Adicet Bio Reports Positive Clinical Update from ADI-001 Phase 1 Trial in Relapsed/Refractory Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma (NHL)
Adicet Bio, Inc., a clinical stage biotechnology company discovering and developing first-in-class allogeneic gamma delta chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell therapies for cancer, announced that an abstract detailing updated safety and efficacy data from the Company’s Phase 1 study of ADI-001 for the potential treatment of relapsed or refractory B-cell Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma (NHL) was made available as part of the 2022 American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) Annual Meeting, to be held June 3-7, 2022. The abstract provides a summary of clinical data as of a February 14, 2022, data-cut date.
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“We look forward to presenting updated data on safety, efficacy, pharmacokinetics and longer follow up, including available data from patients enrolled in dose level 3, at the upcoming 2022 ASCO Annual Meeting with a coinciding press release as well as a company webcast later that afternoon.”
“We are very pleased to see the continued positive data resulting from our ongoing Phase 1 clinical trial evaluating ADI-001 in relapsed/refractory NHL. We believe that our allogeneic gamma delta CAR T cell therapy approach may improve complete response rate and durability by the complementary innate, adaptive and CAR-mediated anti-tumor response,” said Chen Schor, President and Chief Executive Officer of Adicet. “We look forward to presenting updated data on safety, efficacy, pharmacokinetics and longer follow up, including available data from patients enrolled in dose level 3, at the upcoming 2022 ASCO Annual Meeting with a coinciding press release as well as a company webcast later that afternoon.”
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Data highlights as of the February 14, 2022 data-cut date included in the ASCO abstract were as follows:
- Six evaluable patients were enrolled in dose level 1 (DL1; 30 million CAR+ cells) and dose level 2 (DL2; 100 million CAR+ cells), 33% (2/6) were female and the median age was 62 years (range 45-75). There were five patients with large B-cell lymphoma and one with mantle cell lymphoma. Indolent lymphomas, such as follicular lymphoma, are currently not enrolled in the study.
- Overall, the patients were heavily pretreated with a median number of prior therapies of 3.5 (range 2-5) and had a poor prognostic outlook as indicated by the median International Prognostic Index (IPI) score of 3.5 (range 2-4). One patient previously progressed following two prior treatments with autologous anti-CD19 CAR T cell therapy (lisocabtagene maraleucel) prior to receiving ADI-001.
- At Day 28, the overall response rate (ORR) and the complete response (CR) rate based upon independent central reading by PET/CT were 67% (4/6 patients).
- As of the February 14, 2022 data-cut date, of the four patients who achieved CR after treatment with ADI-001:
- Two patients remained in CR with ≥ three months post-treatment follow-up, including a triple-hit large B-cell lymphoma patient who had previously progressed following two administrations of autologous anti-CD19 CAR-T and a total of five lines of prior therapy.
- As previously disclosed, one patient, a 66-year-old female who had responded to ADI-001, developed COVID-19 related pneumonia approximately two and a half months after ADI-001 administration and later died of complications from it, unrelated to ADI-001. This patient was previously reported as a partial response (PR) by local radiological assessment and has been assessed as a CR by independent central reading.
- One patient with a CR had not reached the three-month assessment date as of the data-cut date for the ASCO abstract submission.
- Safety data from the trial at the February 14, 2022 data-cut date were consistent with the previously reported well tolerated profile, with no occurrence of Grade ≥ 3 Cytokine Release Syndrome (CRS), Immune Effector Cell-Associated Neurotoxicity Syndrome (ICANS) or Graft vs Host Disease. No dose-limiting toxicities were documented.
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