Achilles Therapeutics Provides Interim Phase I/IIa Update on Clonal Neoantigen Reactive T Cells in Advanced NSCLC and Melanoma Including First Patients Dosed with Enhanced Host Conditioning

In This Article:

Achilles Therapeutics PLC
Achilles Therapeutics PLC

– Improved VELOS™ manufacturing process delivering higher cNeT doses –

– Protocols updated to evaluate the benefit of enhanced host conditioning, with further data expected in 2H 2024 –

– First three patients dosed in CHIRON and THETIS with enhanced host chemo-conditioning, along with IL-2 aligned to standard TIL therapy, show improved cNeT persistence and engraftment –

LONDON, April 04, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Achilles Therapeutics plc (NASDAQ: ACHL), a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company developing AI-powered precision T cell therapies targeting clonal neoantigens to treat solid tumors, today announced interim Phase I/IIa data on the use of clonal neoantigen reactive T cells (cNeT) from the CHIRON study in advanced unresectable or metastatic non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) and the THETIS study in recurrent or metastatic malignant melanoma. The update includes data from 18 patients across CHIRON (n=12) and THETIS (n=6) dosed since the previous interim update in December 2022, with two CHIRON patients and one THETIS patient having received enhanced chemo-conditioning and IL-2 dosing aligned to standard tumor infiltrating lymphocyte (TIL) therapy (enhanced host conditioning) in a new Cohort C. This new Cohort C will allow the impact of enhanced host conditioning on cNeT engraftment and persistence beyond 28 days to be evaluated.

All trial participants were late-stage, checkpoint refractory patients with progressive disease at the time of lymphodepletion. The observed tolerability profiles remain favorable and similar to standard TIL therapy.

The VELOS™ manufacturing process continued to improve with a median 172 million cNeT dosed across the eighteen patients in the update compared to 18 million cNeT in the December 2022 update, with 10 products over 100 million cNeT and five over one billion cNeT.

“The updated safety, tolerability and translational science data presented today from checkpoint refractory patients continue to be encouraging and reveal important mechanistic learnings about the factors driving durable T cell engraftment and the impact of immune evasion mechanisms at an antigen level. These learnings will inform the development of cNeT and related neoantigen vaccine and TCR-T therapies,” said Dr Iraj Ali, CEO of Achilles Therapeutics. “We have made important progress in the optimization of our VELOS manufacturing process with a significant improvement in cNeT doses delivered and are developing our understanding of the relationship between host conditioning and the engraftment of infused cNeT. The next step is to evaluate cNeT persistence and clinical activity in patients with enhanced host conditioning, and we plan to report a meaningful data update in the second half of 2024.”