Fate Therapeutics Presents 6-Month Follow-up Data on First Patient Treated in Phase 1 Autoimmunity Study with Fludarabine-free Conditioning and FT819 Off-the-shelf, 1XX CAR T-cell Product Candidate at ACR Convergence

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Fate Therapeutics, Inc.
Fate Therapeutics, Inc.

27-year-old African American-Asian Woman with Active Lupus Nephritis Achieved DORIS Clinical Remission; Patient Remains On-study, in Clinical Remission, and Free of All Immunosuppressive Therapies

Patient Treated with Fludarabine-free Conditioning and Single-dose FT819; Favorable Safety Profile with No Grade ≥3 Adverse Events and No Events of CRS, ICANS, or GvHD

Reconstituted B Cell Compartment Predominantly Consists of Naïve, Non-class Switched B Cells with Deep Depletion of Aberrant B Cells and Plasmablasts, Indicative of Immune Reset

Second Treatment Arm Adding FT819 to Maintenance Therapy without Conditioning Chemotherapy Opened for Enrollment

SAN DIEGO, Nov. 18, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) --  Fate Therapeutics, Inc. (NASDAQ: FATE), a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company dedicated to bringing a first-in-class pipeline of induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC)-derived cellular immunotherapies to patients with cancer and autoimmune disorders, today presented initial clinical and translational data from the first patient treated in its FT819 Phase 1 Autoimmunity study for moderate-to-severe systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) at the American College of Rheumatology (ACR) Convergence being held in Washington, D.C. The patient, a 27-year-old African American-Asian woman diagnosed with lupus nephritis (LN) over ten years ago, received fludarabine-free conditioning followed by a single dose of FT819. The patient achieved DORIS (definition of remission in SLE) clinical remission and LLDAS (low lupus disease activity state) as of Month 6 follow-up. The patient continues on-study, in clinical remission, and free of all immunosuppressive therapies as of a data cutoff date of November 11, 2024. FT819 is the Company’s off-the-shelf, CD19-targeted, 1XX CAR T-cell product candidate comprised of CD8αβ+ T cells with a memory phenotype and high CXCR4 expression to promote tissue trafficking.

“These initial results are incredibly promising. Our patient not only went into drug-free clinical remission but also had resolution of fatigue, something that we as rheumatologists struggle to improve with our treatments,” said Jennifer Medlin, M.D., and Principal Investigator at the University of Nebraska Medical Center. “If we continue to see similar results in other patients with an acceptable safety profile, off-the-shelf CAR T-cell therapy could be a complete game-changer for our sickest lupus patients. This gives me hope for a future where we can make a great impact on these patients with devastating disease.”

Patient 1 Case Study