On February 20, 2025 Oxford Vacmedix (OVM) reported the first patient being treated with new extended dosing of OVM-200, at the prestigious Sarah Cannon Research Institute in London (Press release, Oxford Vacmedix, FEB 20, 2025, View Source;utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=first-patient-ovm-200-cancer-vaccine-extended-dosing [SID1234650417]). The extended dosing protocol was first suggested by the clinical investigators in the trial, following the excellent safety record seen in Phase 1a. The new regime will allow up to 11 vaccinations of OVM-200 over a six-month period and has been approved by the UK Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA). OVM-200 is a new therapeutic cancer vaccine developed using OVM’s novel recombinant overlapping peptide (ROP) platform. It targets survivin, a protein overexpressed by cancer cells, which prevents them being attacked by the body’s immune system.
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The Phase I trial of OVM-200 is focused on safety and on establishing an immune response in patients with three tumour types – non small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), prostate cancer and ovarian cancer. It is being run at four sites in the UK including the Sarah Cannon Institute and University College Hospital (UCH) in London, the Churchill hospital of the Oxford University Hospitals Foundation Trust (OUHFT) and the Christie NHS Foundation Trust in Manchester. The first part of the trial, Phase 1a, has been completed and has shown both excellent safety and a strong immune response. The Chief Investigator for the trial is Professor Martin Forster, based at UCH. This trial is both the first time OVM-200 has been used in people and also the first time any ROP-based vaccine has been tested in the clinic.
William Finch, CEO of Oxford Vacmedix, said:
The ROP technology has been developed from an initial concept in the laboratory to now being tested as a treatment for critically ill patients. We see the potential benefits of a vaccination approach both in stimulating the body’s immune system to attack the cancer and also, in future trials, enhancing the efficacy of other immune oncology agents. This Phase I trial is a first step towards having effective cancer vaccines.
Dr Anja Williams Principal Investigator at the Sarah Cannon Research Institute UK, added:
It is a privilege to work with Oxford Vacmedix on this innovative vaccine programme for patients with lung, prostate, and ovarian cancer. We are very pleased with the results to date and strongly believe that vaccine treatments will play a major role in future cancer treatments. Extending the dosing will maximise the potential benefits of the vaccine.