePoster)
  • Lead Author: Yael Sagi, Ph.D.
  • Category: Combination Immunotherapies
  • Date & Time: The ePoster will be on display on the SITC 2021 virtual meeting platform from 7 a.m. EST on Friday, Nov. 12, 2021 until the virtual meeting platform is closed on Jan. 9, 2022.

About NeoTX

NeoTX is a clinical-stage immuno-oncology company which is developing targeted anticancer immunotherapies utilizing its proprietary Tumor Targeted Superantigen (TTS) platform. TTS binds a genetically engineered bacterial determinant to the tumor surface while simultaneously activating and expanding tumor specific immune cells that are then redirected from the periphery to the tumor to mount an immune response. The company’s lead TTS molecule, naptumomab estafenatox (NAP) is currently in clinical development for advanced solid tumors. For more information, please visit www.neotx.com

Media Contact:
Aviram Uzi
Head of PR and Communications
Gelbart-Kahana Investor Relations
aviram@gk-biz.com
+972-525329103

Investor Contact:
Robert Harow, CFOO
NeoTX Therapeutics Ltd
robert@neotx.com 
609-718-2305 x204

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NeoTX Announces First Patient Enrolled In Phase 2a Clinical Trial Of Naptumomab Estafenatox (NAP), Its Lead Tumor Targeted Superantigen (TTS) Candidate, In Combination With Docetaxel In Patients With Advanced Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC)

REHOVOT, Israel – October 20, 2021 – NeoTX Therapeutics (NeoTX), a clinical-stage immuno-oncology company, announced today that the first patient has been enrolled in the company’s phase 2a clinical trial of naptumomab estafenatox (NAP), its lead Tumor Targeted Superantigen (TTS) candidate, in combination with docetaxel in patients with advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC).

 “Dosing of the first patient in this phase 2 trial represents a crucial step forward for the clinical advancement of NAP” said Asher Nathan, Ph.D., chief executive officer of Neo TX. “This trial is based on promising phase 1 data. NSCLC is one of the deadliest cancers, and we are looking forward to evaluating NAP in this setting”.

 The phase 2a, open label trial in the US, will assess NAP in combination with docetaxel in patients who had been previously treated with checkpoint inhibitors and have advanced or metastatic NSCLC.  The primary endpoint is objective response rate as measured by RECIST 1.1 criteria.  The trial will also evaluate safety, duration of response, progression free survival, overall survival, pharmacokinetics, and pharmacodynamics. For more information about the trial, visit https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT04880863

 

About NeoTX

NeoTX is a clinical-stage immuno-oncology company which is developing targeted anticancer immunotherapies utilizing its proprietary Tumor Targeted Superantigen (TTS) platform. TTS binds a genetically engineered bacterial determinant to the tumor surface while simultaneously activating and expanding tumor specific immune cells that are then redirected from the periphery to the tumor to mount an immune response. The company’s lead TTS molecule, naptumomab estafenatox (NAP) is currently in clinical development for advanced solid tumors. For more information, please visit www.neotx.com

 

Media Contact:
Aviram Uzi
Head of PR and Communications
Gelbart-Kahana Investor Relations
aviram@gk-biz.com
+972-525329103

Investor Contact:
Robert Harow, CFOO
NeoTX Therapeutics Ltd
robert@neotx.com
609- 718-2305

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Key Opinion Leader Webinar on Overcoming Check Point Inhibitor Resistance and Update on NeoTX TTS Platform

REHOVOT, Israel —July 14, 2021 – NeoTX Therapeutics (NeoTX), a clinical-stage immuno-oncology company, hosted a key opinion leader (KOL) webinar on overcoming checkpoint inhibitor resistance on Wednesday, July 14, 2021.

The webinar featured a presentation by KOL Mario Sznol, MD, Yale Cancer Center, who discussed New Frontiers for Checkpoint Inhibitors in Immuno-Oncology. NeoTX’s management gave an update on their Tumor Targeted Superantigen (TTS) platform’s lead candidate, naptumomab estafenatox (NAP) in overcoming resistance. NAP is being evaluated in combination with chemotherapy, checkpoint inhibitors and CAR T. Dr. Sznol and NeoTX management answered questions following the formal presentations.

