OncoMed Announces Upcoming Presentation of Navicixizumab Interim Phase 1b Data at the European Society of Clinical Oncology Meeting

On October 9, 2018 OncoMed Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (NASDAQ:OMED), a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company focused on discovering and developing novel anti-cancer therapeutics, reported that interim results of its ongoing Phase 1b study of navicixizumab in combination with paclitaxel in patients with platinum-resistant ovarian cancer will be presented in a poster presentation on October 20, 2018 at the European Society for Medical Oncology meeting to be held in Munich, Germany (Press release, OncoMed, OCT 9, 2018, View Source [SID1234530050]).

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Poster 951P/
Abstract 1389: A Phase 1b Study of Navicixizumab & Weekly Paclitaxel in Heavily Pre-Treated Platinum Resistant Ovarian, Primary Peritoneal or Fallopian Tube Cancer

Date and Time: Saturday, October 20, 2018 from 12:30 pm to 1:30 pm CEST

Location: Hall A3 – Poster Area Networking Hub
About Navicixizumab
OncoMed’s anti-DLL4/VEGF bispecific antibody, navicixizumab, is designed to inhibit the function of both DLL4 and VEGF and thereby induce potent anti-tumor responses while mitigating certain angiogenic-related toxicities. Navicixizumab was developed utilizing OncoMed’s BiMAb bispecific platform technology, which enables the design of bispecific antibodies comparable to traditional monoclonal antibodies but possessing dual target-binding specificity. In preclinical studies, navicixizumab demonstrated robust in vivo anti-tumor efficacy across a range of solid tumor xenografts, including colon, ovarian, lung and pancreatic cancers, among others. Further, in preclinical studies dual inhibition of DLL4 and VEGF appeared to exhibit synergistic anti-tumor activity at doses where blockade of either target alone elicited sub-optimal activity. In a Phase 1a study with single-agent navicixizumab published in Investigational New Drugs, 19 of 66 patients with various types of refractory solid tumors had tumor shrinkage following treatment with navicixizumab. Notably, 3 of the 12 (25%) ovarian cancer patients treated in the trial achieved a partial response with single-agent navicixizumab therapy