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Old 06-21-2009, 08:15 PM   #23
Rich66
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June 18, 2009 08:00 AM Eastern Daylight Time
ImmunoCellular Therapeutics Announces Filing of Key Patent Application Relating to Cancer Stem Cell Technology


LOS ANGELES--(BUSINESS WIRE)--ImmunoCellular Therapeutics, Ltd. (OTC: IMUC.OB) (IMUC), a biotechnology company, today announced the filing of a provisional U.S. patent application relating to its novel vaccine technology targeting cancer stem cells. The patent application relates to new peptide candidates that may significantly expand the potential target patient population for the company’s cancer stem cell vaccine product candidate, ICT-121. Many cancer therapies are limited by their ability to be used only in patients with certain human leukocyte antigen (HLA) types. Identification of the new peptides for use in IMUC’s vaccine should enable the use of IMUC’s product candidate in patients with many different HLA types. The Company currently has 25 issued or pending patents.
“This patent application supports our broad and growing portfolio of intellectual property. ICT-121 is an immunotherapy that targets cancer stem cells - a very exciting approach given the product’s mission of destroying cancer cells at their root as well as its proven ability in preclinical studies to be highly targeted for destroying cancer cells,” stated Manish Singh, Ph.D., president and chief executive officer of IMUC. “This product may have applicability to multiple types of cancer, but our first clinical target will be glioblastoma. We anticipate filing an Investigational New Drug (IND) application next quarter to begin a Phase I clinical trial of ICT-121.”
About ICT-121
ICT-121 is IMUC’s cancer stem cell (CSC) vaccine product candidate that consists of a peptide to stimulate a cytotoxic T-lymphocyte (CTL) response to CD133, which is generally overexpressed on the CSCs. It is designed as an “off-the-shelf” vaccine. IMUC will initially evaluate it in a Phase I clinical study for glioblastoma which the company expects to file an IND for in the third quarter of this year. While glioblastoma will be the initial target for ICT-121, CD133 is also overexpressed in colon cancer, breast cancer, liver cancer, prostate cancer, multiple myeloma and melanoma, providing many potential cancer targets for this CSC vaccine in the future.
About ImmunoCellular Therapeutics, Ltd.
IMUC is a Los Angeles-based clinical-stage company that is developing immune based therapies for the treatment of brain and other cancers. The company’s “off the shelf” therapeutic vaccine product candidate targeting cancer stem cells for multiple cancer indications is expected to enter clinical trials during the fourth quarter of 2009. IMUC is in pre-clinical development of a monoclonal antibody product candidate for the treatment of small cell lung cancer and pancreatic cancer, and is also evaluating its platform technology for monoclonal antibody discovery using differential immunization for diagnosing and treating multiple types of cancer. To learn more about IMUC, please visit www.imuc.com.




