The Journal of Clinical Oncology Publishes Five-year Analysis of Amtagvi® (lifileucel) in Patients with Advanced Melanoma

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Iovance Biotherapeutics, Inc.
Iovance Biotherapeutics, Inc.

One-time Amtagvi Treatment Continues to Show 
Deep, Durable Responses and Meaningful Survival

One Third of Responses Remain Ongoing without Subsequent Treatment after Five Years

Simultaneous Presentation at ASCO 2025

SAN CARLOS, Calif., June 02, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Iovance Biotherapeutics, Inc. (NASDAQ: IOVA), a commercial biotechnology company focused on innovating, developing, and delivering novel polyclonal tumor infiltrating lymphocyte (TIL) therapies for patients with cancer, today announced that the Journal of Clinical Oncology has published the final analysis from the Phase 2 C-144-01 clinical trial evaluating the individualized T cell therapy Amtagvi® (lifileucel) in patients with advanced melanoma. These five-year follow-up results are being simultaneously presented during an oral session today at the 2025 American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) Annual Meeting.

This five-year analysis of the C-144-01 trial represents unprecedented durability and duration of follow-up in advanced melanoma patients previously treated with anti-PD-1 and targeted therapy, where applicable. The analysis includes 153 patients from cohorts 2 and 4 of the C-144-01 trial.

One-time Amtagvi treatment demonstrated long-term benefit in heavily pretreated patients, including deep and durable responses, meaningful overall survival without further treatment, and no new or late-onset adverse events at a median follow-up of 57.8 months. The objective response rate was 31.4% with a median time to response of 1.4 months and a median duration of response of 36.5 months. Nearly one third of responders (31.3%) completed the five-year assessment with ongoing responses. The median overall survival (mOS) was 13.9 months with a five-year survival rate of 19.7%. Survival outcomes were consistent among responders, regardless of time of onset of response to Amtagvi therapy.

The observed safety profile was consistent with that of nonmyeloablative lymphodepletion and interleukin-2 administration. The incidence of AEs decreased rapidly within the first two weeks after Amtagvi infusion, and there were no new or late-onset treatment-related AEs.

Theresa Medina, M.D., medical oncologist at the University of Colorado Cancer Center on the Anschutz Medical Campus, stated, “Amtagvi has demonstrated long-term benefit and meaningful overall survival in a difficult-to-treat melanoma patient population resistant to immune checkpoint inhibitor therapy. Five years following one-time Amtagvi treatment, responses persisted or deepened during an extended treatment-free interval for some patients. Amtagvi offers a new standard of care for the advanced melanoma community and sets a new bar for one-time cell therapies with curative intent in solid tumors.”