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Plus Therapeutics Announces New Employment Inducement Grants

Posted: May 18, 2024 at 2:42 am

AUSTIN, Texas, May 17, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Plus Therapeutics, Inc. (Nasdaq: PSTV) (the “Company”), a clinical-stage pharmaceutical company developing targeted radiotherapeutics with advanced platform technologies for central nervous system (CNS) cancers, today announced that on May 8, 2024, it granted option awards to Charles Huang, the Company’s new Director of Capital Markets and Investor Relations. The Company agreed to grant these equity awards to Mr. Huang to induce him to commence employment with the Company.

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Achilles Therapeutics Receives Nasdaq Deficiency Notice Regarding Minimum Bid Price Requirement

Posted: May 18, 2024 at 2:42 am

Achilles ADSs will continue to trade on the Nasdaq Global Select Market at this time, and the Company’s operations are not affected by the receipt of the Notice Achilles ADSs will continue to trade on the Nasdaq Global Select Market at this time, and the Company’s operations are not affected by the receipt of the Notice

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Athira Pharma Announces Proposed Settlement of Stockholder Derivative Action

Posted: May 18, 2024 at 2:42 am

BOTHELL, Wash., May 17, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Athira Pharma, Inc. (NASDAQ: ATHA), a late clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company focused on developing small molecules to restore neuronal health and slow neurodegeneration, today announced that the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Washington issued an order providing for preliminary approval of a proposed settlement of the claims asserted nominally on behalf of Athira against the individual defendants named in the previously disclosed stockholder derivative actions entitled Bushansky v. Kawas et al., No. 2:22-cv-497 and Houlihan v. Kawas et al., No. 2:22-cv-620, pending before the court. The proposed settlement calls for Athira to adopt certain corporate governance reforms and pay lead plaintiffs’ attorney’s fees, litigation expenses, and lead plaintiff service awards.

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Deaf baby can hear after ‘mind-blowing’ gene therapy treatment – Livescience.com

Posted: May 18, 2024 at 2:42 am

A toddler who was born completely deaf due to a rare genetic condition can now hear unaided thanks to a pioneering gene therapy.

Opal Sandy, who is now an 18-month-old girl from the U.K., is the youngest child in the world to receive this type of gene therapy, which uses a harmless, modified virus to correct genetic mutations in the body's cells. In this case, the therapy replaced a mutant gene associated with deafness with a working copy of that gene, according to a statement released May 9 by Cambridge University Hospitals.

Very similar gene therapies are being tested in other trials and have shown early success in treating slightly older children with the same type of hearing loss as Opal.

Known as auditory neuropathy, this type of hearing loss arises when the ears can detect sound but can't relay that information to the brain. The condition is caused by mutations in a gene called OTOF that normally makes otoferlin, a protein needed for the inner ear to talk to neurons that are linked to the brain. The condition accounts for between 1% and 8% of cases of congenital hearing loss that occurs in the absence of other symptoms.

Related: CRISPR can treat common form of inherited blindness, early data hint

Opal was diagnosed at 3 weeks old. When she was 11 months old she became the first patient treated in a global trial of the new gene therapy. She was given the new treatment via an injection into her right ear. The virus injected during the procedure known as an adeno-associated virus delivers a working copy of OTOF to cells in the ear to replace the mutated version. Afterwards, the virus is naturally eliminated from the body.

Doctors also installed a cochlear implant in Opal's left ear; these devices help users hear some sound by relaying signals to the brain that their ear cells can't.

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Within four weeks of the gene therapy, Opal could respond to sounds even when her cochlear implant was switched off, her doctors reported. Twenty-four weeks out from treatment, her treated ear could pick up soft sounds, such as whispering, at "close to normal" hearing levels. Now, at 18 months old, Sandy can respond to her parents' voices without her implant activated and say words such as "dada" and "bye-bye."

"When Opal could first hear us clapping unaided it was mind-blowing we were so happy when the clinical team confirmed at 24 weeks that her hearing was also picking up softer sounds and speech," Opal's mother Jo said in the statement. Her father, James, noted that Opal can't wear her implant in certain contexts, such as in the bath, so the therapy is already making a difference in their day-to-day lives.

