First in Human Phase I/II clinical trial of ONC-392: Preserving CTLA-4 immune tolerance checkpoint for safer and more effective cancer immunotherapy

NIH RePORTER · NIH · R44 · $400,000 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

Summary A major paradigm in cancer immunotherapy is to use checkpoint inhibitors to break regulatory mechanisms that guard the host against autoimmune diseases. CTLA-4-targeting immunotherapy was the first example to establish this paradigm. However, the clinically tested anti-CTLA-4 antibodies exhibit suboptimal efficacy but high toxicity. Our preclinical study demonstrate that this outcome is predicated by inactivating the CTLA-4 checkpoint that plays important role in immune tolerance protecting body against autoimmune diseases. Importantly, our studies have demonstrated that immunotherapy-related adverse events (irAE) and the cancer immunotherapeutic effect (CITE) represent distinct and therapeutically separable activities of anti-CTLA-4 antibodies. The irAE is attributable to inactivation of CTLA-4 checkpoint, while the CITE is effective through selective depletion of regulatory T cells (Treg) in tumor microenvironment. We hypothesize that a safer and more effective CTLA-4-targeting immunotherapy should preserve rather than inhibit the CTLA-4 checkpoint while enhancing the efficacy and selectivity of Treg-depletion in tumor microenvironment. In preparation to test this ground-breaking hypothesis clinically, we have generated a new generation of anti- CTLA-4 antibodies that preserving CTLA-4 immune checkpoint by avoiding lysosomal degradation of CTLA-4. The new antibody, ONC-392, has dramatically lower irAEs in humanized mouse model and significantly higher potent activity in depleting tumor-infiltrating regulatory T cells, resulting in more effective CITE. We have conducted IND-enabling studies, including GMP-grade manufacturing and GLP toxicity in non-human primate. We have also sought FDA feedback on our clinical plan through a pre-IND meeting. These progresses allowed us to propose a Fast Track Phase 1/2 SBIR application to determine safety and efficacy of ONC-392 in human cancer patients. With the support of the SBIR grant, we will carry out an open label Phase I/II clinical study to test the safety, pharmacokinetics (PK), and efficacy of ONC-392 as a single agent and in combination with Pembrolizumab in advanced solid tumors and non-small cell lung cancer patients. Our proposed study will not only confirm safety of ONC-392, but also provide clinical proof-of-concept data for our new paradigm of CTLA-4 targeting cancer immunotherapy.

Key facts

NIH application ID
10010179
Project number
1R44CA250824-01
Recipient
ONCOIMMUNE, INC.
Principal Investigator
Christian Diego Rolfo
Activity code
R44
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2020
Award amount
$400,000
Award type
1
Project period
2020-04-03 → 2020-09-30