Primary efficacy endpoint readout expected in mid-2025Phase 1b studies in dMMR/MSI GI tumors showed that NOUS-209 with pembrolizumab was well- tolerated, generating potent and broad immune responses and durable tumor shrinkageNOUS-209 is being evaluated in multiple clinical studies targeting MSI cancers, from early-stage cancer interception through to metastatic disease
BASEL, Switzerland – 19th November 2024 - Nouscom, a clinical stage immuno-oncology company developing off-the-shelf and personalized neoantigen cancer immunotherapies, announces the completion of patient enrollment of 69 patients in a randomized Phase 2 study. This trial evaluates its lead asset, NOUS-209 in combination with pembrolizumab versus pembrolizumab alone in first-line (1L) Deficient Mismatch Repair/Microsatellite Instable (dMMR/MSI) unresectable and metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC) patients. The efficacy readout for the primary endpoint - Objective Response Rate (ORR) based on the Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors (RECIST1.1) for NOUS-209 combined with pembrolizumab versus pembrolizumab alone – is anticipated in mid-2025.
NOUS-209 is an off-the-shelf immunotherapy encoding 209 neoantigens that are shared across both sporadic and hereditary MSI tumors. The immunotherapy is designed to activate the immune system to generate CD8 and CD4 T cell responses by targeting MSI tumor-specific neoantigens that are created by defective DNA mismatch repair genes (dMMR).
Data published from the successfully completed Phase 1b trial of NOUS-209 plus pembrolizumab in first and second line dMMR/MSI gastrointestinal (GI) tumors demonstrated a clean safety profile with encouraging results, including the strong and long-lasting induction of CD8 and CD4 T cells in 90% of patients. Expansion of intratumoral T cells was shown post NOUS-209 immunotherapy in patients who experienced deep and durable clinical responses, with evidence that neoantigen-specific CD8 T cells induced by NOUS-209 successfully traffic and infiltrate the tumor, correlating with its mechanism of action.1
These findings, together with new Phase 1b/2 immunogenicity and translational data evaluating NOUS-209 monotherapy in Lynch Syndrome (LS) carriers – presented recently at the Society of Immunotherapy in Cancer (SITC 2024) Meeting – highlight the unique potential of NOUS-209 both to intercept pre-malignant lesions at the earliest stages of disease development and to treat advanced MSI tumors.
The Phase 2 randomized clinical trial (NCT04041310) is being conducted in multiple centers across the US and Europe. The trial includes two patient cohorts: a 2:1 randomized cohort of previously untreated 1L MSI mCRC patients receiving NOUS-209 plus pembrolizumab versus pembrolizumab alone; and a single-arm cohort of MSI mCRC patients who have become refractory to prior anti-PD1 and other therapies, receiving NOUS-209 plus pembrolizumab.
About MSI Tumors/ MSI metastatic CRC
Microsatellite instable (MSI) tumors are a subset of cancers characterized by high mutation rates within short, repetitive DNA sequences called microsatellites, arising from defects in the DNA mismatch repair (MMR) system. When the MMR system is deficient (dMMR), errors in DNA replication accumulate, leading to MSI tumors. This instability is particularly significant in colorectal cancer (CRC), where MSI metastatic CRC represents a distinct subtype associated with increased sensitivity to certain immunotherapies. MSI tumors account for approximately 15% of all CRC and 4-5% of all metastatic CRC cases, as reported in a 2015 New England Journal of Medicine study and supported by subsequent research. MSI is also observed in other cancers, most frequently in endometrial and gastric cancers.
About Lynch Syndrome
Lynch Syndrome (LS) is a common hereditary condition that significantly increases the risk of colorectal, endometrial, and gastric cancers. Caused by mutations in DNA mismatch repair genes, LS leads to MSI tumors. Affecting about one in 300 people (Win et al 2017, Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev), it is estimated that nearly one million individuals in the US have LS, though it remains vastly underdiagnosed due to a lack of approved treatment options. LS carriers face a 50-80% lifetime risk of colorectal cancer and a 40-60% risk of endometrial cancer, along with the burden of frequent invasive surveillance and prophylactic surgery.
About Nouscom
Nouscom is a clinical-stage immuno-oncology company developing next-generation, off-the-shelf and personalized cancer immunotherapies. Nouscom’s proprietary viral vector platform has the capacity to encode for large payloads of neoantigens or other immunomodulators and clinically demonstrated to safely and potently harness the power of the immune system.
Nouscom is currently advancing the clinical development of its wholly owned programs:
- NOUS-209, an off-the-shelf neoantigen cancer immunotherapy, for the treatment of MSI solid tumors in combination with pembrolizumab in a randomized Phase 2 trial.
- NOUS-209 monotherapy in Lynch Syndrome carriers with the potential to ‘intercept cancer’ before it advances. A Phase 1b/2 is being conducted under a Clinical Trial Collaboration and Supply Agreement with the National Cancer Institute (NCI).
- NOUS-PEV, a personalized cancer immunotherapy, is expected to enter randomized Phase 2 trials in indications with high unmet medical need during 2025.
Nouscom has also exclusively out-licensed VAC-85135, an off-the-shelf immunotherapy developed under a multi-project agreement, which is currently under evaluation in a Phase 1 trial for the treatment of Myeloproliferative Neoplasms sponsored by Janssen Research & Development and Bristol Myers Squibb.
For more information on Nouscom, please visit the company’s website at www.nouscom.com or follow us on LinkedIn.
Contacts
Nouscom
Rick Davis, COO
E : info@nouscom.com
T : +41 61 201 1835
MEDiSTRAVA
Sylvie Berrebi, Sandi Greenwood, Mark Swallow
E : nouscom@medistrava.com
T : +44 (0)203 928 6900