Genmab — November 2019
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A: With respect to combining our CD38 antibodies isatuximab with PD-1 or PD-L1, the hypothesis we're testing there is that CD38 plays an important role in the tumor micro environment contributing to an immunosuppressive state and therefore could be a essentially an immuno-oncology opportunity beyond my the role of CD38 as a direct target in myeloma.
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Now, the tumor microenvironment of every kind of cancer is different. Really quite unique depending on the type of malignancy and that's why we laid out a broad-based program around eight different types of malignancies to test that hypothesis in a number of context.
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The first couple of indications prostate and lung have not confirmed the hypothesis. But we still feel there's merit to continue that work in the other indications. Several of them are hematologic malignancies, for example, where the tumor microenvironment is very different than solid tumors. And so we'll see those studies to their end. They're small signal seeking studies to test the hypothesis.
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We've said from the beginning, it's a low probability of success, but we feel that the data -- the preclinical data from our own labs and from the medical community merits that we test the hypothesis in a lean way that would help to determine whether there is a broader opportunity for CD38 antibodies like isatuximab that have unique properties due to the epitope that we target relative to other competitors.
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But CD38 still remains on the myeloma cell, however at lower levels. So the target is still relevant. And we feel there's sufficient retained expression for most patients that we can still go at that target but with these enhanced antibodies. So there would really be an attempt to rescue patients who failed a frontline standard care agent.
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a small new trial using BMS-986253 / HuMax-IL8 for NSCLC https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT04123379
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