MOLOGEN AG: Treatment with renal cancer therapy MGN1601 generates clear survival benefit for patients


– First evaluation of survival times provides results that exceed expectations
– Immunological active principle proven in an exemplary manner
– Data presented at the annual meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research

In a further evaluation of the phase I/II renal cancer study with MGN1601, the biotechnology company MOLOGEN AG has analyzed the survival times of patients enrolled in the study and the first data of the accompanying immunological tests. The result: patients that were able to completely finish the twelve-week therapy scheme scheduled in the study protocol with the study drug MGN1601 (PP group) have an unexpectedly clear survival benefit in comparison with patients that had to terminate their study therapy early (non-PP group).

Thus far, the ten patients in the PP group already survived more than ten months on average. Since only one patient in this group has died by now, this parameter will continue to improve. In the non-PP group, the median survival time is a little over two months; all nine patients had died at the latest after six months. With regard to historical clinical data and statistical models, a median survival time of five to seven months was expected. Hence, this was clearly exceeded in this study.

Furthermore it is very remarkable that for two patients who are currently being treated in the extension phase of the study at fixed intervals, the disease has not progressed in over ten months.

Immunological principle proven in an exemplary manner
With the evaluation of immunological data it was possible to prove in an exemplary manner that those patients that completed the entire planned three-month treatment cycle with MGN1601 in accordance with the study protocol have generated a clear immune response. The strength of the immune response increased with continued treatment. With these results, the mechanism of action demonstrated in preclinical studies could also be confirmed in patients. In the view of MOLOGEN AG, the observed positive effects with respect to overall survival can thus be attributed to the treatment with MGN1601.

Concurrently to the evaluation of the study, MOLOGEN has also applied for scientific advice at the Paul-Ehrlich-Institut, to discuss, amongst others, questions relating to the design of future clinical studies. Subsequent clinical studies with MGN1601 will then be applied for.

Prof. Dr. Burghardt Wittig, Chairman of the Scientific Advisory Board of MOLOGEN AG, states: “As a scientist, I am delighted that our molecular biological and immunological concepts for active therapeutic vaccination against cancer were able to prove their efficacy so impressively with MGN1601. I find it particularly noteworthy that we were now able to clearly show what we had hitherto only been able to assume: active immunotherapies against cancer, like MGN1601, need time before they can show their effect. Tragically, all patients for whom the therapy with MGN1601 came too late have already died, while all other patients – apart from one, who survived for more than eleven months – are still alive today.”

Dr. Matthias Schroff, Chief Executive Officer at MOLOGEN AG, adds: “It is a very positive surprise that our second oncological product candidate MGN1601 is already showing such excellent efficacy data in phase I/II. Thereby, our product pipeline has taken a great step forward. For this reason I am very confident with regard to our further clinical studies, both for MGN1703, our immunomodulator, which we are applying in the field of colorectal cancer and lung cancer, and also for MGN1601, our renal cancer therapy.”

Presentation at the annual congress of the American Association for Cancer Research
MOLOGEN project manager Ekaterina Weith is to present the data together with Prof. Dr. Burghardt Wittig (Chairman of the Scientific Advisory Board of MOLOGEN AG) at the annual meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) as part of a “Late-Breaking Poster Session” on April 3, 2012 in Chicago, USA (poster no. LB-233). The AACR is the world’s oldest and largest scientific organization that is dedicated to all aspects of high-quality, innovative cancer research.

About the phase I/II clinical study (ASET study)
Within the framework of the ASET study, patients receive a total of eight treatments with MGN1601 over a period of twelve weeks. The patients are examined after completion of the treatment phase. If the patients have at least responded to the treatment with stabilization of the originally progressing cancer disease after twelve weeks, they can be treated further within an extension phase. In this extension phase, the patients receive up to five further treatments distributed over two years at increasing intervals. As reported, patient recruitment was finalized ahead of schedule after acceptance of 19 patients into the study, since it had already been possible to achieve the primary goal of the study, namely to verify the safety and tolerability of the compound.

About MGN1601
The tumor therapy with MGN1601 is a therapeutic vaccination to fight advanced renal cancer and to prevent their recurrence after operation and medical treatment.

MGN1601 is a cell-based cancer therapy based on genetically modified tumor cells. A cell bank established by MOLOGEN AG from human renal cancer cells in accordance with pharmaceutical regulations forms the basis. These cancer cells from the cell bank, foreign (allogeneic) to the patient, are “genetically modified” with additional genetic information with the help of four different MIDGE® vectors developed by MOLOGEN and are combined with the DNA immunomodulator dSLIM®, also developed by MOLOGEN, as an adjuvant.

The active principle of the cell-based gene therapy involves induction of a cross-reaction of the patient’s immune system against their own cancer cells after the immune system has learned what cancer cells typically look like via its response to the genetically-modified foreign cancer cells.

About renal cancer
Renal cancer is the most frequently occurring malignant tumor of the kidneys with 200,000 incidences annually throughout the world. According to the Robert Koch Institute, there are 15,000 patients affected by this disease in Germany alone. Among these patients, around 30% already have distant metastases at the time of initial diagnosis, which significantly reduces the success of a therapy. The tumor is known for not responding to radiation or chemotherapy. The use of medications which are currently available on the market are accompanied by considerable side effects. Thus there is still a great medical need for new, effective medications with low side effects for the treatment of renal cancer. Exactly this approach is followed with MGN1601.

Orphan Drug Status
The cell-based gene therapy against renal cancer has received the Orphan Drug Status from the European Medical Agency (EMA). This enables MOLOGEN AG to market the product exclusively within the European Union within a period of ten years. The Orphan Drug Program of the European Union is supposed to promote the development of therapies for rare and serious diseases.

