Ensysce Biosciences to Host Virtual Investor Day on July 27, 2021

On July 21, 2021 Ensysce Biosciences, Inc. ("Ensysce" or the "Company") (NASDAQ: ENSC, OTC: ENSCW), a clinical stage biotech company with proprietary technology platforms to reduce the economic and social burden of prescription drug abuse and overdose, reported that it will host a virtual investor day on Tuesday, July 27, 2021 from 11:00 am to 12:00 pm EDT (Press release, Ensysce Biosciences, JUL 21, 2021, View Source [SID1234585504]).

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Ensysce CEO Dr. Lynn Kirkpatrick and CFO Dave Humphrey will present alongside other members of the Company’s executive management team. There will be a 30-minute question and answer session following the Company’s presentation.

Registration for the event can be found here. Interested parties may submit questions in advance of the event by emailing [email protected]. A recording of the event as well as the accompanying presentation will be provided on the Company’s website following the conclusion of the event.

Bayer’s drug that turns a cancer-protective pathway toxic eradicates breast tumors in mice

On July 21, 2021 Bayer reported that An investigational breast cancer drug Bayer recently licensed from Systems Oncology has shown strong antitumor responses in mice, offering early clues as to why the German pharma shelled out $25 million for the preclinical asset last September (Press release, Bayer, JUL 21, 2021, View Source [SID1234585129]).

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The drug, dubbed ErSO, works by over-activating a normally tumor-protective pathway to make it toxic for cancer cells. It eradicated both primary and metastatic tumors in mouse models of estrogen receptor-positive breast cancers, according to results published in Science Translational Medicine.

The pathway ErSO targets is called the anticipatory Unfolded Protein Response (aUPR). Through mild and transient activation, aUPR prepares ER-positive cancer cells for growth and protects them from stress such as anticancer treatment.

But in a PNAS study in 2015, a research team from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign led by biochemistry professor David Shapiro, Ph.D., showed that massive and sustained activation of aUPR with a drug could instead inhibit protein synthesis, depriving ER-positive breast cancer cells key building blocks necessary for survival.

For the new research, Shapiro and colleagues identified ErSO as a more potent aUPR hyper-activator that could selectively kill ER-positive breast cancer cells.

RELATED: ASCO (Free ASCO Whitepaper): Sanofi says early amcenestrant data could see it be ‘endocrine backbone therapy’ in breast cancer

In multiple mouse models of ER-positive breast cancer, ErSO quickly killed off tumor cells in high numbers just days after treatment. Combined data from four mouse models showed that 38 of 39 tumors regressed by over 95%, with about half of cases reduced to undetectable levels, the team reported. Even tumors that didn’t completely disappear and regrew after stopping treatment still remained fully sensitive to another cycle of ErSO, the team found.

In another mouse model bearing mutant, patient-derived breast tumors with low expression of ER, oral ErSO treatment outperformed standard-of-care therapies tamoxifen and AstraZeneca’s Faslodex (fulvestrant) at blocking tumor growth, the team found.

"Many of these breast cancers shrink by more than 99% in just three days," Shapiro said in a statement. "ErSO is fast-acting and its effects on breast cancers in mice are large and dramatic."

What’s more, the Bayer drug also significantly reduced cancer metastases at multiple locations, including the lung, bone and brain, the researchers showed.

RELATED: AstraZeneca drops breast, prostate cancer programs in Q4 pipeline cull

The success of Faslodex has prompted several biopharma companies to develop next-generation selective ER downregulators (SERDs). They include Sanofi, which is moving its drug, amcenestrant, into a phase 3 trial against tamoxifen after showing promising early results in combination with Pfizer’s CDK4/6 inhibitor Ibrance.

Roche is pairing its SERD drug, giredestrant, with Ibrance in the phase 3 persevERA trial. And Radius Health is working with Menarini on an oral SERD dubbed elacestrant. It expects phase 3 data from the EMERALD trial later this year.

The UIUC team noted that in mouse models, second-generation SERDs typically induced moderate regression of primary tumors. Those that were tested against metastases showed limited efficacy. And resistance is still a risk with CDK4/6 inhibitors.

Compared with the common inhibitory modes of action against ER, ErSO could offer "a turn-on approach to convert a tumor-selective protective pathway into a lethal, targeted anticancer response," the researchers wrote in the study. The drug’s ability to target metastatic tumors and its activity in ER-low tumors that are traditionally considered ER-negative could broaden its potential therapeutic range, the researchers said.

Bayer picked up global rights to ErSO in September for $25 million upfront, and Systems Oncology is eligible to receive milestone payments of up to $345 million.

While the current study found the drug was well tolerated in mice and dogs, further safety analyses are needed before it can be tested in humans, the UIUC team said. The researchers also plan to explore ErSO’s use against other types of ER-positive cancers.

