2022 Archived Content

T Cell Based Cancer Immunotherapy: TILs CARs and TCRs

Including gamma delta T cells

24 - 25 May 2022 ALL TIMES BST

Initial good responses to T cell therapies can be followed by rapid relapse owing to tumour-related mutations and evasion mechanisms put out by the tumour. Despite these challenges, these treatments are reaching the clinic and showing benefit to the patient, often when applied in combination or with co-stimulation. Much-needed allogeneic cell therapies are being developed with CAR-T cells and with gamma delta T cells with the aim of modulating their activity and providing a more favourable tumour environment for the immune response. The application of these and many other novel methodologies are presented in this conference track.

Tuesday, 24 May

PLENARY ROOM LOCATION: Quayside 1 & 2

PLENARY SESSION

11:15

Chairperson's Remarks

Robert W. Wilkinson, PhD, Senior Director, Oncology R&D, AstraZeneca
11:20

Antibody-Cytokine Fusions as Bispecific Immunomodulatory Proteins

Dario Neri, PhD, CEO and CSO, Philogen

Many solid tumors and hematological malignancies are characterized by an insufficient density and activation of tumor-specific leukocytes (e.g., CD8+ T cells, NK cells) at the site of disease. The antibody-based targeted delivery of suitable cytokine payloads (e.g., IL2, IL12, TNF) to the tumor may activate lymphocytes at the site of disease, mediates a potent anti-cancer activity in preclinical models of cancer, and is being investigated in clinical trials.

11:55

Targeting Regulatory T Cells within Brain Tumours: From Mechanisms to Therapies

Sergio A. Quezada, PhD, Professor, Cancer Immunology & Immunotherapy, University College London

T cells have a critical role in the maintenance of immune homeostasis in mice and man. However, despite their role in maintaining host integrity, their function is known to be hijacked in the context of cancer. In this talk, I will discuss the role of regulatory T cells in the context of the brain tumour microenvironment, as well as old and new strategies to target this compartment, including our previous work on anti-CTLA-4 and the recent development of a new CD25-targeting Treg depleting antibody for mice and man.

12:30 Enjoy Lunch on Your Own
13:10 Coffee Break with Exhibit and Poster Viewing (Quayside Foyer)
13:45

Better Targets, Better Targeting: Iterative CAR T Studies in an Academic Programme

Claire Roddie, PhD, Professor, Haemato-Oncology, UCL Cancer Institute

Here we will discuss current paradigms, recent learnings and future directions for the academic UCL CAR T cell programme, encompassing our plans for blood cancers and our increasing footprint in solid tumours.

14:20

Precision Medicine-Enabled Development of PD-1 Antibody Mono- and Combination Therapy

Roy Baynes, MD, PhD, Senior Vice President & Head, Global Clinical Development; CMO, Merck, Sharp, and Dohme

Precision medicine enabled screening studies identified unambiguous effect of PD-1 monoclonal antibody (mAB) activity in more than 30 major cancer types. Precision medicine tools enabled accelerated development and approvals of monotherapy applications. Precision medicine tools led to histology agnostic monotherapy approvals. These same tools provided powerful insights to mechanisms of treatment resistance and informed the selection of combination therapies. PD-1 mAB in combination with a variety of agents are having a major impact in cancer treatment.

14:55 Refreshment Break with Exhibit and Poster Viewing (Quayside Foyer)

ROOM LOCATION: Quayside 1

FOCUS ON T CELL RECEPTOR ENGAGEMENT

15:40

Chairperson's Remarks

Claire Roddie, PhD, Professor, Haemato-Oncology, UCL Cancer Institute
15:45

MAGE-C2 TCR T Cells to Treat Melanoma and Head and Neck Cancer: Start of Clinical Trial and Future Steps

Reno Debets, PhD, Professor, Chair, Tumor Immunology Lab, Medical Oncology, Erasmus MC Cancer Center

Adoptive T cell therapy is advancing rapidly as an anti-tumor treatment. Determinants of clinical success likely include rigorous selections of target antigens and corresponding receptors, optimization of T cell fitness, as well as strategies enabling T cells to overcome the immune suppressive micro-environment. In addition to the preclinical trajectory, it is important to roll out these therapies quickly in the clinical setting.

Points that are presented during this lecture: Patient study: start of MAGE-C2 TCR T cell clinical trial and, laboratory study: future strategies to enhance efficacy of engineered T cells.

16:15

Developing Stem Cell Derived TCR T Cell Therapies for Cancer

David J. Dow, PhD, Senior Director, Allogeneic Research, Adaptimmune R&D

The development of allogeneic cell therapies for cancer holds much promise, with various methods and cell types currently being developed. In this talk, I will update you on our progress towards developing T cells differentiated from IPSC cells, incorporating our SPEAR T cell TCRs, as a therapeutic approach.

