INAB: INB-200 Update at ASCO24

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By John Vandermosten, CFA

NASDAQ:INAB

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IN8bio, Inc (NASDAQ:INAB) updated results from its Phase I INB-200 clinical trial at the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) 2024 meeting last Saturday. Sponsored by the University of Alabama, the trial is evaluating the use of γδ T cell therapy for treatment of patients with newly diagnosed glioblastoma (GBM). As of the cutoff date on May 30, 2024, 92% of evaluable patients had exceeded a median of seven months of progression free survival (PFS). Data from the trial was included in a poster presented at ASCO on June 1st in Chicago. The poster title is INB-200: Fully enrolled Phase 1 study of gene-modified autologous gamma-delta (γδ) T cells in patients with newly diagnosed glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) receiving maintenance temozolomide (TMZ). The presenter was Dr. Mina Lobbous of the University of Alabama at Birmingham

Updated data from the poster were provided in a press release on June 3rd which extended the observation period for the patients an extra 30 days.

One patient remains progression free at 34.9 months. Overall survival (OS) was not calculated as five of thirteen remain alive and measurements are ongoing. Safety appears to be good with no cell therapy related toxicities such as immune effector cell-associated neurotoxicity syndrome or cytokine release syndrome reported in patients receiving up to the maximum dose of six infusions of the therapy.

Standard of care (SoC) for newly diagnosed GBM requires primary resection, six weeks of daily chemoradiation therapy followed by six cycles of monthly maintenance temozolomide therapy (Stupp regimen). SoC produces a median PFS of 7 months and an overall survival (OS) of approximately 14 to 16 months as reported by IN8bio.

Our own review finds a range of reported survival of nine months to the upper twenty-month range depending upon specific characteristics. Most of the more recent resources we reviewed were 15 months or less. Factors associated with differing survival rates include age, further tumor treatment after surgery and MGMT promoter methylation among other contributors.1,2,3,4,5,6

Key Findings

All patients who completed the protocol mandated doses surpassed the median PFS of seven months with a majority also exceeding expected PFS based on age and O?-methylguanine-DNA methyltransferase (MGMT) status. 92% exceeded mPFS of seven months. The most common treatment-emergent adverse events were Grade 1 or 2 toxicities consisting of white blood cell and platelet count decreases related to temozolomide.