The ongoing trial that Opal is part of is enrolling patients in the U.S., the U.K. and Spain. In this stage of the research, patients receive a low dose of the therapy in one ear. Future trials will test the therapy at higher doses in one ear and then in both ears. Patients will be followed up for five years to assess long-term outcomes.

"Gene therapy has been the future of otology and audiology for many years and I'm so excited that it is now finally here," Dr. Manohar Bance, chief investigator of the trial and a professor of otology and skull base surgery at the University of Cambridge in the U.K., said in the statement.

"This is hopefully the start of a new era for gene therapies for the inner ear and many types of hearing loss," he said.

Ever wonder why some people build muscle more easily than others or why freckles come out in the sun? Send us your questions about how the human body works to community@livescience.com with the subject line "Health Desk Q," and you may see your question answered on the website!

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Gene therapy relieves back pain, repairs damaged disc in mice – The Ohio State University News

Posted: May 18, 2024 at 2:42 am

Disc-related back pain may one day meet its therapeutic match: gene therapy delivered by naturally derived nanocarriers that, a new study shows, repairs damaged discs in the spine and lowers pain symptoms in mice.

Scientists engineered nanocarriers using mouse connective-tissue cells called fibroblasts as a model of skin cells and loaded them with genetic material for a protein key to tissue development. The team injected a solution containing the carriers into damaged discs in mice at the same time the back injury occurred.

Assessing outcomes over 12 weeks, researchers found through imaging, tissue analysis, and mechanical and behavioral tests that the gene therapy restored structural integrity and function to degenerated discs and reduced signs of back pain in the animals.

We have this unique strategy thats able to both regenerate tissue and inhibit some symptoms of pain, said co-senior author Devina Purmessur Walter, associate professor of biomedical engineering at The Ohio State University.

Though there is more to learn, the findings suggest gene therapy could offer an effective and long-lasting alternative to opioids for the management of debilitating back pain.

This can be used at the same time as surgery to actually boost healing of the disc itself, said co-senior author Natalia Higuita-Castro, associate professor of biomedical engineering and neurological surgery at Ohio State. Your own cells are actually doing the work and going back to a healthy state.

The study was published online recently in the journal Biomaterials.

An estimated 40% of low-back pain cases are attributed to degeneration of the cushiony intervertebral discs that absorb shocks and provide flexibility to the spine, previous research suggests. And while trimming away bulging tissue from a herniated disc during surgery typically reduces pain, it does not repair the disc itself which continues to degenerate with the passage of time.

Once you take a piece away, the tissue decompresses like a flat tire, Purmessur Walter said. The disease process continues, and impacts the other discs on either side because youre losing that pressure that is critical for spinal function. Clinicians dont have a good way of addressing that.

This new study builds upon previous work in Higuita-Castros lab, which reported a year ago that nanocarriers called extracellular vesicles loaded with anti-inflammatory cargo curbed tissue injury in damaged mouse lungs. The engineered carriers are replicas of the natural extracellular vesicles that circulate in humans bloodstream and biological fluids, carrying messages between cells.

To create the vesicles, scientists apply an electrical charge to a donor cell to transiently open holes in its membrane, and deliver externally obtained DNA inside that converts to a specific protein, as well as molecules that prompt the manufacture of even more of a functional protein.

In this study, the cargo consisted of material to produce a pioneer transcription factor protein called FOXF1, which is important in the development and growth of tissues.

Our concept is recapitulating development: FOXF1 is expressed during development and in healthy tissue, but it decreases with age, Purmessur Walter said. Were basically trying to trick the cells and give them a boost back to their developmental state when theyre growing and at their healthiest.

In experiments, mice with injured discs treated with FOXF1 nanocarriers were compared to injured mice given saline or mock nanocarriers and uninjured mice.

Compared to controls, the discs in mice receiving gene therapy showed a host of improvements: The tissue plumped back up and became more stable through production of a protein that holds water and other matrix proteins, all helping promote range of motion, load bearing and flexibility in the spine. Behavioral tests showed the therapy decreased symptoms of pain in mice, though these responses differed by sex males and females showed varying levels of susceptibility to pain based on the types of movement being assessed.