Julian Ashby, PhD, Field Application Scientist, Cell Avidity, LUMICKS

Predicting CAR and TCR therapeutic response with legacy techniques including affinity, cytokine release and in vitro killing assays can be difficult. However, cell avidity (or overall cellular binding strength) provides a more complete and physiologically relevant picture of the interaction between T cells and targets and is better at predicting therapeutic response. In this talk we will share case studies demonstrating how cell avidity has been used to better understand downstream functionality.

17:15

Targeting Tumor Neoantigens with TCR-Engineered T Cell Therapy

Gavin M. Bendle, PhD, Vice President, R&D, Neogene Therapeutics

We are developing neoantigen-specific TCR-engineered T cell therapies for the treatment of solid cancers. Using our proprietary TCR discovery and T cell engineering technologies we are developing fully individualized multi-specificity engineered T cell products that utilize TCRs recognizing patient-specific neoantigens. We are also developing engineered T cell products expressing TCRs that recognize highly-prevalent shared neoantigens such as those resulting from mutations in TP53 and KRAS oncogenic driver genes.

17:45 Close of Day

Wednesday, 25 May

08:00 Registration and Morning Coffee (Quayside Foyer)

ROOM LOCATION: Quayside 1

TILs AND MORE ON TCRs

09:05

Targeting Solid Tumors with a Universal CAR and Small Molecule Bispecific Adapters (TumorTags)

David J. Fontana, PhD, Chief Business and Strategy Officer, Umoja BioPharma

Targeting of solid tumors with “fixed” specificity CARs has shown limited efficacy and questionable benefit/risk profiles.   This presentation will review an alternative approach using a universal CAR and a cocktail of specific TumorTags specific for tumor cells/stromal elements.    Delivery of a universal “TagCAR” construct (ie, anti-FITC) that can be delivered with ex vivo and in vivo technologies paired with TumorTags potentially provides an integrated approach to effective solid tumor therapy.

09:35

Anti-FLT3 CAR T and Bispecific Antibody Therapies for Effective Elimination of AML and Conditioning for Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation

Vladislav M. Sandler, PhD, CEO & Co-Founder, Hemogenyx Pharmaceuticals

Relapsed/refractory acute myeloid leukemia (R/R-AML) has a poor prognosis even with hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) transplantation. Surface expression of FLT3 in leukemic cells and in HSCs provides an excellent opportunity for the development of targeted therapy aimed to eradicate FLT3+ R/R-AML and facilitate bone marrow conditioning. We have developed chimeric antigen receptor modified T cells (CAR T) targeting FLT3 and a humanized bispecific antibody (CDX) that recruits T cells to eliminate FLT3-expressing cells.

10:05 Coffee Break with Exhibit and Poster Viewing (Quayside Foyer)

IMPROVING THE THERAPEUTIC INDEX / GAMMA DELTA T CELLS

10:45

Improving the Therapeutic Index (TI) in Adoptive Cell Therapy

Francesco Marincola, Senior Vice President & Global Head of Cell Therapy Research, Kite Pharma

In solid malignancies, modifiers dependent on individual tumour immune biology may affect pharmacodynamics, including differential trafficking to benign compared with cancer tissue, hampered engagement with target cells, immune suppression and cellular dysfunction due to unfavourable metabolic conditions. Here, we propose a patient-specific assessment of factors affecting on-tumour from off-tumour activity in disparate immunologic environments that impact Adoptive Cell Therapy’s clinical efficacy and may favourably balance the TI for these products.

11:15

Using Gamma Delta T Cells to Identify New Cancer Antigens

Julie Dechanet-Merville, PhD, Director of Immunoconcept, CNRS and Bordeaux University

Gamma delta T lymphocytes hold great promise for the development of new cancer immunotherapies. However, a better understanding of how they recognize and kill cancer cells is required to harness their full anti-tumor potential. I will present the strategy we developed to identify tumor antigens recognized by gamma delta T cells on different types of cancer cells and how they could be used as cell therapy against glioblastoma.

11:45

Genetically Modified Gamma Delta T Cells in Combination with Chemotherapy: Now in the Clinic 

Lawrence Lamb, Jr., PhD, Executive Vice President & CSO, IN8Bio

Combination therapies aligning chemotherapy and immunotherapy can improve outcomes over either approach but eradication of solid tumors remains elusive. While chemotherapy reduces tumor mass, increases vascular permeability, disrupts immunosuppressive networks, and upregulates NKG2DL expression, anti-tumor immune effector cells can also be depleted. We show effective synergies achieved with genetic modification of γδ T cell for chemotherapy resistance and concurrent delivery with chemotherapy.

