- Multikine is the first cancer immunotherapy to show
pre-surgical tumor regression in head and neck cancer in just 3
weeks - confirmed by pathology at surgery
- Factors supporting the go-ahead for the 212-person
registration study in the target population include:
- Multikine led to significant rates of tumor
regression
- Pre-surgical tumor regressions were confirmed at surgery and
forecast survival benefit
- Target population is likely to show significant survival
prolongation in the confirmatory study
- Confirmatory study target population selection is based
on:
- Strong statistical significance in a large subgroup of 114
patients
- Subgroup analysis was pre-defined in the statistical
analysis plan (SAP)
- Strong biological rationale for the results based on
Multikine’s mechanism of action (MOA)
CEL-SCI Corporation (NYSE American: CVM) today highlights
strong biological rationale for the use of Multikine in the
confirmatory registration head and neck cancer study. This study of
212 newly diagnosed locally advanced, resectable head and neck
cancer patients was given the go-ahead as a confirmatory
registration study by FDA and will focus on those patients who
showed a 73% survival with Multikine vs. a 45% for the control
patients not treated with Multikine in the prior Phase 3 study.
“I am hopeful that this report will help investors understand
why we believe that we have developed a potentially very effective
and safe new medicine for newly diagnosed head and neck cancer, a
horrible disease with very few treatment options. Our goal is to
make the first cancer treatment more successful by activating an
anti-tumor immune response BEFORE surgery, radiotherapy and
chemotherapy weaken the immune system,” said Geert Kersten, Chief
Executive Officer of CEL-SCI Corporation.
Multikine (Leukocyte Interleukin, Injection)* is an
immunotherapy intended for use in treating cancer. CEL-SCI has long
hypothesized that to achieve maximum stimulation of a patient’s
immune system, it is best to administer an immunotherapy as a
neo-adjuvant (pre-surgical) therapy, prior to standard of care
treatments, when the immune system is still intact. Multikine Phase
2 studies showed significant tumor regression resulting from
Multikine treatment in just three-weeks of neoadjuvant therapy with
no excess toxicity beyond the standard of care. Following these
positive results, CEL-SCI conducted a 928-patient randomized
controlled Phase 3 clinical trial to confirm Multikine’s ability to
cause tumor regressions prior to surgery, confirm its safety
profile and ultimately longer overall survival versus the standard
of care.
The Phase 3 study missed the primary endpoint of 10% improvement
in overall survival (OS) in the ITT population (all patients in the
study) but showed a 46.5-month (almost 4 years) OS benefit vs
control (101.7 months vs. 55.2 months) in the patients who received
Multikine followed by surgery and radiotherapy. In the other group
of about 50% of patients who had chemotherapy added to radiotherapy
after surgery, there was no survival benefit. Because the decision
to administer chemotherapy is made after surgery, CEL-SCI had to
develop selection criteria that would identify at screening
those patients who would be most likely to benefit from Multikine
neoadjuvant (pre-surgery) treatment. After this analysis was done
and the evidence collected, CEL-SCI presented these selection
criteria to FDA. The agency accepted these selection criteria and
gave CEL-SCI the go-ahead to conduct a 212-patient confirmatory
registration study in the patient population defined by the
selection criteria. The study will include patients with newly
diagnosed locally advanced primary (disease stage III and IVa) head
and neck cancer presenting with: No lymph
node involvement (N0) (determined via PET imaging) and
having low PD-L1 tumor expression
(determined via biopsy).
There are many factors that support going ahead with the
confirmatory registration study, including the following:
- Multikine was shown to be highly active in the full Phase 3
study population, leading to significant rates of tumor regression,
including 5 complete regressions, before surgery, following just 3
weeks of Multikine treatment. Refer to slide 31 in the corporate
slide presentation posted on the Company’s website. In this
advanced disease stage, tumors do not shrink spontaneously, and the
control group in the study had no reported pre-surgical tumor
regressions. Therefore, the regressions had to be due to
Multikine.
- Pre-surgical tumor regressions were confirmed by pathology at
surgery, where biological evidence of Multikine’s activity,
inducing cellular infiltration of anti-tumor immune cells, could be
seen at the tumor microenvironment.
- Pre-surgical tumor regressions were also seen in prior
published Phase 2 studies, further supporting the validity of the
Phase 3 results showing Multikine’s anti-cancer activity.
- The pre-surgical tumor regressions forecasted increased
long-term survival benefit in responders. That is, subjects who had
tumor regressions lived longer than those who did not. Refer to
slide 20 of the corporate slide presentation for these data in the
full study population.
- In the target population selected for the confirmatory study
the rate of pre-surgical tumor regressions was substantially higher
than what was seen in the full Phase 3 population. Refer to slide
21 of the corporate slide presentation. This shows that the
selected population is highly likely to show a significant survival
prolongation in the confirmatory registration study.