The findings speak to the value of using universal adult donor cells to create these extracellular vesicle therapies, the researchers said, because they dont carry the risk of generating an immune response. The gene therapy also, ideally, would function as a one-time treatment a therapeutic gift that keeps on giving.

The idea of cell reprogramming is that you express this transcription factor and the cell is then going to convert to this healthier state and stays committed to that healthier phenotype and that conversion is not normally transient, Higuita-Castro said. So in theory, you would not expect to have to re-dose significantly.

There are more experiments to come, testing the effects of other transcription factors that contribute to intervertebral disc development. And because this first study used young adult mice, the team also plans to test the therapys effects in older animals that model age-related degeneration and, eventually, in clinical trials for larger animals known to develop back problems.

Higuita-Castro, director of advanced therapeutics and engineering in the College of MedicineDavis Heart and Lung Research Institute and a core faculty member of Ohio StatesGene Therapy Institute, and Purmessur Walter, an investigator in Ohio States Spine Research Institute and director of the Spinal Therapeutics Laboratory in the College of Engineering, are co-principal investigators on National Institutes of Health grants funding this research.

Additional co-authors include co-first authors Shirley Tang and Ana Salazar-Puerta, Mary Heimann, Kyle Kuchynsky, Mara Rincon-Benavides, Mia Kordowski, Gilian Gunsch, Lucy Bodine, Khady Diop, Connor Gantt, Safdar Khan, Anna Bratasz, Olga Kokiko-Cochran, Julie Fitzgerald and Benjamin Walter, all of Ohio State; Damien Laudier of Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai; and Judith Hoyland of the University of Manchester.

Ohio State has filed a patent application on nonviral gene therapy for minimally invasively treating painful musculoskeletal disorders.

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Hemophilia B gene therapy Beqvez offers new choice: Pfizer official – Hemophilia News Today

Posted: May 18, 2024 at 2:42 am

Pfizer is preparing to launch its hemophilia B gene therapy Beqvez (fidanacogene elaparvovec-dzkt) after securing a U.S. approval for the treatment last month.

Beqvez is the second gene therapy to be approved for adults with moderate to severe hemophilia B in the U.S., following the clearance of Hemgenix in 2022.

With the U.S. approval of BEQVEZ, physicians and patients now have another choice in the treatment of hemophilia B, Sonal Bhatia, MD, senior vice president and head of U.S. specialty care medical affairs at Pfizer, said in a written Q&A with Hemophilia News Today.

Beqvez is also cleared in Canada and is under review in the European Union.

Bhatia said gene therapies, which directly address the diseases underlying cause, offer transformative potential for long-term bleed control in eligible patients, who are often susceptible to breakthrough bleeds despite being on standard of care preventive therapies.

There is a clear interest and anticipation from the physician and patient community for gene therapy and its potential use alongside conventional treatments, Bhatia said.

Pfizer is focusing on Beqvezs rollout. The therapy is expected to become available by prescription to eligible patients this quarter, Bhatia said.

The company is proactively working with treatment centers, payers, and the hemophilia community to help ensure the healthcare system is appropriately prepared to deliver Beqvez to the patients who can benefit from it, she said.

That includes offering personalized patient support services through Pfizers GeneTogether program. Through the program, patients can access educational materials about what happens before, during, and after receiving gene therapy, and can find help understanding insurance coverage and financial options.

Gene therapies are among the most expensive treatments in the world. Beqvez has a list price of $3.5 million, the same as Hemgenix.

To help ensure that insurance companies are willing to cover the cost, Pfizer is offering a warranty program based on the durability of a patients response, Bhatia said. The program provides financial protection by insuring against the risk of efficacy failure, with the aim of making it easier for patients to access treatment, she said.

Pfizer also offers a co-pay assistance program to help manage out-of-pocket costs for patients who are commercially insured.

Factor replacement therapy has long been the standard prophylactic treatment for hemophilia B. It involves regularly administering infusions into the bloodstream of a working version of factor IX (FIX), the blood clotting protein patients thats faulty or missing due to mutations in the F9 gene that encodes its production.

