Asterias Biotherapeutics Announces Positive Outcome from Safety Review Committee for AST-VAC2; Recommends Continuation of Clinical Trial in Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC)

On July 11, 2018 Asterias Biotherapeutics, Inc. (NYSE American:AST), a biotechnology company dedicated to developing cellular immunotherapies to treat cancer and cell-based therapeutics to treat neurological conditions associated with demyelination, reported that the Safety Review Committee (SRC) for the first clinical trial of AST-VAC2, held a scheduled meeting to review the safety and tolerability data generated in the first patient enrolled in the study and recommended continuation of the study and moving to parallel enrollment of the second and third patients in the advanced cancer cohort (Arm A), as planned per the study’s protocol (Press release, Asterias Biotherapeutics, JUL 11, 2018, View Source;date=July+11%2C+2018&title=Asterias+Biotherapeutics+Announces+Positive+Outcome+from+Safety+Review+Committee+for+AST-VAC2%3B+Recommends+Continuation+of+Clinical+Trial+in+Non-Small+Cell+Lung+Cancer+%28NSCLC%29 [SID1234527937]). This initial clinical trial, which is being sponsored, managed and funded by Cancer Research UK under a collaboration between Asterias and Cancer Research UK, will examine the safety and tolerability of AST-VAC2 in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) as the study’s primary endpoints. Secondary and tertiary endpoints of the study include evaluations of the immunogenicity of AST-VAC2 in NSCLC.

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"Based on its review of all available study data after five doses in the first patient, the Safety Review Committee’s recommendation to continue the trial without modification reaffirms our belief that AST-VAC2 is safe and well-tolerated," commented Dr Edward Wirth, Chief Medical Officer of Asterias Biotherapeutics. "The committee concluded that the trial can proceed as planned per protocol – an important step as we continue the clinical development of AST-VAC2."

The Safety Review Committee reviewed all of the accumulated safety data generated to date for the first patient in Arm A (advanced disease), who by the time of the review had received five, weekly doses of 10 million AST-VAC2 cells.

As specified in the AST-VAC2 clinical trial protocol, the Safety Review Committee meets on a dosing-driven basis to review safety and tolerability data from the ongoing trial. The committee is comprised of a group of medical and scientific experts and is responsible for reviewing and evaluating patient safety data in order to safeguard the wellbeing of trial participants.

About AST-VAC2

AST-VAC2 is an innovative immunotherapy product that contains mature dendritic cells derived from pluripotent stem cells. These non-patient specific (allogeneic) AST-VAC2 cells are engineered to express a modified form of telomerase, a protein widely expressed in tumor cells, but rarely found in normal cells. The modified form of telomerase invokes enhanced stimulation of immune responses to the protein. Similar to an earlier, Asterias-sponsored, hematological cancer program which provided proof-of-concept data in [AML], the AST-VAC2 dendritic cells instruct the immune system to generate responses against telomerase and, through this mechanism, target tumor cells. AST-VAC2’s mode of action is complementary to and potentially synergistic with other immune therapies such as checkpoint inhibitors or other immune pathway inhibitors.

About Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer and the AST-VAC2 Trial

Lung cancer (both small cell and non-small cell) is the leading cause of cancer-related death, accounting for about one-quarter of all cancer deaths and more than colorectal, breast, and prostate cancers combined. Non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) accounts for about 80% to 85% of lung cancers, according to the American Cancer Society. The three main types of NSCLC are adenocarcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma, and large cell carcinoma. The American Cancer Society’s estimates for lung cancer in the United States for 2017 are: about 222,500 new cases of lung cancer, and about 155,870 deaths from lung cancer. Despite the large number of people afflicted by non-small cell lung cancer, patients remain vastly underserved due to a scarcity of effective treatments. According to statistics published by Cancer Research UK, the five year survival rate for lung cancer patients in England and Wales is less than 10%.

As currently designed, the first AST-VAC2 clinical trial will enrol up to 24 subjects into one of two cohorts, depending on the stage of their non-small cell lung cancer. The first cohort will evaluate AST-VAC2 in up to 12 subjects with advanced non-small cell lung cancer. Subjects in this cohort, who carry the major histocompatibility gene, HLA-A2, will receive six weekly injections of AST-VAC2 and will be followed for safety, immune responses to telomerase and overall clinical survival. Assuming safety is demonstrated in the first cohort, enrolment will advance to a second cohort. In the second cohort, early stage subjects who have had successful resection of their tumour with no evidence of metastasis will be enrolled. Up to 12 subjects in this second cohort who carry the major histocompatibility allele HLA-A2 will receive six, weekly injections of AST-VAC2 and will be followed for safety, immune responses to telomerase, overall clinical survival and time to relapse. Both cohorts will also have a control group consisting of patients that meet all inclusion/exclusion criteria for the study but who do not have the HLA-A2 marker. Subjects will be followed for one year for immune response to telomerase and for 2 years for the survival endpoints. The supply of AST-VAC2 to be used in this trial is being manufactured by Cancer Research UK’s Biotherapeutics Development Unit.