CEL-SCI addresses some criticisms that are often levelled
against any subgroup analysis. These criticisms are often applied
dogmatically without considering specific facts.
- Strong statistical significance
- Criticism: Clinical trials are
typically designed to detect effects in the overall population, not
within subgroups. Analyzing smaller subgroups reduces the sample
size, which decreases statistical power and increases the
likelihood of false positives (Type I error) or false negatives
(Type II error).
- Response: the selected group from
the Phase 3 study is large. It includes 114 Intention-to-Treat
(ITT) patients, leading to results with strong statistical
significance (p=0.0015). Refer to slide 16 of the corporate slide
presentation. The hazard ratio of 0.35 (less than 1 is beneficial)
and its statistical 95% confidence interval upper limit of 0.66 are
below the 0.7 usually needed for approval. The Kaplan-Myer survival
curve shows a clear survival benefit for Multikine-treated patients
over control at all times during the 5-year follow-up of the Phase
3 study.
- Multiple comparisons require a higher level of significance
- Criticism: When multiple subgroups
are analyzed, the probability of finding a significant result by
chance increases. This can lead to spurious findings.
- Response: The subgroup analysis by
risk was pre-specified in the original Phase 3 protocol, so these
results do not arise from a post hoc search for pockets of
favorable results after the fact. It should be noted that at the
time of Phase 3 study initiation PD-L1 was not available. However,
as the study progressed, the statistical analysis plan (SAP) was
updated to specify analysis by cellular markers including tumor
PD-L1. The SAP also stated: “For each biomarker (including the
pre-defined ratio and differences), proportional hazard models for
OS, LRC, and PFS will be run first for just stage, location, lower
biomarker cutoff, higher biomarker cutoff, and treatment as
covariates; the models will be repeated by adding treatment
interactions with stage, location, and the biomarker cutoffs”.
Moreover, the statistical strength of these results is very strong.
For example, it is universally accepted that a p-value of less than
0.05 denotes a statistically significant result. When multiple
subgroups are analyzed, however, the threshold for significance
becomes much stricter, i.e., a need for a lower p-value to show
statistical significance. The data meet these stricter standards
because the p-value is only 0.0015, which is much better than a
p-value of 0.05.
- Are the results post hoc or not?
- Criticism: Subgroup analyses are
often conducted after the trial is completed and not pre-specified
in the protocol or the SAP. This exploratory nature increases the
risk of data dredging or p-hacking, where investigators may
unintentionally focus on results that appear significant by
chance.
- Response: The subgroup analyses in
the Phase 3 study were pre-specified in the original protocol
including analysis of cellular markers; for markers not available
at the time of study initiation, analysis by these markers was
pre-specified in the SAP (signed and issued prior to database
lock).
- Is there a biological basis for the results?
- Criticism: Subgroup analyses can
show positive results in populations that have no biological
connection to the outcome. A famous example is the ISIS-2 trial
where researchers, somewhat jokingly, analyzed results by zodiac
sign and found seemingly negative effects of aspirin on people born
under Gemini or Libra, highlighting the pitfalls of analyzing data
in extremely small subgroups.
- Response: The results in the
selected subgroup are based on factors that tie directly to
Multikine’s mechanism of action. They therefore have a strong
biological rationale that explains why this particular group should
be expected to do well with Multikine pre-surgery treatment. In
other words, we did not select patients based on factors, like the
zodiac, that bear no relation to Multikine. Rather, the selection
criteria for the patient population is supported by Multikine’s
biological mechanism of action.
- Were the treatment and control groups well balanced?
- Criticism: Subgroup effects may
not truly reflect differences in treatment but rather random
variation in patient characteristics. It can be difficult to
distinguish genuine treatment effects from noise without a strong
biological rationale.
- Response: The baseline and
demographics of the two comparator groups in the confirmatory
registration study are well balanced. There was a small
disadvantage to Multikine because the Multikine treated group had a
higher percentage of sicker stage IVa patients, but the Multikine
arm still showed a highly significant overall survival advantage
versus control. Refer to slide 35 of the corporate slide
presentation.
There is a strong biological rationale for the selection
criteria that help identify the patients who best respond to
Multikine
The confirmatory registration study will be conducted in
patients with newly diagnosed locally advanced primary (disease
stage III and IVa) head and neck cancer, presenting with:
- no lymph node involvement (N0)
(determined via PET imaging) and
- low PD-L1 tumor expression
(determined via biopsy).