But despite these treatments, many people living with moderate to severe hemophilia B are at risk of spontaneous bleeding episodes, which can result in painful joint damage and mobility issues, Bhatia said.

This can significantly affect a persons daily life. Bhatia pointed to studies showing that nearly 40% of severe hemophilia patients who are employed experience disease-related restrictions in job performance, and that at least 13% have faced unemployment because of it.

With Beqvez, the hope is to allow people living with hemophilia more time for the things they love and support their ability to engage in the workforce, school, and society, Bhatia said.

The gene therapy, intended as a one-time treatment, provides patients liver cells with a healthy copy of F9. The therapy provides the body with the tools to continuously produce its own FIX protein in the long term, offering lasting bleed prevention.

The potential benefits of Beqvez were demonstrated in the open-label Phase 3 BENEGENE-2 clinical trial (NCT03861273), which tested the effects of the gene therapy in men, ages 18-65, with moderate to severe hemophilia B.

Bleeds were eliminated in 60% of patients after they received Beqvez for up to three years, while only 29% of patients experienced complete bleed control while on standard prophylaxis during a lead-in period prior to receiving the gene therapy.

The overall median annualized bleeding rate was zero after treatment with Beqvez, compared with 1.3 bleeds per year during the lead-in period. The mean annualized bleeding rate dropped from 4.5 bleeds per year while patients were on prophylaxis to 2.5 bleeds per year after receiving Beqvez.

An ultimate goal of gene therapy would be for patients to be less reliant on replacement therapy, or to eliminate it altogether, avoiding years of medical burden, Bhatia said.

Still, the long-term effects of Beqvez, and whether it will offer sustained bleed control for many years, will only be known once treated patients have been followed for a longer period of time.

BENEGENE-2 participants are being followed for up to 15 years: six years in the current study and nine more in a long-term Phase 3 extension study (NCT05568719).

Bhatia said Pfizer is optimistic about the gene therapys long-term safety and efficacy profile.

Patients from an earlier Phase 1/2a trial (NCT02484092) and long-term extension study (NCT03307980) have been followed for up to six years, during which time FIX activity has remained stable, according to Bhatia. With FIX activity generally in the mild hemophilia to normal range, patients have also maintained low bleed rates during that time.

While more long-term data are collected, the company is conducting exploratory modeling analyses aiming to predict the treatments long-term effects based on available clinical trial data.

Results from those analyses presented earlier this year indicated that a one-time infusion was predicted to be efficacious for more than 20 years, maintaining FIX at levels not achievable with recommended replacement therapy dosing. Bhatia said Pfizer will continue to update the modeling analyses as more data become available, adding that the current results are encouraging.

Bhatia touted the recent Beqvez approval as a testament to Pfizers continued effort to advance the standard of care for people living with hemophilia.

The company, which markets a number of approved hemophilia treatments, has other experimental ones in the pipeline. Those include giroctocogene fitelparvovec, a gene therapy for hemophilia A thats in Phase 3 testing, and marstacimab, an injectable therapy currently under review in the U.S. and Europe for hemophilia A and B patients without inhibitors.

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Vectorized antibodies are taking gene therapy beyond rare disease – BioCentury

Posted: May 18, 2024 at 2:42 am

ARTICLE | Product Development

By Lauren Martz, Executive Director, Biopharma Intelligence

May 17, 2024 5:38 PM UTC

After long being considered irrelevant for cancers, infectious diseases and large inflammatory conditions, gene therapy is increasingly seen as a promising treatment modality for these indications in the form of vectorized antibodies. This years ASGCT meeting brought several new vectorized antibody designs.

Use of gene therapy has traditionally been restricted to rare genetic diseases, where viral vectors deliver a functional copy of the gene thats lost or mutated in the disease to restore expression, thereby treating the underlying disease pathology...

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The Promising Future of Gene Therapy in Treating Neurological Diseases: Michael Kaplitt, MD, PhD – Neurology Live

Posted: May 18, 2024 at 2:42 am

WATCH TIME: 6 minutes

"I think the fact that there's so much work going on will create a universe of advanced biological therapies over the next several years, that could become available to more general practitioners and not just in experimental trials."