ImmunoCellular (IMUC.OB): Taking Aim At The Root Of Cancer
http://www.istockanalyst.com/article...icleid/3438149
ImmunoCellular Therapeutics (IMUC.OB) is an emerging cancer immunotherapy company that is developing therapeutic and diagnostic product candidates taking aim at the root cause of the disease, cancer stem cells (CSCs), based on two distinct technology platforms - active (cancer vaccines) and passive (monoclonal antibodies or mAbs). This approach is in the early stages of development, but has the potential to become a disruptive, paradigm shifting therapeutic approach to the treatment of cancer. CSCs are resistant to standard treatments such as chemotherapy and radiation, but numerous bio-markers on these cells have been identified which can be used to develop targeted mAbs and CSC immunotherapy products.
Although CSCs account for a small proportion of the cells in a given tumor, a growing body of scientific literature suggests CSCs drive the process of tumor growth and recurrence (even after the disease is undetectable and thought to be eradicated). Current therapeutic options such as radiation therapy or chemo target the proliferating cells, which form the bulk of any tumor mass while the CSCs lie dormant and unaffected at the root of the disease. Click here for a link to several overview articles on CSCs at MIT's Technology Review website.
The Company is developing an off-the-shelf (i.e. does not require obtaining cells from the patient as part of the manufacturing process) stem cell cancer vaccine (ICT-121) which targets a protein marker called CD133 which is typically expressed only on cancer stem cells and not on normal cells. CSCs are responsible for the prolific growth of primary and metastatic tumors and these cells must be eliminated for the complete eradication of a tumor to prevent recurrence of the disease (which may occur after months or years of being free of cancer).
While glioblastoma (GBM, a deadly type of brain cancer) will be the initial target for ICT-121, CD133 is also over-expressed in a wide variety of cancers such as colon cancer, breast cancer, liver cancer, prostate cancer, multiple myeloma and melanoma. In late June, IMUC announced an agreement with Formatech, Inc. to manufacture the Company's CSC vaccine product candidate (ICT-121) for an upcoming Phase 1 clinical trial in early 2010 targeting GBM. The deal includes a provision for Formatech to prepare the cancer vaccine vials for the clinical trial in a FDA-compliant GMP (Good Manufacturing Practices) environment.
The Phase 1 study for ICT-121 will involve 20 patients with GBM receiving five treatments each with final data from the trial anticipated after about 18 months (e.g. 3Q11), since the median time to recurrence in GBM patients is only 6.9 months. The Company is focusing on the following deadly forms of cancer which represent unmet medical needs with the following incidence of new cases each year according to American Cancer Society statistics for 2008: brain (21,800), small-cell lung (215,020), and pancreatic cancer (37,680). These cancers represent an unmet medical need with a 15% five-year survival rate for this trio, compared to a five-year survival rate for breast cancer that is nearly 6X higher. A major problem is the recurrence of disease after initial treatment which is IMUC's target by focusing on residual disease (CSCs) following surgery in combination with standard radiation/chemo treatments.
IMUC uses peptides (the building blocks of proteins comprised of amino acid chains) in combination with another compound called an adjuvant to elicit a targeted immune response by T cells to destroy CSCs. This T cell response targets CSCs with a specific bio-marker (CD133 positive CSCs) that has been identified in a number of cancer types such as those outlined earlier. The goal of the Company's cancer vaccine approach is to combine conventional treatment(s) such as chemo or radiation with a product such as ICT-121 to target the residual CSCs to eliminate or delay the recurrence of cancer following treatment.
The current treatment for brain cancer (GBM) typically involves a combination of surgery, radiation treatment, and chemotherapy which may lead to tumor cell DNA mutations or other changes leading to treatment-resistance and/or tumor recurrence. At ASCO 2009, IMUC presented promising Phase 1 clinical data for ICT-107, which is the Company's dendritic cell-based cancer vaccine product candidate for the treatment of GBM (the most common and malignant type of brain cancer). The data presented at ASCO supplement the preliminary data from the completed study that IMUC initially reported in December 2008. The study enrolled 19 patients, including 16 with newly-diagnosed and three with recurrent disease. IMUC will seek a partnership to fund the future clinical development of ICT-107 as it focuses its resources on ICT-121 and cancer mAbs.
ICT-107 is the Company's patient-specific therapeutic cancer vaccine (in contrast to ICT-121 as an off-the-shelf vaccine) product candidate that consists of dendritic cells (immune system cells also referred to as antigen presenting cells or APCs that present molecules to the immune system to elicit a reaction) which are obtained from the patient's blood and programmed with tumor antigens which in turn provide a target for the immune system. Patients in the Phase I trial received three intradermal injections of ICT-107 at two-week intervals.
Seven of the 16 newly-diagnosed patients demonstrated stable disease with median progression-free survival of 64 weeks, and three of these seven patients have progression-free survival (PFS) exceeding two years, compared to the historical median PFS time of newly-diagnosed glioblastoma of just 30 weeks. ICT-107 was well tolerated with no significant adverse events (with no grade 3/4 adverse events and only mild side effects) reported in the study. Nine of the 16 newly-diagnosed patients had progressive disease with a median PFS of 39 weeks and median survival of 56 weeks. The three patients enrolled with recurrent disease exhibited disease progression, but still exhibited extended survival times of 34, 47, and 59 weeks.