There are three biological factors supporting this population
definition. First, it is widely recognized that the timing of
surgery is an important factor for patients depending on their
tumor burden. Secondly, Multikine’s mechanism of action will result
in greater therapeutic effect in patients with intact local immune
architecture and lower-disease burden. Thirdly, tumors with low
PD-L1 expression (having lower defenses to anti-tumor immune
cellular attack) should be more susceptible to the cellular immune
attack incited by Multikine. Together, this gives a biological
basis for how the effect of Multikine will vary across the locally
advanced head and neck cancer population in the neoadjuvant
setting, provides biological rationale and supports the selection
criteria.
This biological basis is evidenced by the Phase 3 clinical trial
results, which showed a higher rate of pre-surgical responses among
subjects with lower disease burden. Pre-specified histopathology
and immunohistochemistry performed blinded to the study confirmed a
similar heterogeneity of Multikine’s effect on the tumor
microenvironment, as well as Multikine’s greater effect in subjects
with low PD-L1 tumor expression (TPS < 10, which included TPS =
0 to <10) vs those with higher PD-L1 tumor expression (TPS ≥
10).
These outcomes were expected in view of Multikine’s biological
mechanism of action. Specifically, because the timing of surgery is
important to individual patients depending on their tumor burden
and lymph node involvement, it was expected that the three-week
delay of surgery necessary for the administration of Multikine
would mostly negatively affect subjects with higher disease burden,
while subjects with lower disease burden at entry may have a better
chance of benefiting from Multikine administration. Additionally,
because Multikine relies on activating the patient’s local
antitumor immune response, it should be expected that Multikine
will have greater effect in patients with an intact local immune
architecture and increased immune competency, lower-disease burden,
and the anti-tumor cellular immune response incited by Multikine
will have an increased anti-tumor effect in tumors with lower PD-L1
tumor expression (where tumor defenses to, and ability to hide
from, the immune system are reduced).
When these criteria were retrospectively applied to subjects in
the Phase 3 study by selecting those with N0 and low PD-L1 tumor
expression, the results of this analysis showed a 5-year OS
advantage over control (73% vs 45%), unstratified log rank
p=0.0015, and a hazard ratio of 0.35 [0.18, 0.66], Wald 0.0012, as
shown on slide 16 in the corporate slide presentation.
About CEL-SCI Corporation
CEL-SCI believes that boosting a patient’s immune system while
it is still intact should provide the greatest possible impact on
survival. Multikine is designed to help the immune system "target"
the tumor at a time when the immune system is still relatively
intact and thereby thought to be better able to mount an attack on
the tumor.
Multikine (Leukocyte Interleukin, Injection), a true first-line
cancer therapy, has been dosed in over 740 patients and received
Orphan Drug designation from the FDA for neoadjuvant therapy in
patients with squamous cell carcinoma (cancer) of the head and
neck. Based on the very strong data from the completed randomized
controlled Phase 3 study, the FDA concurred with CEL-SCI’s target
patient selection criteria and gave the go-ahead to conduct a
small, focused, confirmatory Registration Study which will enroll
212 patients. CEL-SCI will enroll newly diagnosed locally advanced
primary treatment naïve resectable head and neck cancer patients
with no lymph node involvement (determined via PET scan) and with
low PD-L1 tumor expression (determined via biopsy), representing
about 100,000 patients annually.
The Company has operations in Vienna, Virginia, and near/in
Baltimore, Maryland.
Forward-Looking Statements
This press release contains forward-looking statements within
the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as
amended, and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as
amended. When used in this press release, the words "intends,"
"believes," "anticipated," "plans" and "expects," and similar
expressions, are intended to identify forward-looking statements.
Such statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that could
cause actual results to differ materially from those projected.
Factors that could cause or contribute to such differences include
an inability to duplicate the clinical results demonstrated in
clinical studies, timely development of any potential products that
can be shown to be safe and effective, receiving necessary
regulatory approvals, difficulties in manufacturing any of the
Company's potential products, inability to raise the necessary
capital and the risk factors set forth from time to time in
CEL-SCI's filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission,
including but not limited to its report on Form 10-K for the year
ended September 30, 2023. The Company undertakes no obligation to
publicly release the result of any revision to these
forward-looking statements which may be made to reflect the events
or circumstances after the date hereof or to reflect the occurrence
of unanticipated events.
* Multikine (Leukocyte Interleukin, Injection) is the trademark
that CEL-SCI has registered for this investigational therapy. This
proprietary name is subject to FDA review in connection with the
Company's future anticipated regulatory submission for approval.
Multikine has not been licensed or approved for sale, barter or
exchange by the FDA or any other regulatory agency. Similarly, its
safety or efficacy has not been established for any use.
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version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20241212453035/en/
Gavin de Windt CEL-SCI Corporation (703) 506-9460
Cel Sci (AMEX:CVM)
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