For clinicians, neurodegenerative disorders present a unique challenge for treatment because of the slow progression of the disease and the profound neuron loss before the onset of clinical symptoms. Options for treatment are additionally constrained by the post-mitotic nature of the central nervous system (CNS) neurons and confined ability of these cells to perform regeneration. Moreover, the blood brain barrier hinders peripheral access to the brain and so there are some limitations inherent in respect to treatment especially for protein and peptide-based therapeutics.1

To combat these constraints, investigators continue to expand the therapeutic platform based on the delivery of genes engineered for efficient CNS expression. Researchers first assessed gene therapy over 20 years ago and since then have continued to evolve it for neurodegenerative diseases like Parkinson disease (PD). Despite incremental advancements realized for PD so far, clinicians believe there is hope for the technology. Gene therapy in PD may offer the opportunity to alter dopamine production and neuronal phenotype permanently, which would be a significant therapeutic advancement even if there isnt a cure found yet.

Michael Kaplitt, MD, PhD, professor of neurological surgery and vice chairman for research in the department of neurological surgery at Weill Cornell Medicine, recently sat down with NeurologyLive in an interview to discuss how gene therapy streamlines the process of developing treatments compared with traditional drug discovery methods. He also spoke about the key factors that would make a patient a suitable candidate for specific gene therapies in neurological disorders. Furthermore, Kaplitt talked about the advancements in gene therapy that are currently being tested for PD.

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Rett gene therapy NGN-401 safe in first patients dosed in trial – Rett Syndrome News

Posted: May 18, 2024 at 2:42 am

NGN-401, Neurogenes gene therapy candidate for Rett syndrome, was well tolerated in the first three patients dosed in a Phase 1/2 clinical trial.

The Phase 1/2 trial (NCT05898620) is enrolling girls with Rett, ages 4-10, at three sites in the U.S. The company also plans to establish the first clinical trial for the treatment in the U.K., following recent regulatory approval.

Trial results were presented during the American Society of Gene and Cell Therapy (ASGCT) annual meeting, held May 7-11 in Baltimore. The company expects to share interim efficacy data from the first group of patients later this year, and additional results, including data from a second group of participants, in 2025.

The NGN-401 datapresented at ASGCT demonstrate a favorable tolerability profile in the first three pediatric patients with no signs or symptoms of overexpression-related toxicity reported in any patient, Rachel McMinn, PhD, Neurogenes founder and CEO, said in a company press release.

In most cases, Rett syndrome is caused by mutations in the MECP2 gene that impair the function of MeCP2, a protein that regulates the activity of other genes. The loss of MeCP2 impairs the growth and connectivity of neurons (nerve cells), leading to disease symptoms.

NGN-401 provides a full-length version of the gene, packaged in a harmless adeno-associated virus (AAV). The therapy is delivered directly into the fluid-filled cavities of the brain, a process known as intracerebroventricular infusion, in a one-time treatment.

The gene therapy was developed using Neurogenes EXACT gene regulation technology, for the delivery of highly controlled and consistent levels of the lab-made MECP2 gene without the toxic effects associated with high levels of the MeCP2 protein, or overexpression, associated with conventional gene therapy.

We designed NGN-401 to overcome the limitations of conventional gene therapy for Rett syndrome by incorporating our EXACT transgene regulation technology, which we believe provides tolerable and therapeutic levels of protein expression to the key areas of the brain and nervous system that drive disease, McMinn said.

Preclinical studies showed NGN-401 extended survival and eased the disease burden in a mouse model of Rett syndrome, without signs of toxicity associated with MeCP2. Data presented at ASGCT showed that the therapy was well tolerated in non-human primates, without overexpression concerns.

The ongoing clinical trial is assessing NGN-401s safety, tolerability, and preliminary efficacy in girls with Rett syndrome, following them for several years after treatment. The first group of patients consists of eight girls, receiving a low NGN-401 dose (1x1E 15 vector genomes).

The first two girls were dosed in 2023, and the third received the treatment this year. So far, the therapy has been well tolerated, with no treatment- or procedure-related serious adverse events, after a follow-up between three and nine months.

