Topics

  1. Shinshu University and BrightPath Conclude Joint R&D Agreement for CAR-T Cell Therapy for Solid Tumors
Research
2019/09/12

Shinshu University and BrightPath Conclude Joint R&D Agreement for CAR-T Cell Therapy for Solid Tumors

20190912_fig_CAR-T2.png

Tokyo, August 19, 2019 — National University Corporation Shinshu University and BrightPath Biotherapeutics Co., Ltd., an immuno-oncology company, announced the conclusion of a joint research and development agreement aiming at the clinical development of CAR-T cell therapy for solid tumors.

A cancer antigen called “HER2” is overexpressed in many cases of solid tumors. While anti-HER2 antibody drugs have already been put into practical use, HER2 continues to draw attention as a promising target antigen in cancer treatment. In cooperation with Shinshu University, BrightPath will start preparations for an investigator initiated trial treating patients with osteosarcoma using HER2-CAR-T cells as an investigational drug. These cells recognize HER2 antigens, and are produced using a method established by Professor Yozo Nakazawa, Department of Pediatrics, Shinshu University School of Medicine, Assistant Professor Shigeki Yagyu, Department of Pediatrics, Kyoto Prefectural University of Medicine, and others.

CAR-T cells, which have been transduced with a viral vector or the like, recognize cancer antigens via chimeric antigen receptors (CARs) and have the ability to kill cancer cells. CAR-T cell therapy has already been approved in Japan, the US and Europe for certain hematologic cancers, and its substantial benefits have recently been clinically demonstrated. In the pursuit of further clinical effects, development of next-generation CAR-T cell therapy is already in progress around the world. While its effects are evident in an expanding range of hematologic cancers, there is still room for improvement in the area of solid tumors.

The difficulty in using CAR-T cell therapy targeted to treat solid tumors is due to the fact that sustained anti-tumor effects of CAR-T cells are required for them to be effective in the fierce environment specific to solid tumors, known as the “tumor microenvironment,” where the functions of immune cells are suppressed. One solution to overcome this difficulty is to use the non-viral gene transfer method established by Professor Yozo Nakazawa’s team and the new CAR-T cell culture method jointly developed by Professor Nakazawa’s team and other groups (joint patent pending). It is suggested that CAR-T cells created by these methods have more sustained anti-tumor effects in comparison with CAR-T cells created by conventional viral methods. This new approach is therefore expected to achieve sustained activity in the immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment and thereby exhibit greater efficacy against solid tumors.

Shinshu University is now preparing an investigator initiated trial treating osteosarcoma, a representative pediatric cancer. Although recent progress in osteosarcoma treatment has been remarkable, development of new therapeutic options is awaited in order to cure those with severe symptoms or distant metastases and prevent cancer recurrence. In the US, clinical trials for such cases of refractory osteosarcoma have been conducted using HER2-CAR-T cells, which are created through traditional genetic modification using conventional viral vectors. In some cases reported from those clinical trials, promising results, including complete remission, have been observed. With the clinical concept already proven, BrightPath expects that CAR-T cell therapy targeting HER2 antigens but using the more durable platform technology invented by Professor Nakazawa, will broaden future therapeutic options for such patients, and has decided to commit its support to Shinshu University’s upcoming investigator initiated clinical trial, which is scheduled to start in fiscal 2020.

Shinshu University
Shinshu University is a national university with eight faculties (Arts, Education, Economics and Law, Science, Medicine, Engineering, Agriculture, and Textile Science and Technology) on five campuses, which are located in four municipalities in Nagano Prefecture (Nagano, Matsumoto, Ueda, and Minamiminowa). The university marks its 70th anniversary in 2019. Shinshu University Hospital is the only national university hospital in Nagano Prefecture, with 32 clinical departments and 707 beds. It provides safe and secure medical services as a government-designated advanced treatment hospital, performs leading-edge medical practice based on state-of-the-art research achievements, and endeavors to develop next generation international healthcare human resources.

BrightPath
BrightPath is a clinical stage biopharmaceutical company focused on the development of novel cancer immunotherapies to transform cancer treatment for progressive or refractory cancers that cannot be treated using conventional standard therapies. In addition to its cancer peptide vaccines currently in clinical trials in the United States, BrightPath is actively involved in developing cell therapies, immunomodulatory antibodies and new drugs targeted toward cancer-specific neoantigens.

Inquiries

Shinshu University School of Medicine

Miyuki Tanaka, Department of Pediatrics
Tel: +81-263-37-2642
E-mail: miyuki@shinshu-u.ac.jp
/english/

BrightPath Biotherapeutics Co., Ltd.
Administration Department
Tel: +81-3-5840-7697
E-mail: irpr05@brightpathbio.com
https://www.brightpathbio.com/english/index.html

Source: Shinshu University and BrightPath Biotherapeutics Co., Ltd.