AIM ImmunoTech Provides Summary of Ampligen® Data Supporting
Synergistic Potential with Checkpoint Blockade Therapies
AIM ImmunoTech Inc. (NYSE: American AIM) (“AIM” or
the “Company”), an immuno-pharma company focused on the research
and development of therapeutics to treat multiple types of cancers,
immune disorders, and viral diseases, including COVID-19, the
disease caused by the SARS-CoV-2 virus, today provided a summary of
clinical data that support the synergistic potential of Ampligen®
(rintatolimod) with checkpoint blockade therapies.
Thomas Equels, Chief Executive Officer of AIM,
commented, “We have amassed a growing body of encouraging Ampligen
data to date through close collaborations with leading KOLs at
preeminent institutions. These data have not only affirmed but
significantly evolved our belief that Ampligen as a single agent
therapy, as well as in combination with the latest powerful cancer
therapies, has the potential to become a breakthrough therapy for
some of the most difficult to treat and deadly cancers. We are
going to continue working tirelessly to advance Ampligen towards
approval and commercialization with the goal of bringing much
needed hope to patients and solutions to treating physicians around
the world.”
Ampligen is the Company’s dsRNA drug currently
being developed for globally important cancers. Ampligen has shown
therapeutic synergy with checkpoint inhibitors, including
increasing survival rates and efficacy, in the treatment of animal
tumors when used in combination with checkpoint blockade therapies.
The first detection of Ampligen’s synergistic potential with
checkpoint blockade therapeutics was witnessed in pre-clinical
mouse models of melanoma and pancreatic cancers. Additionally, the
Company now has data from two clinical studies — in advanced
recurrent ovarian cancer and triple negative breast cancer — that
indicate that the drug may have similar anti-tumor activity in
humans.
“Working with AIM, our Pancreatic Cancer R&D
team at the Buffett Cancer Center did extensive pre-clinical
research demonstrating in animal models that Ampligen had a
significant therapeutic benefit in treating pancreatic cancer. This
March, Prof. C.H.J. van Eijck and his team at Erasmus MC published
data in the journal Cancers showing Ampligen alone was associated
with extended overall survival in late-stage pancreatic cancer of
19 months. Just last week, at AACR, publications of clinical data
by UPMC’s Dr. Bob Edwards in advanced recurrent ovarian cancer, and
Roswell’s Dr. Pawel Kalinski in both stage 4 triple negative breast
cancer and stage 4 colorectal cancer, strongly supported the
advance of Ampligen into human trials for patients in pancreatic
and other cancers where checkpoint drugs are not effective,” stated
Michael (Tony) Hollingsworth, PhD, Associate Director, Basic
Research, University of Nebraska Medical Center. “Checkpoint drugs
are powerful and important therapies, but only work on ‘hot’ tumors
visible to the immune system, not ‘cold’ tumors that are
immune-silent. Ampligen appears, from these data, to turn cold
tumors into hot tumors and create significant therapeutic potential
for a successful second round of Ampligen plus checkpoint therapy
for those who do not respond to checkpoint therapy alone,” added
Robert Edwards, MD, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine and
University of Pittsburgh Cancer Institute.
“The two ongoing Roswell Park clinical trials we
recently presented findings from represent milestones in our
10-year-long NIH and DoD-funded research program aiming to convert
immuno-resistant ‘cold’ tumors into ‘hot’ ones that would be more
sensitive to immunotherapy. Seeing both studies successfully meet
their predetermined efficacy endpoint — selective increase of
cytotoxic T lymphocyte markers in tumor tissues — Roswell Park
plans to move forward with critical studies assessing therapeutic
efficacy of the combination of a rintatolimod-based
chemokine-modulating regimen with PD-1 inhibitors, cancer vaccines
and/or adoptive T cell therapies in solid tumors. Observations from
our preclinical studies suggest that this multipronged strategy may
benefit patients with multiple solid-tumor lesions, which are
difficult to target individually,” commented Pawel Kalinski, MD,
PhD, Jacobs Family Endowed Chair of Immunology, Chief of the
Division of Translational Immuno-Oncology and Senior Vice President
for Team Science at, Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center.
Recurrent Ovarian Cancer: ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT03734692
The investigator-initiated, Phase 2, single-arm,
efficacy/safety trial to evaluate the effectiveness of combining
intensive locoregional intraperitoneal (IP) chemoimmunotherapy of
cisplatin with IP Ampligen (TLR-3 agonist) and IV infusion of the
checkpoint inhibitor pembrolizumab (KEYTRUDA®) (IVP) for patients
with recurrent platinum-sensitive ovarian cancer is being conducted
by the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center (UPMC). The Phase 2
trial is designed to enroll up to 45 subjects using Ampligen in
combination with pembrolizumab to test the combinational activity
of checkpoint blockade therapy where Ampligen is administered by
injection in the peritoneal cavity where the tumor is located.