All reported adverse events were mild, and were mainly known potential risks of AAV, including increased blood levels of liver enzymes and decreased levels of certain immune proteins.

There were no signs of overexpression toxicity, even in a girl with a milder form of Rett, predicted to result in residual MECP2 gene activity.

A second group of eight girls will receive a high dose of NGN-401 (3 x 10^15 vector genomes). As with the first group, the first three patients will be dosed in a staggered manner, and if the gene therapy is considered safe, the other five will be dosed in parallel.

Efficacy measures will include clinician-rated assessments of symptom severity and patient improvement, as well the Rett Syndrome Behavior Questionnaire that evaluates behavioral challenges.

Gene therapy has the potential to address the underlying cause of Rett syndrome with a one-time treatment, and these interim safety data from the NGN-401 trial provide an important milestone on the path to realizing its potential for patients, said Bernhard Suter, MD, medical director of the Blue Bird Circle Rett Center at Texas Childrens Hospital and principal investigator in the clinical trial.

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Nadofaragene Firadenovec Sets the Stage for Gene Therapies in NMIBC – OncLive

Posted: May 18, 2024 at 2:42 am

As investigators parse out the unique mechanism of action of nadofaragene firadenovec-vncg (Adstiladrin), which has set the stage as the first gene therapy approved for bladder cancer, additional gene therapies with unique mechanisms of action are under development in high-risk, BCG-unresponsive nonmuscle-invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC).1

The proposed mechanism of action of nadofaragene firadenovec is likely due to the pleiotropic nature of interferon-2b (IFN-2b) and its direct and indirect antitumor activities, according to investigators. Vikram M. Narayan, MD, explained that the agent includes a nonreplicating adenovirus that delivers the payload of IFN-2b. IFN is an immune-stimulatory agent, and [clinicians] have previously given IFN in the bladder with BCG or by itself but have found limited efficacy. Nadofaragene firadenovec uses the adenoviral vector to deliver IFN directly into urothelial cells to hijack the machinery of urothelial cells to produce the IFN-2b protein. Then that goes on to have immunomodulatory effects that result in tumor and cell deathyou can trigger apoptosis [and] antiangiogenesis; there are various pathways.

He added, We see cell death with TRAIL-mediated apoptosis, antiangiogenesis, and increased antitumor activity of natural killer cells, which preferentially target bladder cancer cells. All those things taken together result in cell death.

Narayan practices at Emory University Hospital and serves as director of urological oncology at Grady Memorial Hospital, and is an assistant professor in the Department of Urology at Emory University School of Medicine and a member of the Winship Cancer Institute in Atlanta, Georgia. He highlighted that the polyamide surfactant and synthetic excipient Syn3 is a key component of the gene therapy (Figure 1).1

Figure 1. Mechanism of Action of Nadofaragene Firadenovec1

Syn3 is a detergent that helps break down the glycosaminoglycan layer of the bladder, [which] was historically thought to be why giving IFN alone would not work. One of the reasons why we can do every-3-month dosing with nadofaragene firadenovec is because were creating a bit of a bioreactor in the bladder of the patient to produce this IFN-2b protein, he explained.

As approximately 60% to 70% of patients with high-risk NMIBC are likely to experience recurrence and 10% to 45% may have disease progression to muscle-invasive or metastatic bladder cancer within 5 years, gene therapies provide a potential way to improve outcomes for patients. When looking at the standard of care with BCG, approximately one-third of this patient population will not respond to BCG, and among those who do experience an initial response, approximately 50% will experience recurrence or progression.1

[Nadofaragene firadenovec] is a gene therapy drug, but its a nonreplicating adenoviral vector. It has local effects, Narayan said. In studies, there was not systemic absorption or systemic effects noted. Understanding the immune-modulating effects of the drug [is important].

In the phase 3, single-arm trial supporting nadofaragene firadenovecs approval, Study CS-003 (NCT02773849), the complete response (CR) rate at 3 months for adult patients with BCG-unresponsive NMIBC enrolled in the carcinoma in situ (CIS) cohort (n = 103) was 53.4% (95% CI, 43.3%- 63.3%). In the high-grade Ta or T1 disease cohort (n = 48), 72.9% (95% CI, 58.2%-84.7%) of patients were free of highgrade recurrence at 3 months.

