CARGO Therapeutics Announces Phase 1 Clinical Study of Firi-cel CAR T-Cell Therapy Published in The Lancet

Cargo Therapeutics, Inc.
Cargo Therapeutics, Inc.

In This Article:

  • Ongoing Phase 1 study informed dose selection for CARGO’s currently enrolling, potentially pivotal Phase 2 clinical study, FIRCE-1 of firicabtagene autoleucel (firi-cel)1, in patients with relapsed or refractory (R/R) large B-cell lymphoma (LBCL)

  • Notable patient subset analyses show durability of Complete Response (CR), underscoring promising efficacy in a high-risk, heavily pretreated population with advanced disease

  • Most recent, longer-term follow-up data for Stanford Medicine’s Phase 1 presented at the 2024 European Hematology Association (EHA) Congress, continued to show promising efficacy, durability and safety profile of firi-cel

SAN CARLOS, Calif., July 10, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- CARGO Therapeutics, Inc. (Nasdaq: CRGX), a clinical-stage biotechnology company positioned to advance next generation, potentially curative cell therapies for cancer patients, today announced that The Lancet has published favorable data from a Phase 1, single-center clinical study (NCT04088890) by Stanford Medicine (Stanford), evaluating firi-cel, a CD22 CAR T-cell therapy CARGO in-licensed for patients with LBCL whose disease is R/R to CD19 CAR T-cell therapy. The clinical data presented in the publication is as of May 22, 2023.

“This first peer-reviewed publication of Stanford’s Phase 1 study data in The Lancet further validates firi-cel’s clinically transformative potential in addressing the high unmet needs of LBCL patients. Currently, approximately 60% of these patients treated with a CD19 CAR T-cell therapy experience disease relapse or progression and have a median survival of less than six months,” said Gina Chapman, President and Chief Executive Officer of CARGO Therapeutics. “We congratulate Stanford and the study’s investigators on these impactful findings, demonstrating the achievement of favorable complete response rate and long-term durability of response in this heavily pretreated, advanced-disease patient population, many of whom were refractory to all prior lines of therapy. We believe that the patient subset analyses further support the study design of our potentially pivotal Phase 2 program, which continues to progress as planned and is on track for interim analysis in first half 2025.”

The Lancet publication titled “CD22-Directed CAR T-Cell Therapy for Large B-Cell Lymphomas Progressing After CD19-Directed CAR T-cell Therapy: A dose-finding Phase 1 study,” demonstrated for all patients treated (n=38), an Overall Response Rate (ORR) and CR rate of 68% and 53%, respectively, at a median follow-up of 23.3 months. Notably, there were no significant differences observed between ORR and CR across subgroups, and of the patients with a history of refractory disease to all prior therapies, 36% (4 of 11) achieved CR.