Enterome's new OncoMimics™ immunotherapy, EO2463, demonstrates early efficacy and favorable safety in Phase 1/2 trial for indolent non-Hodgkin lymphoma
Enterome
Enterome

EO2463 uniquely targets four distinct B cell markers to maximize tumor killing and prevent immune escape, generating fast, strong and durable CD8+ T cell activation against malignant B cells

Initial data from EONHL1-20/SIDNEY study presented at the 17th International Conference on Malignant Lymphoma (ICML) in Lugano

Beneficial clinical responses observed following 6 weeks of treatment with EO2463 as monotherapy; preliminary complete response rate of 50% in evaluable patients for EO2463 in combination with lenalidomide + rituximab

EO2463 is well tolerated as monotherapy, without additional safety signals when combined with lenalidomide + rituximab

Paris, France – June 14, 2023

Enterome, a clinical-stage company developing first-in-class immunomodulatory drugs for solid and liquid malignancies and inflammatory diseases based on its unique Mimicry platform, today announces first clinical results from the Phase 1/2 (EONHL1-20/SIDNEY) trial of EO2463, an experimental treatment for indolent non-Hodgkin B cell lymphoma (iNHL). The initial data, presented at the 17th International Conference on Malignant Lymphoma (ICML), show that EO2463, as monotherapy and in combination with the standard of care (lenalidomide and rituximab), is well tolerated and generates strong immune responses associated with early clinical activity. ICML is taking place June 13-17, 2023 in Lugano, Switzerland.

EO2463 is an innovative, off-the-shelf immunotherapy candidate that combines four synthetic OncoMimic™ peptides. These non-self, microbial-derived peptides correspond to CD8 HLA-A2 epitopes that exhibit molecular mimicry with the B lymphocyte-specific lineage markers CD20, CD22, CD37 and CD268 (BAFF receptor). EO2463 also includes the helper peptide (CD4+ epitope) universal cancer peptide 2 (UCP2).

The unique ability of EO2463 immunotherapy to selectively target multiple B cell markers enables the destruction of malignant B lymphocytes that are abundant in iNHL. By ensuring broad target coverage across malignant B cells while avoiding a detrimental impact on normal peripheral B cells, this novel approach aims to simultaneously improve safety and maximize efficacy, reducing the tumor cells’ capacity to develop immune-resistance mechanisms.

Dr. Jan Fagerberg, Chief Medical Officer of Enterome said, EO2463 was designed to expand pre-existing memory cytotoxic T cells recognizing specific protein sequences from gut bacteria that cross-react with B cell specific proteins to drive targeted anti-tumor activity against B cell malignancies. We are very encouraged that EO2463 is showing promising efficacy with a good safety profile in indolent non-Hodgkin B cell lymphomas, confirming the validity of our approach and the ability of OncoMimics™ -based immunotherapies to target liquid tumors. We now look forward to continuing the trial with multiple expansion cohorts.”