Referencing the CIS cohort, Narayan said, Theres still more work to be done. We would like to see those numbers [improve], but one of the hopes we have is to stimulate interest and discussion in ways that nadofaragene firadenovec can be augmented, combined with other therapies potentially, or maybe even redosed to improve that long-term CR rate.

The duration of CR or high-grade recurrence-free survival for patients treated with nadofaragene firadenovec was 9.69 months (95% CI, 9.17-not estimable [NE]) in the CIS cohort vs 12.35 months (95% CI, 6.67-NE) in the high-grade Ta or T1 cohort. At 12 months, 24.3% (95% CI, 16.4%-33.7%) of patients with CIS were free from high-grade recurrence compared with 43.8% (95% CI, 29.5%-58.8%) of those with high-grade Ta or T1 disease. Notably, 45.5% of patients who reached a CR at 3 months in the CIS cohort maintained this through 12 months.

In the trial, patients received 75 mL of the gene therapy via intravesical instillation3 1011 viral particles/ mLonce every 3 months for up to 12 months or until unacceptable toxicity or recurrent high-grade NMIBC.3 In the absence of high-grade recurrence, patients were allowed to continue nadofaragene firadenovec every 3 months. Notably, the median number of prior BCG instillations was 12 (range, 8-18), and the median number of nadofaragene firadenovec instillations was 2 (range, 1-5).4

Clinicians will likely be very familiar with the handling and other operational pieces [of nadofaragene firadenovec], Narayan noted. The one thing that clinicians need to know is its shipped frozen on dry ice [and] does need to be thawed and then used within 24 hours, or it needs to be stored frozen until its used. In terms of handling, its very similar to BCG.

Narayan also noted that nadofaragene firadenovec was well tolerated and that the safety profile of the agent observed in CS-003 was similar to that of BCG. In the safety population (n = 157), grade 1 or 2 adverse effects (AEs) included instillation site discharge (33%), fatigue (24%), bladder spasm (20%), micturition urgency (19%), hematuria (17%), dysuria (16%), chills (16%), and pyrexia (15%). No grade 4 or 5 AEs were observed and only 1.9% of patients discontinued treatment while on study (Figure 2).4

Figure 2. Adverse Effects Observed in Study CS-003

Data that supported the approval came from 98 patients in the BCG-unresponsive CIS cohort of CS-003; patients achieved a CR rate of 51% (95% CI, 41%-61%) with a median duration of response (DOR) of 9.7 months (range, 3 to 52+), and 46% of responding patients remained in CR for at least 1 year.3

The American Urological Association [AUA] guidelines recently included nadofaragene firadenovec as an option for patients with BCG-unresponsive NMIBC. Patients are now coming to us in the clinic asking about this treatment, to know more about it and have access to it, Narayan added.

The AUA guidelines include nadofaragene firadenovec under the Intravesical Therapy; BCG/Maintenance; Chemotherapy/BCG Combinations section. The section notes that a physician may recommend nadofaragene firadenovec as an alternative intravesical therapy for patients with persistent or recurrent high-grade NMIBC who are not candidates for or do not want cystectomy within 12 months of completion of adequate BCG therapy; BCG therapy includes 2 induction courses or 1 induction course plus 1 maintenance cycle. Alternatives to the gene therapy include clinical trials or intravesical chemotherapies such as gemcitabine or docetaxel.5

Furthermore, Narayan noted that the question of whether redosing nadofaragene firadenovec [is ideal remains]. In the original trial, if therapy failed or patients had recurrence of high-grade disease, they would not get additional treatments; they would be switched to an alternative therapy because when we were designing [the CS-003] trial, the interest was to make sure that patients were safe and not given treatments that wouldnt work. Now that we have data on efficacy, its reasonable to see whether a second treatment does offer benefit if a patient recurs initially. Theres justification for that [because] patients will often get repeat induction BCG, and some of the other drugs that are being developed in this space also have redosing regimens if they have failures.