About MOLOGEN AG
MOLOGEN AG, a German biopharmaceutical company with headquarters in Berlin specializes in the research and development of innovative medications on the basis of DNA structures. The activities focus on numerous product developments which are relevant to the immune system; on the one hand vaccines against infectious diseases and on the other hand cancer medications. MOLOGEN AG is globally one of the few biotechnology companies with well tolerated DNA-based cancer treatment in the clinical development phase.

The stocks of MOLOGEN AG are listed in the Prime Standard of the German stock exchange (ISIN DE0006637200).

Memberships in associations:
Biotechnologieverbund Berlin-Brandenburg (bbb) e.V. | BIO Deutschland e.V. | DECHEMA – Society for chemical technology and biotechnology e.V. | German industrial association of biotechnology (DIB) | Association for the Promotion of Science and Humanities in Germany | Association of German biotechnology companies (VBU) | Association of researching manufacturers of pharmaceuticals e.V. (VFA) | Association of the chemical industry e.V. (VCI)

MIDGE®, dSLIM® and MOLOGEN® are registered trademarks of MOLOGEN AG.

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Acceleron’s ACE-041 Combined with a VEGF Inhibitor Shows Potent Activity in Preclinical Model of VEGF-Resistant Renal Cell Carcinoma


— Enhanced Anti-Tumor Activity Achieved via Combination of Two Distinct Anti-Angiogenic Drugs presented at the AACR Annual Meeting 2012 —

CAMBRIDGE, Mass.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Apr 3, 2012 – Acceleron Pharma, Inc., a biopharmaceutical company developing protein therapeutics for cancer and orphan diseases, announced that collaborators at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center presented preclinical data today at the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) Annual Meeting 2012 which showed that ACE-041, an activin-receptor like kinase 1 (ALK1) receptor ligand trap, when used in combination with sunitinib, inhibited tumor growth in a model of VEGF-inhibitor-resistant renal cell carcinoma (RCC).

Anti-angiogenesis therapies, including the VEGF-inhibitor sunitinib, are currently the standard of care in metastatic RCC. While these treatments cause tumor shrinkage and extend progression-free survival in many patients, the responses are typically short-lived due to the development of drug resistance. Mice bearing A498 and 786-0 human RCC xenografts that receive anti-VEGF treatment mirror this clinical experience with a period of tumor stabilization that is followed by the restoration of angiogenesis and resumption of growth despite continued drug administration. The preclinical data, presented by Rupal Bhatt, M.D., Ph.D., Assistant Professor, Hematology-Oncology, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center provide evidence that combining two distinct anti-angiogenic drugs, a VEGF inhibitor and ACE-041, may produce an enhanced therapeutic effect in the treatment of metastatic RCC.

Preclinical Study Description and Results

Two renal cell carcinoma cell lines (A498 and 786-O) were used in a mouse xenograft model. In each tumor cell line, mice treated with the combination of ACE-041 and sunitinib slowed tumor growth to a greater extent than either agent alone. Additionally, the combination of ACE-041 and sunitinib prevented the restoration of tumor perfusion during the resistant phase of sunitinib-alone treatment and lowers tumor perfusion to a greater extent than sunitinib-alone.

“These data demonstrate that blocking ALK1 ligand signaling, either alone or in combination with other anti-angiogenesis therapies, may be an attractive strategy for treatment of renal cell carcinoma,” said Dr. Bhatt.

“There is increasing evidence that combining anti-angiogenesis inhibitors with distinct mechanisms of action, such as a VEGF inhibitor with an ALK1 ligand trap, like ACE-041, can more effectively inhibit tumor angiogenesis,” said Matthew Sherman, M.D., Chief Medical Officer at Acceleron. “We believe this approach holds great promise and we’re excited to pursue Phase 2 studies of ACE-041 in combination with VEGF inhibitors later this year.”

About ACE-041

ACE-041 is an ALK1 ligand trap that inhibits angiogenesis by preventing BMP9 and BMP10, members of the TGFβ protein superfamily, from interacting with activin receptor-like kinase 1 (ALK1), a receptor found on proliferating endothelial cells. ACE-041 inhibits ALK1 signaling, which is required for the development of mature, functional capillary networks. In animal studies, treatment with ACE-041 inhibits tumor angiogenesis and growth. In a clinical study of patients with advanced, refractory solid tumors, treatment with ACE-041 was generally well-tolerated and antitumor activity was observed, resulting in tumor shrinkage and stabilization of disease. ACE-041 is being studied in a Phase 2 clinical trial in patients with squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck.

About Acceleron

Acceleron is a privately-held biopharmaceutical company committed to discover, develop, manufacture and commercialize novel protein therapeutics for orphan diseases and cancer. Acceleron’s scientific approach takes advantage of its unique insight to discover first-in-class therapies based on the TGF-β protein superfamily. Acceleron utilizes proven biotherapeutic technologies and capitalizes on the company’s internal GMP manufacturing capability to advance its therapeutic programs rapidly and efficiently. The investors in Acceleron include Advanced Technology Ventures, Alkermes, Avalon Ventures, Bessemer Ventures, Celgene, Flagship Ventures, MPM BioEquities, OrbiMed Advisors, Polaris Ventures, QVT Financial, Sutter Hill Ventures and Venrock. For further information on Acceleron, please visit http://www.acceleronpharma.com.

Contact: Acceleron Pharma:
Steven Ertel, 617-649-9234
Chief Business Officer
or
Suda Communications LLC
Maureen L. Suda, 585-387-9248
Media

Posted: April 2012

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