ImmunityBio Announces Study of ANKTIVA? in Combination with the AdHER2DC Cancer Vaccine as a Potential Therapy to Control Endometrial Cancer

In This Article:

  • The QUILT 502 trial is testing ImmunityBio’s N-803 (ANKTIVA?) in combination with the AdHER2DC investigational vaccine for endometrial cancer, a gynecological cancer with lower survival rates and limited effective post-second-line treatment.

  • The AdHER2DC vaccine targets the HER2 protein, which is elevated in 30% of endometrial cancer.

  • ANKTIVA, recently approved for BCG-unresponsive non-muscle invasive bladder cancer carcinoma in situ, is designed to activate the immune cells that kill tumor cells to provide long-term immune response.

  • The Phase1/2 interventional study will enroll 60 participants with HER2-positive endometrial cancer (EC), who will also receive pembrolizumab and lenvatinib, two FDA approved drugs for endometrial cancer.

  • The study is expected to be completed in 2026.

 

CULVER CITY, Calif., August 06, 2024--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Immunotherapy company ImmunityBio, Inc. (NASDAQ: IBRX), today announced the opening of a clinical trial to study ANKTIVA? (nogapendekin alfa inbakicept-pmln) together with the investigational AdHER2DC vaccine (autologous dendritic cells transduced with HER2 expressing adenovirus), in individuals with HER2-expressing endometrial cancer. It marks the latest trial involving ANKTIVA, the company’s IL-15 superagonist immune enhancer, to evaluate ANKTIVA as an agent to replace the short-term activity of checkpoint inhibitor immunotherapies with long-term effectiveness. ANKTIVA was recently approved by the FDA for BCG-unresponsive non-muscle invasive bladder cancer CIS with or without papillary tumors.

This Phase 1/2 QUILT 502 trial (NCT06253494) sponsored by the National Cancer Institute, part of the National Institutes of Health, will study whether the AdHER2DC vaccine in combination with ANKTIVA, pembrolizumab (checkpoint inhibitor), and lenvatinib (kinase inhibitor) can be safely administered in combination and provide preliminary clinical efficacy before a larger, more definitive study.

Endometrial cancer is the most common gynecological cancer in the U.S., and affects more than 65,000 women each year with incidence peaking around 50-60 years of age. The 5-year overall survival rate in patients with metastasis is around 20 percent; treatment options after the second-line treatment are limited.

The AdHER2DC vaccine targets the HER2 protein, which is elevated in 30% of patients with endometrial cancer and in more than 50% of high risk subtypes. The AdHER2DCs are autologous, using each participant’s own blood cells obtained through apheresis, a "loop" where blood is removed from one vein, passed through a machine to filter out target cells and then returned to the patient through another vein. The AdHER2DC is a proprietary agent of the NCI and it will be manufactured at the NIH Clinical Center for each study participant. The single agent AdHER2DC demonstrated safety profile and immunogenicity in a phase 1 clinical trial conducted by the NCI. The first treatment cycle is 28 days and each cycle after that will be 21 days. All participants will receive the vaccine and the two FDA approved drugs pembrolizumab and lenvatinib, and some participants will receive ANKTIVA.