Data demonstrates tumor-clearing ability of Inovio’s dBiTE

PLYMOUTH MEETING, PA, USA I April 18, 2019 I Inovio Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (NASDAQ: INO) announced today the company’s novel DNA-encoded Bi-specific T Cell Engagers (dBiTEs) generated potent anti-tumor activities and cleared established tumors in preclinical studies. Inovio’s dBiTE results were published in a JCI Insight article entitled, “DNA-encoded bi-specific T cell engagers and antibodies present long-term antitumor activity,” by Inovio and its collaborators at The Wistar Institute. JCI Insight is a peer-reviewed journal published by the American Society for Clinical Investigation dedicated to well-executed preclinical and clinical research studies.

For this study, Inovio developed a novel dBiTE targeting the HER2 molecule which was tested in therapeutic models for the treatment of ovarian and breast cancers. Importantly, just a single dose of Inovio’s HER2 dBiTE resulted in high levels of corresponding BiTE in mice for up to four months, exceeding what is typically displayed with the currently approved BiTE’s short half-life of only a few hours. The HER2 dBiTE treatment effectively killed HER2-expressing tumor cells resulting in a near-complete tumor clearance.

Dr. J. Joseph Kim, Inovio’s President and CEO, said, “Inovio’s dBiTEs represent game-changing advancements in immuno-oncology. Leveraging Inovio’s in vivo synthetic nucleic expression platform, we have shown that just one dose of Inovio’s dBiTE could generate corresponding BiTEs at high levels for several months, demonstrating a dramatic advantage over conventional BiTEs. Our dBiTE technology could be utilized to overcome the greatest shortcomings of traditional BiTEs, particularly its incredibly short half-life. Based on these promising preclinical results, we plan to rapidly advance our first dBiTE candidate into clinical testing, as well as develop more cancer tumor-targeting dBiTEs as partnering candidates.”

BiTEs are a class of artificial bi-specific monoclonal antibodies that has the potential to transform the immunotherapy landscape for cancer. They direct a host’s immune system, more specifically the T cells’ cytotoxic activity, against cancer cells. In layman’s terms, BiTEs are like a double-sided tape that binds to a tumor and to a cancer-killing T cell. One domain of the BiTE binds to the targeted tumor (like HER2 or CD19 expressing cells) while the other engages the immune system by binding directly to CD3 molecules on T cells. This double-binding activity drives T cell activation directly at the tumor resulting in a killing function and tumor destruction.

The biggest drawback of conventional protein-based BiTEs is their short half-life. The BiTEs have a half-life of only two hours, which requires patients to undergo continuous intravenous infusion for several weeks to maintain therapeutic levels, making treatment adherence more difficult and resulting in high levels of infusion-associated adverse events. In addition, just like other traditional monoclonal antibodies, conventional BiTEs are also manufactured in bioreactors, typically requiring costly large-scale manufacturing facility development and laborious production as well as having to deal with improper product folding and stability. They must also be kept and distributed frozen at all times. These difficulties collectively have limited the development and commercialization of conventional BiTEs as only one licensed product is currently on the market (BLINCYTO® (blinatumomab)).

Inovio’s dBiTE is a new transformative application of Inovio’s dMAbplatform. The dBiTEs share many advantages of Inovio’s dMAbs as they both are composed of engineered DNA sequences which encode antibody fragments. When administered by Inovio’s CELLECTRA® delivery device, the patient’s own cells become the factory to manufacture functional BiTES encoded by the delivered dBiTE sequences. Inovio’s dBiTEs are developed with novel syntheic nucleics design using plasmid vectors and unique formulations allowing for rapidity of development, long-term product stability at refrigeration, ease of validated and scalable manufacturing and deployability.

About Inovio’s dBiTE program

Inovio’s dBiTEs are able to target the cytotoxic T cells to tumors by engaging proteins expressed in the tumor surface. The current preclinical models have shown proof that DNA technologies are in an advantageous position to launch a more ambitious BiTE program. The tumor-binding domain can be modified to engage multiple targets, of which preclinical data targeting HER2 and CD19 has been presented. Of these, the CD19dBiTE can be used to target B cell cancers and the HER2dBiTE can be used to treat advanced breast, ovarian, gastric, esophageal and endometrioid cancers.

About Inovio Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

Inovio is a late-stage biotechnology company focused on the discovery, development, and commercialization of DNA-based immunotherapies and vaccines that transform the treatment and prevention of cancer and infectious disease. Inovio’s proprietary technology platform applies antigen sequencing and DNA delivery to activate potent immune responses to targeted diseases. The technology functions exclusively in vivo, and has been demonstrated to consistently activate robust and fully functional T cell and antibody responses against targeted cancers and pathogens. Inovio’s most advanced clinical program, VGX-3100, is in Phase 3 for the treatment of HPV-related cervical pre-cancer. Also in development are Phase 2 immuno-oncology programs targeting HPV-related cancers, bladder cancer, and glioblastoma, as well as platform development programs in hepatitis B, Zika, Ebola, MERS, and HIV. Partners and collaborators include AstraZeneca, Regeneron, Roche/Genentech, ApolloBio Corporation, The Wistar Institute, The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the University of Pennsylvania, Parker Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy, CEPI, DARPA, GeneOne Life Science, Plumbline Life Sciences, NIH, HIV Vaccines Trial Network, National Cancer Institute, Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, Drexel University, and Laval University. For more information, visit www.inovio.com.

SOURCE: Inovio Pharmaceuticals