— Pooled Analysis of Early-Phase Studies Indicates Melapuldencel-T, an Investigational Immunotherapy for Metastatic Melanoma Targeting Cancer Initiating (Stem) Cells, May Increase Survival Rates Significantly for Patients With Advanced-Stage Disease —
— 5-Year Overall Survival of Melapuldencel-T Cohort Was 33 Percent vs. 20 Percent for Patients Treated With Irradiated Autologous Tumor Cells for This Subset of Patients —
— Phase 3 Study Planned for 2014, With Special Protocol Assessment —

NEW YORK, NY, USA I May 29, 2014 I NeoStem, Inc. (NBS) (“NeoStem” or the “Company”), a leader in the emerging cellular therapy industry, today announced results of a pooled analysis indicating that Melapuldencel-T, an investigational patient-specific immunotherapy for metastatic melanoma, may increase survival rates significantly for patients at the most advanced stages of the disease. The findings will be presented on Sunday, June 1 in a poster by Robert O. Dillman, MD, study author and Vice-President, NeoStem Oncology, at the 50th Annual Meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO), taking place in Chicago.

The analysis to be presented at ASCO includes a subset of pooled data from three melanoma clinical trials, conducted successively from 1990-2011. Two of these trials (one of which was controlled and one of which was not) studied Melapuldencel-T. The new pooled analysis indicates significantly better five-year overall survival rates in patients treated with Melapuldencel-T than those treated with the comparator therapy (autologous tumor cells that had been irradiated to render them inactive) for the subset of patients who still had evidence of disease after prior treatment with one or more standard therapies.

“This subset analysis lends further support to the view that tumor-initiating cells are viable targets for therapeutic interventions like Melapuldencel-T, aiming for better overall survival, even for patients in the most advanced stages of malignant melanoma,” said Dr. Dillman. “In addition, the product may have significant safety and tolerability advantages over existing therapies.”

Melapuldencel-T is an autologous immunotherapy intended to eliminate cancer-initiating (stem) cells capable of causing disease recurrence. The therapy employs the patient’s own tumor cells and dendritic cells (a type of immune cell), along with granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor (GM-CSF, a natural growth factor that stimulates white blood cells in the body). The patient’s dendritic cells are mixed with the patient’s tumor cells to create the therapeutic agent, which is then suspended in GM-CSF for injection into the patient.

Melapuldencel-T was developed by California Stem Cell, Inc., which was acquired by NeoStem in May 2014. NeoStem is initiating a Phase 3 study of Melapuldencel-T later this year under a Special Protocol Assessment agreement with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), and the therapy has been granted fast-track designation by the agency as well.

“Melapuldencel-T has the clear potential to advance immunotherapy for melanoma patients who urgently need new options for extending survival,” said Douglas W. Losordo, MD, FACC, FAHA, Chief Medical Officer, NeoStem. “NeoStem is excited to continue investigating this promising therapy in a large-scale Phase 3 study beginning this year.”

“Presentation as a vaccine (Melapuldencel-T) of a large array of patient-specific, cancer-initiating (stem) cell antigens appear to enable the immune system to respond to the very cells capable of causing disease progression resulting in the observed improved survival. These data further support investigation of Melapuldencel-T and the need to personalize therapy because the relevant cancer initiating cell antigens appear to differ from patient to patient,” said Andrew L. Pecora, MD, FACP, CPE, Director and Chief Visionary Officer, NeoStem and a melanoma therapy clinical investigator.

Pooled Analysis Details and Results

The ASCO poster is based on further analysis of previously published data from 170 patients enrolled in three studies: a single-arm Phase 2 trial of irradiated, proliferating, autologous tumor cells1, a single-arm Phase 2 trial of Melapuldencel-T 2, and a randomized trial directly comparing the two treatments.3 Twenty-seven comparator-treated patients were excluded to decrease interpatient differences associated with poor survival. Remaining patients were classified as NED or non-NED.