The Company’s recently announced positive
interim results suggesting induction of T cell activation together
with clinical responses may indicate prognostic evidence of tumor
environment reprogramming that we do not see with chemotherapy
alone and which may extend survival. A total of 17 patients have
been enrolled and 13 were evaluable for response in the ongoing
Phase 2 trial. The observed clinical responses were: 2 complete
responses (15.4%), 3 partial responses (23.1%), 3 stable disease
(23.1%), 5 progressions (38.4%) for a clinical benefit rate
(CR+PR+SD) of 61.6%. From 13 patients, 77 IP wash samples were
collected at serial time points. Measurements in IP washes revealed
an acute increase in granzyme B (GZMB), perforin, TNF alpha, CXCL9,
CXCL10 and CXCL11 after treatment (p<0.05). Longitudinal data
revealed a progressive increase in some biomarkers in the
locoregional environment; CXCL9, CXCL10, CXCL11, perforin and TNF
alpha were all increased from baseline levels at cycle 1 to
baseline of cycle 6 (p<0.05). CXCL12 was also increased acutely
after treatment (p<0.05).
The cytokine CXCL12 observed to increase acutely
after treatment functions as a chemotactic for lymphocytes. The
cytokines CXCL9-11 active in antitumor responses in modulation of
the tumor microenvironment (TME) to favor cytotoxic T cells
required for anti-tumor cell immune activity versus regulatory T
cells (Tregs), which function to protect non-tumor “self” tissue.
Granzymes are serine proteases released by cytoplasmic granules
within cytotoxic T cells and natural killer (NK) cells. They induce
programmed cell death (apoptosis) in the target cell, eliminating
cells that have become cancerous. Perforin is a protein, which
creates tubules in the cell membrane allowing cell lysis. Perforin
is a key effector molecule for T-cell- and natural
killer-cell-mediated cytolysis.Triple Negative Breast Cancer:
ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT03599453A Phase 1 study was conducted at
Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center in patients with
metastatic triple-negative breast cancer using chemokine modulation
therapy, including AIM ImmunoTech Inc.’s drug candidate, Ampligen®,
as well as interferon α-2b and pembrolizumab.In the study, six
evaluable patients (33-75 years) with mTNBC received 6 doses of
Ampligen (200 mg i.v.), IFN α-2b (INTRON-A; 20MU/m2 i.v.) and COX-2
inhibitor (celecoxib; 2 x 200 mg, p.o.) over 2 weeks, with tumor
biopsies obtained before (within 6 days) and after (within 5 days)
CKM. All patients received follow-up pembrolizumab (200 mg, i.v, Q3
weeks). Uniform increase of immune markers upon treatment was
observed: CD8 mRNA (6.1-fold; p-0.034), GZMB mRNA (3.5-fold;
p=0.058), ratios of CD8 /FOXP3 and GZMB/FOXP3 (5.7-fold; p=0.036,
and 7.6-fold; p=0.024 respectively), thus successfully meeting the
pre-determined primary endpoint in the study (increase in CD8 in
TME). In addition, an increase in CTL attractants CXCL10 (2.6-fold;
p=0.104) and CCL5 (3.3-fold; p=0.019) was observed. In contrast,
Treg marker FOXP3 or Treg attractants CCL22 or CXCL12 were not
enhanced. Three patients had stable disease lasting 2.4, 2.5 and
3.8 months, as of data cut off September 1, 2021. An additional
patient (non-evaluable) had a partial response (breast tumor
autoamputation) with massive tumor necrosis in the post-CKM
biopsy.Results from this proof-of-concept study indicated that
short-term systemic chemokine modulating regimen (CKM) followed by
pembrolizumab is generally well tolerated and selectively enhances
local cytotoxic T-lymphocytes (CTLs) infiltration in the tumor
microenvironment (TME), providing rationale for concurrent CKM and
PD1 blockade in prospective Phase 2 studies.
Based on the pre-clinical and human clinical
data seen to-date, the Company believes Ampligen has the potential
to expand into treatment of solid tumors.
About AIM ImmunoTech Inc.
AIM ImmunoTech Inc. is an immuno-pharma company
focused on the research and development of therapeutics to treat
multiple types of cancers, immune disorders, and viral diseases,
including COVID-19, the disease caused by the SARS-CoV-2 virus. For
more information, please visit www.aimimmuno.com.
Cautionary Statement
This press release contains forward-looking
statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation
Reform Act of 1995 (the “PSLRA”). Words such as “may,” “will,”
“expect,” “plan,” “anticipate” and similar expressions (as well as
other words or expressions referencing future events or
circumstances) are intended to identify forward-looking statements.
Many of these forward-looking statements involve a number of risks
and uncertainties. Among other things, for those statements, the
Company claims the protection of safe harbor for forward-looking
statements contained in the PSLRA. The Company does not undertake
to update any of these forward-looking statements to reflect events
or circumstances that occur after the date hereof. Many of the
studies discussed above were proof of concept and will require
further studies. Studies and trials are subject to many factors
including lack of regulatory approval(s), lack of study drug, or a
change in priorities at the institutions sponsoring other trials.
Significant additional testing and trials will be required to
determine whether Ampligen will be an effective treatment of cancer
or otherwise, and no assurance can be given that this will be the
case.
Investor Relations ContactJTC
Team, LLCJenene Thomas 833-475-8247AIM@jtcir.com
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