ERYTECH CONFIRMS PLANS TO SUBMIT BLA FOR ERYASPASE IN HYPERSENSITIVE ALL PATIENTS

On July 21, 2021 ERYTECH Pharma (Nasdaq & Euronext: ERYP), a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company developing innovative therapies by encapsulating therapeutic drug substances inside red blood cells, reported its intention to move forward towards the submission of a BLA to the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for eryaspase in hypersensitive acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) patients following feedback from the agency in a pre-BLA meeting (Press release, ERYtech Pharma, JUL 21, 2021, View Source [SID1234585095]).

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The purpose for the meeting was to discuss clinical, non-clinical and quality content and expectations for the Company’s potential BLA submission. Based on the discussion and the totality of the available information to the Company to date, ERYTECH believes its regulatory package can potentially support an approval of eryaspase in hypersensitive ALL patients. Pending successful completion of remaining steps, the Company anticipates submitting a BLA in the fourth quarter of 2021.

"We are encouraged by the interactive dialogue with the agency, and grateful for the feedback and guidance we received on a potential path to approval," said Gil Beyen, CEO of ERYTECH. "This is an important milestone for ERYTECH as it advances our lead product candidate eryaspase as an alternative treatment for ALL patients with hypersensitivity to PEG-asparaginase, while our Phase 3 trial in second line pancreatic cancer is nearing completion. If all goes well, we could be in a position to make this product candidate available to ALL and pancreatic cancer patients in the course of next year."

In December 2020, positive Phase 2 clinical results were presented by the Nordic Society of Pediatric Hematology and Oncology, at the 2020 American Society of Hematology (ASH) (Free ASH Whitepaper) annual meeting. Eryaspase, in combination with chemotherapy, administered every two weeks, provided a sustained asparaginase enzyme activity level, and was generally well tolerated with few hypersensitivity reactions.

About Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia

Acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is a cancer of the blood and bone marrow that is the most common type of cancer in children in the US and Europe. More than 13,000 cases are diagnosed in the US and Europe each year with the majority of patients diagnosed before age 20. Asparaginase has been an integral component of ALL treatment for several years but is associated with treatment-limiting hypersensitivity in up to 30% of patients. Discontinuation of asparaginase therapy in ALL patients has been associated with inferior event free survival highlighting the need for additional asparaginase based treatment options.

Mabworks Plans Hong Kong IPO to Support Antibody/Multi-Specifics Pipeline

On July 21, 2021 Beijing Mabworks Biotech reported that it has filed an application to IPO on the Hong Kong Exchange (Press release, Mabworks Biotech, JUL 21, 2021, View Source [SID1234585071]). The company is developing mAbs and multi-specific antibodies for oncology and autoimmune diseases. Its pipeline consists of six clinical-stage drug candidates and six preclinical candidates, plus an Avastin biosimilar that Mabworks out-licensed to Betta Pharma of Hangzhou. The company’s lead candidate is MIL62, a third-gen CD20 multi-specific that is slated to begin Phase III trials in lymphoma. Because the application was the first filing, no financial details of the IPO were included.

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Sorrento Announces That Its Subsidiary Levena and Its Partner Escugen Have Received Clearance to Begin Clinical Trials With Anti-TROP-2 Antibody Drug Conjugate For Multiple Solid Tumors

On July 21, 2021 Sorrento Therapeutics, Inc. (Nasdaq: SRNE, "Sorrento") reported its partner Escugen Biotechnology Co, Ltd. ("Escugen") and Sorrento’s subsidiary Levena (Suzhou) Biopharma Co., Ltd. ("Levena") have received an approval letter from the Center for Drug Evaluation (CDE) of the National Medical Products Administration (NMPA) for its Application for Clinical Trial (Acceptance No. CXSL2101069) of Recombinant Humanized Anti-Trop2 Mab-SN38 Conjugate (Press release, Sorrento Therapeutics, JUL 21, 2021, View Source [SID1234585070]).

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The TROP-2 ADC (ESG-401) was jointly developed by Shanghai-based Escugen and Levena, and the two companies jointly own the domestic and international patents for this ADC and share global rights for the product.

ESG-401 has potentially distinct differentiating advantages over its competitors in terms of safety, effectiveness and process robustness. Using an innovative, highly stable and cleavable linker, this ADC demonstrated in a series of preclinical studies that it releases very little free toxin during circulation, highly enriches in tumor tissues and rapidly endocytoses, thereby effectively killing tumor cells and inhibiting tumor growth. In the preclinical studies, ESG-401 demonstrated excellent safety, with no off-target or off-tumor toxicity observed in those high-dose, repetitively administered non-human primates. Additionally, ESG-401 showed significant antitumor activity in a variety of tumor models expressing TROP-2, with a low effective dosage and long inhibition time on tumor growth. ESG-401 potentially addresses a highly unmet need for the treatment of multiple solid tumors, including triple-negative breast cancer and urothelial carcinoma.

Sorrento intends to file a US IND for this ESG-401 before the end of the year.