To watch the webinar recording, please click here.

 About NeoTX

NeoTX is a clinical-stage immuno-oncology company which is developing targeted anticancer immunotherapies utilizing its proprietary Tumor Targeted Superantigen (TTS) platform. TTS binds a genetically engineered bacterial determinant to the tumor surface while simultaneously activating and expanding tumor specific immune cells that are then redirected from the periphery to the tumor to mount an effective response. The company’s lead TTS molecule, naptumomab estafenatox (NAP) is currently in clinical development for advanced solid tumors. For more information,

Media Contact:
Cait Williamson, Ph.D.
LifeSci Communications
(646) 751-4366
cait@lifescicomms.com

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NeoTX Hosting Key Opinion Leader Webinar on Overcoming Check Point Inhibitor Resistance

 

REHOVOT, Israel —July 07, 2021 – NeoTX Therapeutics (NeoTX), a clinical-stage immuno-oncology company, announced today that it will host a key opinion leader (KOL) webinar on overcoming checkpoint inhibitor resistance on Wednesday, July 14, 2021 at 10am Eastern Time.

 

The webinar will feature a presentation by KOL Mario Sznol, MD, Yale Cancer Center, who will discuss New Frontiers for Checkpoint Inhibitors in Immuno-Oncology. NeoTX’s management will also give an update on their Tumor Targeted Superantigen (TTS) platform’s lead candidate, naptumomab estafenatox (NAP) in overcoming resistance. NAP is being evaluated in combination with chemotherapy, checkpoint inhibitors and CAR T. Dr. Sznol and NeoTX management will be available to answer questions following the formal presentations.

 

To register for the webinar, please click here.

 

Dr. Mario Sznol is Professor of Internal Medicine, Leader of the Melanoma-Renal Cancer Disease-Associated Translational Research Team, and Co-Leader of the Cancer Immunology Program at the Yale Cancer Center, New Haven, CT. Dr. Sznol graduated from Rice University and Baylor College of Medicine (BCM) in Houston, Texas. He trained in internal medicine at BCM and completed a medical oncology fellowship in the Department of Neoplastic Diseases, Mount Sinai Hospital, New York. He spent the next twelve years in the Biologics Evaluation Section (BES), Investigational Drug Branch (IDB), Cancer Therapy Evaluation Program of the National Cancer Institute, and was Head of the BES from 1994-1999. He attended on the inpatient units of the Biological Response Modifiers Program, NCI, from 1988-1996 and the Immunotherapy Service of the Surgery Branch, NCI, from 1997-1999. From 1999-2004, he served as Vice President of Clinical Development and Executive Officer of Vion Pharmaceuticals in New Haven, Connecticut, and joined the faculty at Yale in 2004. Dr. Sznol is a past President of the Society for Immunotherapy of Cancer. Dr. Sznol’s areas of interest include early drug development, immunotherapy clinical trials, and treatments for advanced melanoma and renal cancer.

 

About NeoTX

NeoTX is a clinical-stage immuno-oncology company which is developing targeted anticancer immunotherapies utilizing its proprietary Tumor Targeted Superantigen (TTS) platform. TTS binds a genetically engineered bacterial determinant to the tumor surface while simultaneously activating and expanding tumor specific immune cells that are then redirected from the periphery to the tumor to mount an effective response. The company’s lead TTS molecule, naptumomab estafenatox (NAP) is currently in clinical development for advanced solid tumors. For more information,

Media Contact:
Cait Williamson, Ph.D.
LifeSci Communications
(646) 751-4366
cait@lifescicomms.com

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FDA Approval of IND Application for NAP (BioSpace)

NeoTX Therapeutics got the go-ahead from the FDA for its IND application for naptumomab estafenatox (NAP). NAP is the company’s lead Tumor Targeted Superantigen (TTS) molecule, which binds a genetically engineered bacterial determinant to the tumor surface while at the same time activating and expanding tumor specific immune cells.

