Marc Hedrick
Analyst · Maxim Group
Thank you, Erica, and good afternoon, everyone. Thank you for taking the time to join us today, as we provide a business update and discuss our 2020 fourth quarter and full year results. Joining me on the call today is Mr. Andrew Sims, our Chief Financial Officer. But before Andrew provides a brief overview of our financial performance, I would like to provide an update on our drug development activities, focusing my remarks on two key topics. First, progress on the clinical development of our lead drug Rhenium Nanoliposomes, also called RNL, currently being developed for recurrent glioblastoma. And second, an update on additional potential clinical target indications for RNL, apart from recurrent glioblastoma. Now for those of you who are new to the company, RNL, our lead drug is a unique therapeutic consisting of isotopic rhenium 186, which is made an efficient reactor that is key [loaded] [ph] with proprietary technology and loaded into 100 nanometerliposomes. RNL is interesting, in part because it releases two energy types, beta energy for cancer killing and gamma energy for imaging. Our lead indication for RNL is recurrent glioblastoma, which affects approximately 12,000 patients annually in the U.S., and about the same number of patients in the EU. It is the most common and lethal form of brain cancer, and essentially all primary glioblastoma tumors will recur after initial treatment. The treatment of this devastating disease remains a significant challenge, and it's been about a decade since the FDA approved a new therapy to treat it. Not surprisingly, then there is really no clear go to standard of care for recurrent glioblastoma. And even in the few currently approved treatments, they provide only marginal survival benefit for those patients. So it's a real true unmet medical need. Now, external beam radiation therapy is commonly used for glioblastoma, and its efficacy against GBM is about as good as it gets or really better than any other potential treatment used today. Compared to external beam radiation therapy, whereby external energy or radiation passes through healthy tissue to reach the tumor, with RNL, it may be possible to deliver a radiation dose only to the tumor that is up to 15 to 20 times higher than with external beam radiation therapy as it's used today. And despite the super-high doses of radiation delivered by RNL and precisely because of its inherent tumor targeting capability, unwanted radiation exposure to nearby healthy tissue is actually reduced. Now, the gamma energy produced by the RNL that I mentioned previously can actually be visualized in real-time during the administration of the drug. This may allow doctors the ability to better control the radiation dose and distribution in order to more effectively treat both the bulk tumor and concomitantly the microscopic disease that's often left in the penumbra of healthy tissue. In 2020, RNL was granted both orphan and fast track designations from the FDA for treatment of patients with recurrent glioblastoma, and to further assist the company in its efforts to develop RNL successfully for brain cancer and other cancers, Plus formed scientific and clinical advisory Boards in 2020. These experts on our Boards are leaders in the fields of neuro-oncology, neurosurgery, preclinical drug development, and nanotechnology, and will help guide and advise us as we advance our versatile proprietary nanotechnology forward. The ongoing ReSPECT clinical trial is a Phase 1/2 design of up to 55 patients to determine the maximum feasible dose and to assess the safety, tolerability, distribution and potential efficacy of 186 RNL in recurrent or progressive malignant glioma funded to a significant degree, the trial is funded to a significant degree by the NIH, National Cancer Institute. Through 2020 and into 2021, thus far, we remain on track and on plan for RNL development program for glioblastoma, including winding up the Phase 1 clinical program called ReSPECT, optimization of the regulatory plan, and bringing the manufacturing and supply chains forward the industry standards in anticipation of the next steps in clinical development. In 2020, the society for neuro-oncology annual meeting, that was in November of last year, we provided an update on the ReSPECT trial for RNL. At that time, interim data for the first 15 patients through cohort 5 and the ReSPECT trial were available, and that data can be found in detail on our `website. But the interim data in brief showed that intratumoral RNL can successfully deliver up to 15 times the absorbed dose of radiation, administered by standard external beam radiation therapy. RNL treatment volume and radiation dose were increased successfully from the earlier cohorts to the fifth cohort. Also, RNL was well tolerated with no dose limiting toxicity observed, despite markedly higher absorbed doses of radiation compared to EBRT or external beam radiation. In our view, one reason we've seen no systemic, serious adverse events or SAE, such as marrow ablation is that the radiation stays in the brain tumor in the adjacent tissue and exposure outside the brain is very low, there's actually about a 3,000 fold difference between those two. Although the dose escalation part of the ReSPECT trial is not designed to show efficacy per se, we have seen two long-term survivors greater than 30 months, and a median and mean survival duration in subjects with tumor coverage greater than 75%, which is currently 8.9 months and 13.6 months, respectively, and growing with six patients still alive. In the interim, we expanded enrollment to a third clinical trial site in the Anderson Cancer Center at Houston. We've completed enrollment of the three required patients in the six cohort of ReSPECT trial, increasing both the RNL drug volume and radiation dose once again. And additionally, I can tell you that we have treated one of an additional three planned patients at the cohort six dosage and volume, but with more aggressive drug delivery parameters. So thus far, in summary, 19 patients with recurrent GBM have been treated in the ReSPECT trial. The latest patient update can actually be found in our February 2021, BIO CEO Corporate presentation, which is now on our website. The plan then in GBM is to complete enrollment in the Phase 1 trial this year, as well as complete critical CMC activities by year-end or early 2022, such that we would potentially be ready for a Phase 2 pivotal about a year from now, of course, depending on the strength of the data and FDA feedback. Now, switching gears and regarding additional clinical development programs for RNL. A priority for us in 2021, is to move additional indications beyond recurrent glioblastoma forward into clinical trials. Although we have promising preclinical data for a number of potential indications, we intend to focus our near-term efforts on two additional CNS indications leptomeningeal carcinomatosis, which the more modern term that's used as leptomeningeal metastases and also pediatric brain cancer, both are two very difficult to treat cancers. All in, leptomeningeal metastasis affects about 110,000 patients in the U.S., and there is no clear standard of care. And these patients die rapidly despite what care we do provide to them. Pediatric brain cancers, though much rarer, carries an equally poor prognosis. The anticipated treatment approach for pediatric brain cancer would mirror our approach in adults with glioblastoma, using direct targeting and conduction enhanced delivery. However, LN is a disease of the lining of the spinal fluid space, and nanoliposome seemed to circulate freely if injected there. And preclinical studies thus far look promising. Therefore, that delivery approach, which would be in LN direct into the CSF or cerebrospinal fluid, would go typically to an indwelling reservoir, which is commonly placed to these patients. Our goal is to have pre-IND meetings with the FDA for both indications in the early part of 2021, understand any gaps that we may currently have in the preclinical data, fill those as needed as rapidly as possible, and then move these into patients, hopefully by year-end 2021, if possible. As a final note and consistent with our stated philosophy of striving for maximum capital efficiency and minimal shareholder dilution in a drug development activities, we intend to apply for State of Texas funding through its CPRIT program whenever possible, to help support our development expenditures, as we've mentioned previously on other calls. So now with that, let me turn the call over to Andrew for a review of the financial results. Andrew?