Surasak Phuphanich, M.D., the principal investigator of the trial and a senior author of the ASCO presentation, stated that, "With a historical median PFS time of 6.9 months in GBM, we are encouraged to see a median PFS time of 14.2 months (57.5 weeks) in this newly-diagnosed glioblastoma (16 patients) population, and furthermore, it is exciting to see the correlation between immune response and survival given that the goal of ICT-107 is to elicit a cancer-specific immune response." A total of 15 patients in the trial were evaluated for immune responses, and six of them had a significant immune response to at least one tumor-associated antigen.
In early 2008, IMUC acquired a technology platform from Molecular Discoveries, LLC which referred to as DIAAD (Differential Immunization for Antigen and Antibody Discovery) for the rapid discovery of antigen targets to develop mAbs for the diagnosis and treatment of a wide variety of conditions with a focus on the detection and treatment of multiple myeloma, small cell lung cancer, pancreatic cancer, and ovarian cancer. The mAbs that IMUC acquired from Molecular Discoveries have been created to recognize certain bio-markers (antigens) which are highly specific to cancer cells and not expressed on normal cells to allow for the targeted treatment and detection of cancer cells.
The Company's mAb pipeline includes the following: (1) ICT-109 is a humanized mAb in development for the diagnosis of SCLC and pancreatic cancers; (2) ICT-037 is in preclinical development for therapeutic and diagnostic applications for colon cancer, ovarian cancer, and multiple myeloma; and (3) ICT-69 is in preclinical development for multiple myeloma and ovarian cancer.
The BioMedReports.com stock research section has recently been updated to include a research report for IMUC published by Griffin Securities on 4/27/09 with a buy rating and $2.50 price target (12-month) in addition to the most recent corporate presentation for the Company.
The report presents both a discounted cash flow and transactions analysis models, which value IMUC shares at $2.50 and $3.10, respectively. On 8/18/09, IMUC's President and CEO, Manish Singh, Ph.D., presented an overview of the Company's business and strategy at the Southern California Investor Conference which I have uploaded in PDF format to provide a single file with all of the slides and images along with a link to the audio transcript from the event. Click here to visit IMUC's page on Facebook.
IMUC is also one of 10 components in the Mentor Capital Cancer Immunotherapy (CI) Index, which has posted a gain of about 23% since its inception six weeks ago. The equal-weight CI Index tracks the following stocks: Mentor Capital (MNTR.PK) (as a public-traded proxy for tracking Quantum Immunologics), Dendreon (NASDAQNDN), ImmunoCellular Therapeutics, Antigenics (NASDAQ:AGEN), Biovest (BVTI.PK), Celldex Therapeutics (NASDAQ:CLDX), Oncothyreon (NASDAQ:ONTY), Northwest Biotherapeutics (NWBO.OB), CEL-SCI Corp. (AMEX:CVM), and Generex Biotechnology (NASDAQ:GNBT) ( as a proxy for its wholly-owned immunotherapeutic subsidiary, Antigen Express).
The CI Index is primarily a subset of my actively managed Cancer Diagnostic & Therapeutic (Dx/Tx) Micro-Cap Index, which reflects a cross-section of emerging cancer companies with market caps below $250 million at the time of index inclusion. In addition, Mentor Capital expects to update the CI Index on a weekly basis at its website.
As of the Company's most recent SEC 10Q filing on 8/14/09, IMUC had 14.65 million (M) shares of common stock outstanding, 9.7M options outstanding (at weighted average exercise price of $1/share or about 2X the current stock price of $0.55 as of 8/25/09), a market cap of $8M, zero debt, $2.3M in cash + investments, and a current cash burn rate of just $0.5M per quarter. In addition, IMUC has a strong intellectual property (IP) position, including seven issued patents and 17 pending applications that cover composition of matter, therapeutic treatments, and diagnostics related to CSC mAbs. Early next year (1Q10), IMUC expects to make an IND filing with the FDA for permission to begin human clinical trials for a Phase 1 study of its off-the-shelf cancer stem cell vaccine candidate (ICT-121).
The Company plans to raise $4-5M (sufficient to fund operations for 2.5 years) through a PIPE transaction with warrant coverage to fund Phase 1 trials of ICT-121 in GBM, pancreatic, and lung cancer; in addition to developing mAbs and additional vaccine candidates targeting CSCs. Any pending catalysts in the form of preclinical/clinical data, IND clearance to begin the Phase 1 trial for ICT-121, and development partnerships will have a major impact on IMUC given its low share count (less than 15M shares outstanding) and conservative valuation (market cap of about $8M) which ignores the Company's strong IP position as a pioneer in the emerging field of both active (vaccines) and passive (mAbs) immunotherapy product candidates focused on the root cause of cancer and its recurrence (CSCs).
Because of the very low cash burn rate of about $0.5M/quarter and $2.3M in cash + investments (sufficient to fund operations through at least mid-2010), IMUC has the luxury of waiting for higher stock prices before raising additional capital as the market becomes aware of the Company's prospects following expected catalysts before year-end that include partnership(s) for its CSC-targeting mAbs and feasibility data for ICT-109 in the detection of SCLC. Beyond 2009, value-enhancing catalysts include preliminary clinical data for ICT-121 (e.g. immune response data), a potential partnership to fund further clinical development of ICT-107, the generation of additional CSC mAbs and vaccine product candidates, and additional partnerships for mAbs beyond the deal expected to occur before year-end.