Credit: BioSpace.com

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NeoTX Announces FDA Clearance of IND for Phase 2 Clinical Trial of Naptumomab Estafenatox (NAP), its lead Tumor Targeted Superantigen Candidate

REHOVOT, Israel — April 19, 2021 – NeoTX Therapeutics (NeoTX), a clinical-stage immuno-oncology company, announced today that it received clearance from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for the Company’s Investigational New Drug (IND) application for naptumomab estafenatox (NAP). NeoTX is developing targeted anticancer immunotherapies utilizing its proprietary Tumor Targeted Superantigen (TTS) platform. NAP, the company’s lead TTS molecule, binds a genetically engineered bacterial determinant to the tumor surface while simultaneously activating and expanding tumor specific immune cells.  NAP has demonstrated preliminary safety and anti-tumor activity in early-stage clinical trials in solid tumors.

 

“This FDA clearance is an exciting milestone for NeoTX,” said Asher Nathan, Ph.D., chief executive officer of NeoTX. “Preclinical and preliminary clinical studies have demonstrated that NAP has potential in combination with other treatment modalities. Non-small cell lung cancer is one of the deadliest cancers, and we are looking forward to assessing NAP in the clinic in combination with chemotherapy as a potential new treatment option after failure of current standards of care.”

 

The Phase 2a open label trial will evaluate NAP in combination with docetaxel in 35 patients with checkpoint inhibitor pretreated, advanced or metastatic non-small cell lung cancer.  The primary endpoint is objective response rate as measured by RECIST 1.1 criteria.  The trial will also evaluate safety, duration of response, progression free survival, overall survival, pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics.  

 

About NeoTX

NeoTX is a clinical-stage immuno-oncology company which is developing targeted anticancer immunotherapies utilizing its proprietary Tumor Targeted Superantigen (TTS) platform. TTS binds a genetically engineered bacterial determinant to the tumor surface while simultaneously activating and expanding tumor specific immune cells that are then redirected from the periphery to the tumor to mount an effective response. The company’s lead TTS molecule, naptumomab estafenatox (NAP) is currently in clinical development for advanced solid tumors. For more information,

Media Contact:
Cait Williamson, Ph.D.
LifeSci Communications
(646) 751-4366
cait@lifescicomms.com

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Special Report on Stem Cells (DDNews)

“Conventional therapy tends to reduce tumor burden and improves symptoms but may fail to eradicate tumor-initiating cells, leading to eventual recurrence and drug resistance,” they suggested. “Therapies targeting tumor-initiating cells may, therefore, work best alongside conventional therapies that debulk the tumor mass.”

Such debulking steps may be particularly important for solid tumors, adds Stern, as therapeutics like antibodies are quite large and can be limited in their capacity to reach the target cells. Initially shrinking the tumors using chemotherapy might facilitate immunotherapeutic access.

NeoTX Therapeutics and Active Biotech, meanwhile, are working on immunotherapy with naptumomab, which fuses the Fab fragment of an antibody targeting 5T4 with an engineered bacterial superantigen that activates T cell responses.

In preclinical studies, naptumomab has shown synergistic anti-tumor effects and has extended overall survival when combined with checkpoint inhibition.

At the 2018 AACR meeting, researchers tested naptumomab and an anti-PD-1 as monotherapy or in combination in low immunogenic mouse tumor models. Although naptumomab alone showed some capacity to activate T cells and increase tumor infiltration and the anti-PD-1 had no effect, the combination more dramatically increased serum cytokines and CD8:CD4 ratio in the tumors, resulting in reduced tumor burden and prolonged media survival.

Findings like these led to a Phase 1b/2 clinical trial, currently recruiting, that combines naptumomab with AstraZeneca’s anti-PD-1 durvalumab versus advanced and metastatic solid tumors. The first patient in this study was dosed last October.

“The dosing of the first patient in our Phase 1b trial is a significant milestone for NeoTX, as it is our first clinical-stage molecule developed with our Selective T Cell Redirection (STR) platform,” said company CEO Asher Nathan in announcing the milestone. “Previous clinical studies have shown Nap to be well tolerated, and preclinical work conducted by the NeoTX team supports its broad potential in treating advanced and metastatic tumors, especially in combination with checkpoint inhibitors.”