The investigational engineered oncolytic immunotherapy cretostimogene grenadenorepvec (CG0070) received both fast track and breakthrough therapy designations from the FDA in December 2023 for the treatment of patients with high-risk BCG-unresponsive NMIBC with CIS with or without Ta or T1 tumors.6 Cretostimogene grenadenorepvec was designed to preferentially replicate in retinoblastoma gene pathwaydefective cells that are present in most urothelial carcinomas and trigger an antitumor immune response. Modifications made for tumor selectivity and potency to the agent include the insertion of an E2F1 promoter and the insertion of the gene for the cytokine granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulation factor7 (Figure 3).8

Figure 3. Alternative Agents to BCG Therapy in NMIBC8

Findings from the phase 3 BOND-003 trial (NCT04452591) revealed that 75.7% of patients with high-risk BCG-unresponsive NMIBC treated with cretostimogene grenadenorepvec (n = 66) achieved a CR; the 3- and 6-month CR rates were 68.2% and 63.6%, respectively.9 Additionally, interim results from the phase 2 BOND-002 trial (NCT02365818) demonstrated this patient population (n = 45) experienced a 47% (95% CI, 32%-62%) CR rate at 6 months. Cretostimogene grenadenorepvec was well tolerated with no grade 4 or 5 AEs observed; grade 3 treatment-related effects included dysuria (3.0%) and hypotension (1.5%).10

The agent is currently under evaluation for NMIBC in the phase 3 PIVOT-006 trial (NCT06111235), which is currently recruiting patients in the US and Canada. It is also being examined in combination with pembrolizumab (Keytruda) in the active phase 2 CORE-001 trial (NCT04387461).11

Gene therapy is emerging as a [potential] significant option for patients who have BCG-unresponsive disease and bladder cancer in general, Narayan said. Were likely going to see more of [these therapies], and we may even look at different payloads [of nadofaragene firadenovec in particular], but the bladder is a natural cavity for safe gene therapy treatment options because its easily accessible via catheter, you can provide contact-based delivery of the drugs that youre using, and we know from preclinical data that for many agents, the absorption systemically is very low, assuming there isnt a raw surface or something along those lines or active hematuria. For that reason, [in] bladder cancer at least in the antitumor space, theres a lot of interest in gene therapy. With the approval of nadofaragene firadenovec, well likely see other agents emerge as well in this space.

Detalimogene voraplasmid (EG-70) has also emerged in the gene therapy space, receiving fast track designation from the FDA in 2020 for BCG-unresponsive NMIBC.12 The nonviral gene therapy is a nanoparticle formulation of plasmids; the plasmid encodes IL-12 and activators of the innate immune receptor RIG-I. The agent elicited a 3-month CR rate of 71% in patients with CIS (n = 17), according to data presented at the 2023 American Society of Clinical Oncology Genitourinary Cancers Symposium from the phase 1/2 LEGEND trial (NCT04752722).

The biggest unmet need is having a durable treatment for BCG-unresponsive NMIBC. The concern that patients have [occurs] when we tell them they [did not respond to] BCG and all the other treatments we have are not as efficacious or they involve life-altering surgery in the form of removal of the bladder. When we compare this with pembrolizumab, which was also FDA approved, the big advantage that nadofaragene firadenovec offers is that its given in the bladder intravesically and dosed once every 3 months, Narayan explained. [This] is a much more favorable dosing regimen for patients than once a week for 6 weeks [with other treatment options].

Pembrolizumabs January 2020 approval for patients with BCG-unresponsive, highrisk NMIBC with CIS with or without papillary tumors was based on data from the phase 2 KEYNOTE-057 trial (NCT02625961). Patients in this population (n = 96) experienced a CR rate of 41% (95% CI, 31%-51%) with a median DOR of 16.2 months (range, 0.0+ to 30.4+).14

Although options for patients with high-risk, BCG-unresponsive NMIBC have expanded for patients who are ineligible for or decline cystectomy to include intravesical chemotherapy, pembrolizumab, and nadofaragene firadenovec, combination therapies may be on the horizon. Narayan noted that it is worthwhile to consider combination strategies with nadofaragene firadenovec to augment responses.

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Nadofaragene Firadenovec Sets the Stage for Gene Therapies in NMIBC - OncLive

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