ImmunityBio Presents Positive Long-Term Overall Survival Data in Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer Patients and Announces Registrational Intent Phase 3 Trials with ANKTIVA® and Checkpoint Immunotherapy at World Conference on Lung Cancer

In This Article:

  • Phase 2 data presented at the World Conference on Lung Cancer showing a prolonged median overall survival of over 14 months in 2nd and 3rd line NSCLC cancer patients who progressed on checkpoint inhibitors such as KEYTRUDA (pembrolizumab) and OPDIVO (nivolumab)

  • ANKTIVA plus KEYTRUDA or OPDIVO rescued T cell activity in these patients who progressed on the same checkpoint inhibitor with overall survival of 57% at 12 months

  • Long-term survival was independent of PDL1 tumor status and independent of 2nd or 3rd line of therapy

  • The data continues to validate the mechanism of action of ANKTIVA in activating NK, CD8 killer, and Memory T cells resulting in prolonged overall survival in patients with advanced cancers

  • Data supports global launch of Phase 3 randomized control of ResQ trials of ANKTIVA plus KEYTRUDA or OPDIVO in 1st and 2nd line NSCLC (ResQ301 and ResQ302) versus standard of care

CULVER CITY, Calif., September 09, 2024--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Immunotherapy innovator ImmunityBio, Inc. (NASDAQ: IBRX), today announced positive results from its QUILT 3.055 trial demonstrating long-term extended survival of 14 months to as much as five years for patients with advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) being treated with checkpoint inhibitors (CPI). An oral presentation of the data was presented by John Wrangle, M.D., MPH, Associate Professor, Medical University of South Carolina, at the World Congress on Lung Cancer in San Diego on Sunday, September 8 in the session titled "Novel Immunotherapy Strategies and Combinations."

The phase 2b study of ANKTIVA (nogapendekin alfa inbakicept-pmln) in combination with checkpoint inhibitors KEYTRUDA or OPDIVO in multiple tumor types including NSCLC who failed CPI showed long-term overall survival of 57 percent (49/86) and 34 percent (29/86) at 12 and 18 months respectively, exceeding the current standard of care.

"Most NSCLC patients experience progression following checkpoint inhibitors, with average survival well under a year when checkpoint inhibitor-based therapies fail our patients," said Dr. Wrangle. "The QUILT-3.055 study enrolled patients relapsed after CPI and CPI in combination with chemotherapy and showed that, regardless of prior therapy, adding the IL-15-based superagonist ANKTIVA to their therapy could rescue checkpoint activity likely through activation of NK cells, CD4+, CD8+, and memory T cells. The survival rate in these patients on their 2nd or 3rd line of cancer therapy is impressive and exceeds what you might expect from the current standard of care."