Credit: DDNews.com

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NeoTX to Present at the Inaugural LifeSci Partners Private Company Virtual Summer Symposium

REHOVOT, Israel – August 3, 2020 – NeoTX Therapeutics, a clinical-stage biotechnology company leveraging its proprietary Selective T cell Redirection (STR) platform to develop targeted cancer immunotherapies, today announced it will participate in the LifeSci Partners Private Company Virtual Summer Symposium, taking place August 4-5, 2020. Chief Executive Officer, Asher Nathan, will deliver a corporate update to potential investors and strategic partners, among other various relevant audiences. The presentation will cover recent and upcoming Company milestones, as well as detail clinical progress of the Company’s lead candidate, naptumomab estafenatox (“Nap”), currently being evaluated in a Phase1b clinical trial for the treatment of advanced and metastatic solid tumors in combination with AstraZeneca’s (NYSE: AZN) checkpoint inhibitor IMFINZI® (durvalumab).  

Presentation Details:

Date:               Wednesday, August 5, 2020

Time:               9:30 a.m. EDT

Registration:  Register Here

About the LifeSci Partners Private Company Virtual Summer Symposium

LifeSci Partners is hosting its inaugural Private Healthcare Company Virtual Summer Symposium on August 4 and 5, 2020. The Symposium will feature presentations by executives from more than 130 private healthcare companies in both the biopharma and medical device sectors as well as panel discussions with healthcare industry leaders, venture capital and investment communities. The format will include 25-minute presentations from each participating company followed by a moderated question and answer segment.

About NeoTX:
NeoTX is a clinical-stage biotechnology company leveraging its proprietary Selective T cell Redirection (STR) platform to develop new targeted anticancer immunotherapies. STR binds a genetically engineered bacterial determinant to the tumor surface while simultaneously activating immune cells away from the suppressive tumor environment to mount an effective antibacterial response. The company’s lead STR molecule, naptumomab estafenatox (Nap) is currently in clinical development for advanced solid tumors. For more information, please visit www.neotx.com.

Media Contact:
Cait Williamson, Ph.D.
LifeSci Communications
(646) 751-4366
cait@lifescicomms.com

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Leveraging the Native Immune Response to Fight Cancer (Pharma’s Almanac)

Unlike checkpoint inhibitors and CAR-T cell therapies that activate the immune system artificially, selective T cell redirection technology from NeoTX activates immune cells away from the suppressive tumor environment, resulting in a powerful — yet safe — native antibacterial immune reaction.

Resurrecting a Drug with a Checkered Past

NeoTX Therapeutics is a clinical-stage immunotherapy company developing a novel technology initially licensed from Active Biotech in 2016. Naptumomab estafenatox (Nap) was being developed for the treatment of cancer by Active Biotech and had shown exciting positive results in a phase I study but failed to show sufficient efficacy in a phase II trial.

A closer examination of both studies suggested that Nap deserved further investigation. In phase I trials, a patient with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) for whom three prior lines of therapy had failed was treated for six months with Nap. Even though he received no further treatments, this patient remained alive for 11 years and died of causes unrelated to cancer. The study also uncovered no concerning safety issues. 

The existing results led Active Biotech to move straight to a phase II/III study without any additional pilot trial. This follow-on study was, unfortunately, conducted in renal carcinoma, for which the standard of care at the time was interferon-α. We know today that interferon-α has significant negative interactions with Nap and that these interactions led to the failure of the trial.

Benefits of a Native Immune Response

Most immunotherapies on the market are designed to elicit some form of artificial immune response. Two difficulties in artificial manipulation include the vast complexity of the immune system and our lack of an in-depth understanding of how it functions. As a result, the generation of non-natural responses can often have many negative, unintended consequences. In addition, some therapies, such as bispecifics, aim to activate all T cells. This approach faces challenges, because T cells eventually become worn out after being activated. Thus, activating all T cells can ultimately deplete their supply.

Nap differs from current standard-of-care therapies because it relies on selective T cell redirection (STR) technology, which effectively converts a weak immune response against cancer to a powerful but specific, natural, antibacterial immune reaction. Nap is a recombinant fusion protein consisting of the antigen-binding fragment of a monoclonal antibody, directed towards the tumor-associated oncofetal trophoblast glycoprotein antigen 5T4, attached to a genetically engineered form of superantigen staphylococcal enterotoxin E (SEA/E-120).

