David Berman
Analyst · Jefferies
Thank you, Ralph. I'm really pleased to update you on the strong progress we have made on our pipeline. I'm proud of our R&D team. We have hit all our development milestones in progressing nine clinical programs, including three Phase III trials, starting three new Phase Is and expanding to three therapeutic areas. Today, I'm going to focus on the two clinical stage programs with data readouts over the next 18 months, brenetafusp and HIV. Let's recall our strategy in cutaneous melanoma and the data supporting the Phase III trial. The most common therapies used globally are anti-PD1, either as monotherapy or in checkpoint combination and BRAF therapy for BRAF mutation-positive patients. Once patients progress on these available therapies, the only options are clinical trials and TILs for select patients. Our strategy is to demonstrate in the Phase I trial in third-line patients that brenetafusp is active and well tolerated and that this activity would support a PFS endpoint in a Phase III trial in first line. Here's a summary of the key data from the Phase I trial we presented at ASCO. First, brene has monotherapy activity, something not commonly seen for other biologics in heavily pretreated melanoma. Second, the disease control rate, which is a surrogate of progression-free survival is higher for brenetafusp monotherapy than the combination of nivolumab + relatlimab in a similar setting. Third, we see higher activity in PRAME-positive versus PRAME-negative. This provides biological plausibility as the PRAME-negative subset behaves as an internal negative control. And finally, the systemic T cell fitness data indicates we expect an even higher disease control rate and longer PFS in first-line. These data supported our decision to move to Phase III in first-line. In our Phase III first-line trial, we will combine two biologics, brenetafusp and nivolumab, each with monotherapy activity and with complementary mechanisms of action. Based on the Phase I cross-trial comparison I just shared with you, we fully expect that brenetafusp + nivolumab in the first-line setting will be superior to both nivolumab alone and nivolumab + relatlimab. We are pleased to announce that the Phase III PRISM-MEL-301 study has started, and we are focused on activating more sites globally. With the PRISM-MEL-301 in first-line I just shared and with the TEBE-AM in second line that Ralph shared, we are really proud to be one of the few companies to have multiple Phase III investments in cutaneous melanoma, both backed by strong data. I will now turn to brenetafusp in ovarian cancer. Women with ovarian carcinoma are cycled through platinum regimens shown in the blue until they become resistant or refractory shown in the green. At which point, they receive non-platinum chemotherapies or for the folate alpha receptor positive tumors, antibody drug conjugate. Unlike melanoma, ovarian cancer has historically not been sensitive to immunotherapy. In heavily pretreated, platinum resistance, which is the population in our Phase I trial, the outlook is poor with non-platinum chemotherapies, having response rates less than 10% and disease control rates between 40% to 50%. In our Phase I trial, we aim to demonstrate in the platinum-resistant setting that brenetafusp is clinically active and can be combined with non-platinum chemo. This will be the subject of our ESMO poster next month. We have learned for our platform that clinical benefit manifest as disease control that activity is even higher in earlier lines and that combined ability with standards of care may enable at least additive activity. In addition, unlike melanoma, ovarian cancer is more complex with two distinct disease segments that are treated very differently, which requires us to study more combinations. Therefore, our next step in ovarian is twofold. First, in the heavily pretreated, platinum-resistant disease, we will expand our patient data set of combinations with non-platinum chemotherapy. And second, in the earlier-line platinum-sensitive disease setting, we will test the combination with bevacizumab and with platinum chemotherapy. Let's now turn to lung cancer. Late-line lung cancer is a heterogeneous disease with patients generally having rapid progression. With lung, we are still in the signal detection phase. Later this year, we plan to share monotherapy in heavily pretreated lung cancer selected for PRAME expression and combinations with late-line chemotherapies enrolled without regard to selection for PRAME expression. The next steps are additional combinations with osimertinib in the EGFR mutant patients and with docetaxel. This will then be followed by first-line platinum combinations. PRAME is a promising target across multiple tumors. And brenetafusp is a first-in-class PRAME ImmTAC. When you pioneer a novel platform, you have to be ready to look, to learn and to adjust. And in fact, frankly, this is the exciting part of drug development. We did this for brenetafusp and melanoma and will follow the same thoughtful approach for brenetafusp in ovarian [end-line]. I will now close by updating on HIV. HIV is currently managed by antiretroviral therapy. But when ART is stopped the virus rebounds on average within two weeks. By week eight, after treatment interruption, 98% of people will have a viral load of at least 200 copies per mL. This is the threshold commonly used to denote risk for viral transmission. The next frontier in HIV treatment is functional care, where the goal is to reduce or eliminate the viral reservoir, which would then delay or prevent viral rebound. To date, no therapy has convincingly demonstrated either of these endpoints. This is the goal of our 113V program, called STRIVE. The MAD portion of the STRIVE study is ongoing. We are treating with 113V plus ART for 12 weeks and then stopping both therapies. The objectives of this study are twofold: first, determine whether we can reduce the viral RNA reservoir during the treatment phase. And second, whether we can delay viral rebound or alter the kinetics of viral rebound after treatment interruption. As of June, we have enrolled 15 people living with HIV across three cohorts, the highest at 300 micrograms. The 300-microgram dose is biologically active. The next step is to enroll more people living with HIV to better characterize the activity and to explore higher doses. This will move the data release into the first quarter of '25. I'm very proud of our R&D team. We pioneered the world's first TCR therapeutic. We saw the value of KIMMTRAK early in Phase I, and we followed that vision to bring a fantastic new medicine to metastatic uveal melanoma patients. We saw that value for KIMMTRAK in cutaneous melanoma and the potential in adjuvant uveal, and these programs are underway. We see that value in brenetafusp, and we are excited to follow through on that vision as well. Brian, I'm going to hand back to you, now.