Enlivex Receives Israeli Ministry of Health Authorization for the Initiation of a Phase I/II Trial Evaluating Allocetra Combined with Chemotherapy in Patients with Peritoneal Metastases Arising from Solid Cancers

On June 6, 2022 Enlivex Therapeutics Ltd. (Nasdaq: ENLV, the "Company"), a clinical-stage macrophage reprogramming immunotherapy company targeting diseased macrophages in patients with sepsis and solid tumors, reported that the Israeli Ministry of Health (MOH) authorized the initiation of a company-sponsored Phase I/II clinical trial evaluating Allocetra combined with chemotherapy in patients with peritoneal metastases arising from solid cancer (Press release, Enlivex Therapeutics, JUN 6, 2022, View Source [SID1234615635]).

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Peritoneal cancer, whether originating from a primary tumor within the peritoneum or from a metastatic tumor elsewhere in the body, is a terminal disease with a poor prognosis. Patients with peritoneal metastases are in urgent need of novel treatment options, as standard-of-care (SOC) chemotherapy provides only modest survival benefits. The median survival of patients with peritoneal metastases differs based on the location of the primary tumor but is frequently poor, with survival rates of 2.9 months, 6.5 months, and 6.9 months reported for cancers of pancreatic, gastric, and colorectal origins, respectively.

The planned Phase I/II trial is an open-label dose escalation and expansion trial that is expected to enroll a total of approximately 12 patients across four cohorts. It is designed to evaluate the safety and potential preliminary efficacy of Allocetra combined with SOC chemotherapy in patients with peritoneal metastases arising from solid cancer. The study will begin with two cohorts of intra-patient and intra-cohort dose escalation to determine the maximum feasible dose (MFD) of Allocetra in this population, followed by two additional cohorts comparing administration of Allocetra at the selected dose either before or after administration of SOC via a pressurized intraperitoneal aerosol chemotherapy procedure (PIPAC; a technique applied when patients are not eligible to receive the standard treatment due to a considerable tumor load, or large quantities of persistent ascites and other circumstances).

Intraperitoneally delivered Allocetra and SOC chemotherapy administered via PIPAC will be given to patients every six weeks. Systemic chemotherapy will also be administered per the treating oncologist’s plan. The primary endpoint is the number and severity of Allocetra-related adverse events and serious adverse events during the 16-week period, starting from the first administration of study treatment. Secondary endpoints include efficacy assessments, such as best overall response rate (ORR), progression-free survival, and overall survival. Changes from baseline in macrophage and immune cell characteristics in peritoneal fluid and tissues will also be assessed as an exploratory endpoint.

Currently, the efficacy of many anti-cancer agents is hampered by the body’s tumor defense mechanisms that facilitate the recruitment of macrophages which become "pro-tumor" tumor associated macrophages (TAMs) rather than "anti-tumor" macrophages. The TAMs typically form a physical layer on top of the solid tumor and induce immunosuppression in the solid tumor microenvironment. This in-turn promotes tumor growth and metastasis and contributes to poor clinical outcomes and response to therapy. Previously reported preclinical data from solid tumor models suggest that Allocetra has the potential to reprogram pro-tumor macrophages back to their homeostatic state and may thereby promote disease resolution and provide patients that do not respond well to existing FDA-approved therapies with an effective treatment option.

Einat Galamidi, M.D., Vice President, Medical of Enlivex, stated: "Receiving this authorization from the MOH is an important step toward expanding Allocetra’s potential therapeutic impact into oncology. Our preclinical studies suggest Allocetra may enhance the efficacy of a broad range of therapeutic agents by weakening tumor defense mechanisms through a novel mechanism of action that drives macrophage populations towards a more anti-cancer state. We look forward to beginning the clinical evaluation of this hypothesis through both this chemotherapy combination study and an additional planned solid tumor study that will evaluate Allocetra combined with a checkpoint inhibitor."

Enlivex plans to initiate the Phase I/II trial evaluating Allocetra in combination with chemotherapy in patients with peritoneal metastases arising from solid cancer in Q3 2022. The Company also expects to initiate a Phase I/II trial evaluating Allocetra in combination with an immune checkpoint inhibitor in late 2022.

ABOUT ALLOCETRATM

Allocetra is being developed as a universal, off-the-shelf cell therapy designed to reprogram macrophages into their homeostatic state. Diseases such as solid cancers, sepsis, and many others reprogram macrophages out of their homeostatic state. These non-homeostatic macrophages contribute significantly to the severity of the respective diseases. By restoring macrophage homeostasis, Allocetra has the potential to provide a novel immunotherapeutic mechanism of action for life-threatening clinical indications that are defined as "unmet medical needs", as a stand-alone therapy or in combination with leading therapeutic agents.