Estrella Immunopharma Achieves Complete Response in First Patient Treated with CD19- Redirected ARTEMIS® T-cells

On September 27, 2024 Estrella Immunopharma, Inc. (NASDAQ: ESLA, ESLAW) ("Estrella" or the "Company"), a clinical stage biopharmaceutical company developing CD19 and CD22-targeted ARTEMIS T-cell therapies to treat cancer and autoimmune diseases, reported that the first patient enrolled in its STARLIGHT-1 Phase I/II clinical trial has achieved a complete response (CR) one month after receiving an infusion of EB103 CD19- Redirected ARTEMIS T Cells (Press release, Estrella Biopharma, SEP 27, 2024, View Source;Redirected-ARTEMIS%C2%AE-T-cells [SID1234646896]).

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In a clinical trial, a complete response means that no detectable signs of disease or cancer remain after treatment. The patient, diagnosed with follicular lymphoma grade 3A with high-risk 3B symptoms, was enrolled in the STARLIGHT-1 trial at UC Davis Comprehensive Cancer Center and received EB103 therapy after relapsing three times following prior treatments. Given the patient’s high tumor burden and multiple comorbidities, the patient was considered at high-risk, which might have increased the severity of side effects like cytokine release syndrome (CRS) and neurotoxicity with commercially available CAR-T treatments. However, no treatment-related serious adverse events (SAEs) were observed in this case.

"We are cautiously optimistic about these early results and the favorable safety profile of EB103 observed in our first treated patient of this clinical trial," said Cheng Liu, Ph.D., President and CEO of Estrella Immunopharma. "Our goal is to develop ARTEMIS T-cell therapies that not only match but also surpass the efficacy of commercially available CAR-T therapies, while also addressing their safety shortcomings. By improving safety, we hope to reach a broader patient population and make T-cell therapy accessible in community hospitals, not just specialized cancer centers."

"We are excited to see the positive early safety and efficacy results in our first treated patient," said Naseem Esteghamat, M.D., Assistant Professor of Medicine at UC Davis Comprehensive Cancer Center and Principal Investigator of the trial. "We look forward to continuing our study to further validate these findings and expand access to this potentially curative therapy."

The Phase I/II STARLIGHT-1 clinical trial is an open-label, dose escalation, multi-center, Phase I/II clinical trial to assess the safety of EB103 autologous T-cell therapy and to determine the Recommended Phase II Dose (RP2D) in adult subjects (≥ 18 years of age) who have relapsed/refractory (R/R) B-cell NHL. The study includes a dose escalation phase followed by an expansion phase. Further details of the trial can be found at www.clinicaltrials.gov under NCT identifier: NCT06343311.

About EB103
EB103, a T-cell therapy, also referred to as Estrella’s "CD19-Redirected ARTEMIS T-Cell Therapy," utilizes ARTEMIS technology licensed from Eureka Therapeutics, Inc. ("Eureka"), Estrella’s parent company. Unlike a traditional CAR-T cell, the unique design of an ARTEMIS T-Cell, like EB103 T-cell, allows it to be activated and regulated upon engagement with cancer targets that use a cellular mechanism more closely resembling the one from an endogenous T-cell receptor. Once infused, EB103 T-cells seek out CD19-positive cancer cells, bind to these cells, and destroy them.