IMUC’s ICT-107 vaccine product candidate targets cancer stem cells

21. January 2010 04:40


ImmunoCellular Therapeutics (OTC.BB: IMUC) today announced the results of a study in which it was shown that certain specific antigens are highly expressed on cancer stem cells (CSCs). This suggests that IMUC’s lead cancer vaccine product candidate ICT-107, which targets those antigens, may effectively target not only the cells that make up the bulk of certain cancerous tumors, but also the CSCs that are widely believed to give rise to them and cause their recurrence.
“We believe that the ability to target cancer stem cells is critical to preventing disease recurrence.”
The CSCs used in IMUC’s study were isolated from the tumors of five patients with glioblastoma multiforme (GBM), the most common and aggressive type of brain cancer. These CSCs were found to have significantly higher expressions of three antigens targeted by ICT-107—Her-2/neu, AIM2, and TRP-2—than the cells that make up the bulk of the tumor.
“This new evidence that ICT-107 may arm the immune system against cancer stem cells— in addition to the cells that make up the rest of the tumor—builds on the strong data from our Phase I study of the vaccine in glioblastoma,” said John Yu, MD, IMUC’s Chairman and Chief Scientific Officer. “We believe that the ability to target cancer stem cells is critical to preventing disease recurrence.”
Manish Singh, PhD, President and CEO of IMUC, added, “Cancer stem cells are like the roots of weeds—they may be undetectable after the tumor is resected, but if they are not effectively targeted, the tumor will almost certainly come back. We believe the ability of ICT-107 to target cancer stem cells meaningfully differentiates it from other cancer vaccines in development.”
In a recent Phase I study of ICT-107 in GBM, newly diagnosed patients who received the vaccine demonstrated a 12-month increase in progression-free survival (PFS) after surgery. This compared favorably with the historical median PFS of 6.9 months observed with standard treatment with surgery, radiation and chemotherapy. Seven of the 16 patients who participated in the study continue to survive with no disease progression after more than two years.
ICT-107 is a dendritic-cell based vaccine that works by activating a patient’s immune system against specific tumor-associated antigens. This is accomplished by extracting dendritic cells from a patient, loading them with the antigens, and reintroducing them to the patient’s body to trigger an immune response.
The six tumor-associated antigens used in ICT-107 are AIM2, Her-2/neu, gp-100, MAGE-1, TRP-2 and IL13Ra2. These antigens are highly expressed in GBM as well as a number other types of cancer, including breast, pancreatic, colon and melanoma. ICT-107 may, therefore, be applicable to multiple cancer types.
SOURCE ImmunoCellular Therapeutics, Ltd.


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