Importantly, only T cells that express the superantigen receptor — approximately 1–2% of all T cells — are activated by Nap. These T cells undergo natural expansion and activation in the permissive environment of the periphery and lymph nodes. Once activated, they multiply rapidly and traffic to the tumor. Meanwhile, NAP binds to the tumor and acts as a neoantigen mimetic that the trafficking T cells can recognize, enabling them to kill the cancer.  The trafficking T cells can invade desert tumors and alter the tumor microenvironment, opening it up to further attack by other components of the immune system. 

Like the NSCLC cancer patient in Active Biotech’s phase I study who lived for an additional 11 years without any further treatment, we have seen that mice treated with Nap maintain the ability to fight off cancer after treatment is completed. Specifically, mice that exhibit a complete response when treated with NAP retain the ability to fight off other subsequent cancers, remaining cancer-free.

Nap, therefore, may provide a means for overcoming drug resistance, even for rapidly evolving cancers. STR technology appear to reboot the immune system, allowing it to evolve as cancers do. 

Synergy with Other Immunotherapies

In addition to breaking drug resistance by binding bacterial determinants to the tumor surface, STR technology carries the potential to augment the effectiveness of checkpoint inhibitors and other anticancer approaches. With such a powerful immune response generated by Nap, we believe that upregulation of checkpoints in the tumor microenvironment is likely to occur, thus enabling the enhanced performance of other cancer drugs, such as PD1/PDL1 inhibitors. 

In fact, we believe that STR technology will be synergistic with all of the major modalities for cancer treatment, including checkpoint inhibitors, which have revolutionized the field, and traditional chemotherapy, which is still widely used for cancers that don’t respond to checkpoint inhibitors.

Clinical Investigation in Progress 

Nap, NeoTX’s lead candidate and first STR platform drug, is currently in clinical development for advanced and metastatic solid tumor indications. Nap has significant potential as a monotherapy and in combination with chemotherapy, checkpoint inhibitors, and CAR-T technologies.

Previous clinical trials have found Nap to be well tolerated in hundreds of patients and demonstrated preliminary signals of efficacy. Preclinical work conducted by the NeoTX team supports its broad potential in treating advanced and metastatic tumors, especially in combination with checkpoint inhibitors.

A phase Ib clinical trial of Nap is ongoing in collaboration with AstraZeneca. The open-label, multicenter, dose-finding phase Ib study is currently enrolling. Patients are dosed with a combination of Nap and AstraZeneca’s checkpoint inhibitor IMFINZI® (durvalumab). NeoTX aims to establish the maximum tolerated dose before advancing to a larger cohort-expansion phase in the Unites States that will include indications known to respond well to checkpoint inhibitors, such as pancreatic and colon cancer.

Platform Technology

Because the superantigen is the same, regardless of the cancer being targeted, the STR approach is indeed a platform technology. The homing molecule can be designed to target many different types of tumor cells, allowing the development of a range of novel drug products. 

Due to its potential as a truly general solution for cancer treatment, STR technology is attracting significant attention. Once we gather more data from the ongoing clinical trials and are able to present hard and fast clinical evidence, we expect to see that interest materialize in the form of numerous partnerships for the investigation of combination treatments with Nap and other existing cancer therapies. 

Separately, NeoTX is actively exploring in-licensing deals and partnerships that could give the company access to new early-stage drugs that could be complementary to the STR platform. This activity will be funded in part by cash ($45 million) raised in a Series C financing round that closed in February 2020. To date, we have raised over $60 million, all from private investors. 

Our team at NeoTX includes both highly experienced scientists, such as Nobel Prize winner Prof. Roger Kornberg, and people with expertise in drug development and commercialization, such as the well-known drug developers Dr. Marcel Rozencweig and Dr. Robert Kramer. Early-stage clinical research is conducted in Israel and backed by highly experienced investigators interested in novel medications. Later-stage trials will be conducted in the United States and managed from our U.S. office. 

Going forward, our strategy for growth revolves around discovering, acquiring, and developing technologies that exploit novel mechanisms that enhance the immune system’s ability to attack tumors and developing business partnerships that leverage our STR platform technology. Because we want to stay focused on the development of novel therapies with real potential to impact patient lives, we intend to commercialize proprietary products through corporate alliances. 

Credit: Pharma’s Almanac.com