A previously published pooled analysis of these studies showed that metastatic melanoma patients treated with autologous dendritic cells loaded with antigens from autologous proliferating tumor cells (Melapuldencel-T) had better overall survival than patients injected with irradiated, proliferating, autologous tumor cells.4 A survival benefit for Melapuldencel-T was also seen in the subset of patients who had no evidence of disease (NED) at the time of treatment. Five-year overall survival for all patients was 50 percent for the Melapuldencel- T group vs. 32 percent for patients receiving irradiated, proliferating, autologous tumor cells (p=0.004). In the subset of patients with NED, five-year overall survival was 73 percent for the Melapuldencel-T group vs. 43 percent for patients receiving irradiated, proliferating, autologous tumor cells (p=0.015).4 The toxicity data demonstrated no Grade IV (life threatening toxicity) and only one Grade III (allergic reaction attributed to the GM-CSF) event in the pooled data. No significant adverse effects were reported regarding hematopoietic cells or renal function, hepatic function, or patient performance status.

The analysis described in the ASCO poster addresses whether better survival was also associated with Melapuldencel-T in the non-NED patients (n=73). Survival curves were generated for 39 patients treated with Melapuldencel-T and 34 patients treated with the comparator, and compared by log-rank test. Five-year overall survival for all 73 non-NED patients was 27 percent (median 25.5 months). No patients were lost to follow up; 15/23 survivors had been followed for at least 5 years. A higher proportion of patients in the Melapuldencel-T cohort than in the comparator cohort had M1c disease (the most advanced subclass of stage IV melanoma, in which the tumor has metastasized to vital organs other than the lungs) (44 percent vs 35 percent, p=0.071). Overall 5-year survival was better in the Melapuldencel-T cohort than in the comparator cohort (33 percent vs 20 percent, p=0.025). In the further subset of patients who had measurable disease by RECIST (Response Evaluation Criteria In Solid Tumors) (n=32), overall five-year survival was better for Melapuldencel-T (20 percent vs 10 percent, p=0.039).

About Melapuldencel-T

Melapuldencel-T, developed by California Stem Cell, Inc. and now NeoStem’s most advanced product candidate and foundation for its Targeted Immunotherapy Program in oncology, is a late stage novel proprietary cancer cell therapy. NeoStem plans to initiate, before the end of 2014, a pivotal Phase 3 trial of Melapuldencel-T, an autologous, melanoma initiating (stem) cell immune based therapy intended to eliminate the tumor cells capable of causing disease recurrence. Melapuldencel-T has been approved to enter this trial with a Special Protocol Assessment (“SPA”) from the Food and Drug Administration (“FDA”) and has received Fast Track designation for metastatic melanoma, as well as Orphan Drug designation. The pooled results may not be predicative of our future Phase 3 results, in part because all patients will be treated using current day standards of care, and the Phase 3 study design will not include any uncontrolled data or cross-study comparisons, allow patients to be excluded from the analysis after data are collected, or permit pooling of different studies.

Initially directed at patients with metastatic melanoma, Melapuldencel-T uses the patient’s isolated and purified tumor stem cells to train the immune system to identify and eliminate cancer stem cells, the root cause of tumor formation and the key drivers of tumor escape, tumor genesis, self-renewal and recurrence in a broad spectrum of solid tumor cancers.

The platform on which Melapuldencel-T is created, in which autologous dendritic cells are pulsed with irradiated tumor cells (DC/TC), is also being investigated for other indications including hepatocellular carcinoma and other immune responsive tumor types.

About Melanoma

Melanoma is the most lethal form of skin cancer, and is most often caused by unrepaired DNA damage to skin cells from UV radiation. Rates of melanoma have been rising for at least 30 years. It is estimated that approximately 76,100 new cases of melanoma will be diagnosed in the U.S. in 2014, and that 9,710 people will die from the disease.5

About NeoStem, Inc.

NeoStem is a leader in the emerging cellular therapy industry, pursuing the preservation and enhancement of human health globally through the development of cell based therapeutics that prevent, treat or cure disease by repairing and replacing damaged or aged tissue, cells and organs and restoring their normal function. The business includes the development of novel proprietary cell therapy products as well as a revenue-generating contract development and manufacturing service business. This combination has created an organization with unique capabilities for cost effective in-house product development and immediate revenue and cash flow generation.

SOURCE: NeoStem