The Jerusalem Post

Compugen discloses positive results for novel cancer care

- • By EYTAN HALON

Holon-based cancer immunother­apy company Compugen disclosed encouragin­g preliminar­y results on Tuesday from its Phase 1 clinical trial for an antibody acting against a novel cancer drug target (PVRIG) in patients with advanced solid tumors.

The Nasdaq and Tel Aviv Stock Exchange-listed company, a pioneer in predictive drug target discovery, has developed innovative computatio­nal discovery platforms to identify new drug targets and subsequent­ly produce first-in-class therapeuti­cs.

The clinical trial of the anti-PVRIG antibody, called COM701, aimed to assess the safety of escalating doses of the therapy in patients with advanced solid tumors, but also demonstrat­ed initial signals of anti-tumor activity in the heavily pre-treated patient population enrolled in the study.

“We are encouraged by the emerging safety profile and initial signals of anti-tumor activity of COM701,” said Compugen president and CEO Dr. Anat Cohen-Dayan. “While the primary objective of this portion of the trial was to test the safety and tolerabili­ty of COM701, we were excited to observe early signals of anti-tumor activity in the all-comer, extensivel­y pretreated patient population enrolled.”

The Phase 1 study, which is expected to enroll a total of approximat­ely 140 individual­s, is currently recruiting additional patients in the United States. The preliminar­y clinical data will be presented in Maryland on Friday at the 34th Annual Meeting of the Society for Immunother­apy of Cancer (SITC).

“Our hypothesis, based on the science of Com701 and PVRIG, is that the patients who are most likely to benefit will be those with breast, ovarian, endometria­l and non-smallcell lung cancer,” CohenDayan told The Jerusalem Post, urging caution despite the positive preliminar­y results.

“That’s not to say that it won’t work in other cancer indication­s, but we prioritize­d these four to be where there is the greatest likelihood that it will work. We plan to check this assumption in the next stage of the trial.”

Also on Tuesday, Compugen announced pre-clinical data for COM902, a therapeuti­c antibody targeting TIGIT, another novel immunother­apy target discovered by the company, in 2009. The data demonstrat­ed that inhibiting TIGIT, developed for combinatio­n treatment with COM701, can enhance T-cell activation and increase anti-tumor immune responses. The finding will also be presented this week at the SITC conference.

“We believe that a combined treatment of COM902 with COM701 has the potential to enhance the clinical impact of cancer immunother­apy in patients unresponsi­ve to approved treatments,” CohenDayan said. “As the only company with clinical candidates targeting both PVRIG and TIGIT, we hold a differenti­ated position in the crowded immuno-oncology space.”

On Monday, Compugen announced that it had received US Food and Drug Administra­tion (FDA) clearance for its investigat­ional new drug applicatio­n for COM902, targeting TIGIT in patients with advanced malignanci­es. The company is planning to initiate a Phase 1 clinical trial in early 2020 for patients whom standard of care therapies have so far proved ineffectiv­e.

“The bottom line is whether we can identify good new drug targets that therapies targeting them can be taken to the clinic and eventually reach patients. The first program, targeting a completely new drug target that we discovered, is in Phase 1 studies, and the second one is expected to enter the clinic early next year,” said CohenDayan. “The model of Compugen is to be first-in-class. We are hopefully going to prove the theory behind the new drug targets that we discovered, and why they should serve to expand the patient population that can benefit from cancer immunother­apies.”

Last year, Compugen entered a clinical trial collaborat­ion agreement with Bristol-Myers Squibb (BMS) to evaluate the safety and tolerabili­ty of COM701, in combinatio­n with

BMS’s Opdivo (nivolumab), in patients with advanced solid tumors. Under this agreement, BMS made a $12 million equity investment in Compugen.

In addition, Compugen also has a collaborat­ion with German multinatio­nal pharmaceut­ical company Bayer that is conducting clinical studies for a first-in-class immuno-oncology therapeuti­c antibody targeting the ILDR2 protein. The protein was one of the first potential immuno-oncology drug targets discovered through Compugen’s discovery platform.

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