Innovent Biologics reported Monday that 20.8% of advanced lung cancer patients saw their tumors shrink at least 30% after receiving an experimental bispecific antibody that’s meant to boost T cell activity.
In the Phase 1 study, the company included 125 total patients in the efficacy analysis. And it spotlighted the results from a subgroup of squamous non-small cell lung cancer patients, whose cancers typically start in the central part of the lungs, at the World Conference on Lung Cancer on Monday.
In squamous NSCLC patients who received lower doses of the therapy, 6 of 27 (22%) had a confirmed partial response. Of those who received a higher dose, 9 of 29 (31%) had a confirmed response. Innovent also reported one unconfirmed partial response in the higher dose cohort.
The median progression-free survival in the low-dose group was 5.5 months, with a median follow-up of 7.5 months, while the median PFS in the higher-dose group was not reached.
In a statement, Innovent SVP Hui Zhou described the follow-up period for the higher 3 mg/kg dose group as short and noted that “more mature data” are expected.
Innovent said similar responses were seen in patients regardless of PD-L1 expression. The experimental drug, known as IBI363, is a bispecific that is designed to block the PD-1/PD-L1 pathway while activating the IL-2 pathway.
Jianya Zhou, the trial’s investigator and a professor at the Zhejiang University School of Medicine, said in a statement that effective treatment options for NSCLC patients who have failed immunotherapy are limited, and this therapy could “help overcome immune resistance.”
About 20% of patients experienced treatment-related adverse events that were grade 3 or higher, and 6% experienced a treatment-related event that resulted in them discontinuing treatment. The most common treatment-related adverse events were arthralgia, or joint soreness; anemia; hyper- and hypothyroidism; and rash, according to Innovent.
The company said the study is ongoing to determine the dose it plans to move into Phase 2 testing.