Anixa Biosciences Announces Presentation on Breast Cancer Vaccine Trial at the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) Annual Meeting

On April 28, 2022 Anixa Biosciences, Inc. (NASDAQ: ANIX), a biotechnology company focused on the treatment and prevention of cancer and infectious diseases, reported a presentation outlining the design of its breast cancer vaccine trial at the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) (Free ASCO Whitepaper) Annual Meeting being held June 3-7, 2022 (Press release, Anixa Biosciences, APR 28, 2022, View Source [SID1234613155]). The presentation, titled "Phase 1 Trial of an alpha-Lactalbumin vaccine in patients with moderate- to high-risk operable triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC)" will be presented by the study’s principal investigator, Dr. George Thomas Budd of Cleveland Clinic, Anixa’s collaboration partner.

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Additional presentation details can be found below:

Abstract #: TPS1125

Date/Time: June 6, 2022, 9:00 AM EDT

About Triple-Negative Breast Cancer

One in eight women in the U.S. will be diagnosed with an invasive breast cancer at some point in their lives. Approximately 10-15% of those diagnoses are TNBC, however TNBC accounts for a disproportionately higher percentage of breast cancer deaths and has a higher rate of recurrence. This form of breast cancer is twice as likely to occur in African-American women, and approximately 70% to 80% of the breast tumors that occur in women with mutations in the BRCA1 genes are triple-negative breast cancer.

About Anixa Bioscience’s Breast Cancer Vaccine

Anixa’s investigational vaccine, currently in Phase 1 trials, takes advantage of endogenously produced proteins that have a function at certain times in life, but then become "retired" and disappear from the body. One such protein is a breast-specific lactation protein, α-lactalbumin, which is no longer found post-lactation in normal, aging tissues, but is present in the majority of triple-negative breast cancers. Activating the immune system against this "retired" protein provides preemptive immune protection against emerging breast tumors that express α-lactalbumin. The vaccine also contains an adjuvant that activates an innate immune response, which allows the immune system to mount a response against emerging tumors to prevent them from growing.