Bolt Biotherapeutics Presents Updated Preclinical Data for BDC-4182 and Key Learnings from Phase 1 Dose-Escalation Trial of BDC-1001 at SITC 39th Annual Meeting

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Bolt Biotherapeutics, Inc.
Bolt Biotherapeutics, Inc.

BDC-4182 demonstrated compelling anti-tumor activity and an acceptable safety profile in preclinical studies

BDC-4182 outperformed cytotoxic claudin 18.2 ADCs in syngeneic model

Learnings from BDC-1001 data suggest Boltbody™ ISACs with enhanced immune activation could offer greater efficacy, warranting further testing

REDWOOD CITY, Calif., Nov. 07, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Bolt Biotherapeutics (Nasdaq: BOLT), a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company developing novel immunotherapies for the treatment of cancer, today presented updated preclinical data for BDC-4182, a next-generation Boltbody™ ISAC clinical candidate targeting claudin 18.2, and provided key learnings from its Phase 1 dose-escalation trial of BDC-1001 at the 39th Annual Meeting of the Society for Immunotherapy of Cancer (SITC), being held in Houston, Texas from November 6-10, 2024.

“We are encouraged by the preclinical BDC-4182 data presented at SITC. Most notably, our next-generation claudin 18.2 ISAC elicits better efficacy than claudin 18.2 ADCs in syngeneic tumor models and can eradicate tumors with low claudin 18.2 expression. We look forward to dosing our first patient in BDC-4182 in 2025,” said Michael Alonso, Ph.D., Senior Vice President of Research. “Our key learnings from the Phase 1 BDC-1001 dose escalation trial that are being presented at SITC support our belief that next-generation Boltbody™ ISACs with enhanced immune activation will offer greater efficacy with the potential for durable responses.”

BDC-4182 is a next-generation Boltbody™ ISAC clinical candidate targeting claudin 18.2, a clinically validated target in oncology with expression in gastric/gastroesophageal junction cancer, pancreatic cancer, and other tumor types. BDC-4182 has advanced into IND-enabling activities, supported by in vitro and in vivo experiments demonstrating potent anti-tumor activity in multiple preclinical models, with clinical trial initiation expected in 2025. In vivo assessment of anti-tumor activity was performed with a murine surrogate of BDC-4182 using xenograft and syngeneic tumor models with different levels of claudin 18.2 expression. The tolerability of BDC-4182 was also tested in non-human primates (NHPs).​ Key findings are summarized below.

  • BDC-4182 demonstrated superior efficacy compared to cytotoxic claudin 18.2 ADCs

  • BDC-4182 demonstrated anti-tumor activity in a wide range of tumor models and elicits immunological memory

  • BDC-4182 has an acceptable safety profile in NHPs with findings consistent with TLR7/8 activation and claudin 18.2 targeting

  • BDC-4182 toxicology profile may enable combinations with checkpoint inhibitors, chemotherapy and anti-angiogenesis agents used in first-line and second-line treatments