EnGeneIC Announces Publication in Cancer Cell of a Scientific Paper Highlighting the Ability of EDV™ Nanocells to Mount Dual Assault on Cancer Cells

On March 16, 2020 EnGeneIC Limited, a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company advancing its proprietary EDV nanocell platform for targeted cyto-immunotherapy in cancer, reported that the prestigious peer-reviewed journal Cancer Cell has published a scientific paper, authored by EnGeneIC’s research team, entitled "Cyto-Immuno-Therapy for Cancer: A Pathway Elicited by Tumor-Targeted, Cytotoxic Drug-Packaged Bacterially Derived Nanocell (Press release, EnGeneIC, MAR 16, 2020, View Source [SID1234555622])." The paper describes how the EnGeneIC Dream Vector (EDV) technology stimulates both an innate and an adaptive immune response and creates a dual method of action that could result in long-term survival. Additionally, Cancer Cell will display the EDV’s immunotherapy mechanism of action as this month’s cover art.

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The immuno-oncology field has been focused largely on chimeric antigen receptor T-cell (CAR-T) therapies or checkpoint inhibitors, both designed to enable cytotoxic T-cells to target cancer cells. However, research shows that T-cells are only part of the story. Achieving a robust anti-tumor immune response requires the stimulation of several different types of immune cells. The EnGeneIC research paper describes how the company’s targeted EDV nanocells combine cytotoxicity by virtue of their chemotherapy payload, and at the same time incite a totally novel and more complete anti-tumor immune response. The EDVs stimulate an innate immune response by activating macrophages, natural killer cells and dendritic cells with a subsequent adaptive immune response resulting from recruitment of specific CD8+ tumor killing T-cells into the tumor microenvironment. This work paves the way for treatment of even drug-resistant, end-stage cancers across many tumor types with little or no toxicity, and for a fraction of the cost compared to other immunotherapies capable of treating only a limited number of cancer indications.

Himanshu Brahmbhatt, Ph.D., co-Chief Executive of EnGeneIC and the study’s senior author, stated, "The EnGeneIC team is excited by the publication of its latest scientific paper in Cancer Cell. For the first time, we show that one therapeutic has the ability to carry a toxic payload to kill cancer cells and also jump-start the depleted immune system. This two-prong attack is showing preliminary success in early human trials."

Clinical trials are now underway in Australia evaluating EDV in multiple cancer indications, including pancreatic cancer patients with stage IV disease who have exhausted curative treatment options. The trial also has a second all-comers cohort for patients suffering with a variety of other a late-stage EGFR-expressing solid tumors.

Dr. Brahmbhatt continued, "EDV treatment is not a piecemeal approach to cancer – all the key immune cells required for an assault on the tumor are stimulated. When we depleted each of these cell types, the anti-tumor effect was diminished. As well as delineating the novel mechanism of action in mouse models of cancer, our paper describes two patients who responded with an anti-tumor immune response. We look forward to advancing the development of our EDV nanocell technology platform to bring hope to those patients most in need."

The Cancer Cell article is available to view at the following link: View Source