12:15 Interactive Discussion Luncheon

Interactive Discussions are informal, moderated discussions, allowing participants to exchange ideas and experiences and develop future collaborations around a focused topic. Each discussion will be led by a facilitator who keeps the discussion on track and the group engaged. For in-person events, the facilitator will lead from the front of the room while attendees remain seated. For virtual attendees, the format will be in an online networking platform. To get the most out of this format, please come prepared to share examples from your work, be a part of a collective, problem-solving session, and participate in active idea sharing. Please visit the conference website for more information.

IN-PERSON ONLY: Progress with Gamma Delta Therapy

Paul Parren, PhD, Executive Vice President, Lava Therapeutics; Professor, Leiden University Medical Center
  • Gamma-delta T cells compared to classical approaches
  • (Bispecific) antibody versus cell therapy approaches
  • Delta2 versus delta1 T cell-based approaches
  • Challenges with pre-clinical studies
  • Manufacturing considerations

IN-PERSON ONLY: The Challenges of CAR T Treatments and How to Overcome Them

John Maher, PhD, Consultant & Senior Lecturer, Immunology, Kings College London; CSO, Leucid Bio
  • Difficulties with tumour antigen heterogeneity
  • Challenges with preclinical modelling
  • Generation and application of allogeneic CAR T cells 
  • Means of enhancing their potency, especially against solid tumours​

IN-PERSON ONLY: Improving Results Targeting Solid Tumors

Wei Yan, PhD, President & CEO, Sound Biologics
  • Understanding challenges compared to treating blood tumors
  • Strategies for immune “cold” tumors
  • Overcoming dose limitations and tolerability
  • Ways to achieve enhanced solid tumor specificity​

IN-PERSON ONLY: Next-Generation Bispecific Strategies

Oliver Schon, PhD, Vice President Development and CMC, BiVictriX Therapeutics PLC
  • When is bispecific not enough?
  • Improved tumour antigen specificity             
  • Engagement with more effective immune responses
  • Novel formats and other enhancements​

GAMMA DELTA ANTIBODY-BASED APPROACHES

13:15

Chairperson's Remarks

Francesco Marincola, Senior Vice President & Global Head of Cell Therapy Research, Kite Pharma
13:20

Progress with Bispecific Gamma Delta T Cell Engager Therapies 

Paul Parren, PhD, Executive Vice President, Lava Therapeutics; Professor, Leiden University Medical Center

LAVA Therapeutics is using its Gammabody platform to engage Vγ9Vδ2-T cells and a cascade of down-stream immune cells to attack tumor cells expressing PSMA as a novel bispecific antibody therapeutic for the treatment of prostate cancer. The presentation will address the design and selection of the lead candidate as well as pharmacokinetic, non-clinical safety studies of the therapeutic format and its progress to the clinic.

13:50

ADT-010, A Novel Immunomodulatory Antibody that Harnesses the Anti-Tumor Properties of Tissue-Resident Vd1 Gamma Delta T Cells

Mihriban Tuna, PhD, MBA, CSO, Adaptate Biotherapeutics Ltd.

Gamma delta T cells are a unique class of lymphocytes that bridge innate and adaptive immunity. Adaptate has developed antibodies which target Vd1 gamma delta T cells. These antibodies selectively modulate Vd1 gamma delta T cell activity with a potential for superior efficacy and safety compared to conventional immunomodulatory therapies such as pan T cell activators and are being developed primarily for solid tumour indications.

14:20

Harnessing Vγ9Vδ2T Cells with Butyrophilins: Translating Immune Modulation into Patient Treatment

Loui Madakamutil, PhD, CSO, ImCheck Therapeutics

γδ-T cells are innate-like lymphocytes that sense stressed cells and form a part of the immune surveillance mechanism, their infiltration into tumors is associated with a positive prognosis. Butyrophilin-3A (BTN3A), a stress sensing surface protein is required for activation of human γ9δ2-T cells in response to malignant or infected cells. ICT01 is a first-in-class clinical-stage anti-BTN3A monoclonal antibody that selectively activates γ9δ2-T cells. The presentation will cover preclinical discovery, mode of action, and development of ICT01. The clinical development strategy that includes biomarker findings and the latest patient responses in the cancer patients will be presented as well.

14:50 Networking Refreshment Break (Quayside Foyer)
15:05

Overcoming Tumour Antigen Heterogeneity in the Context of CAR T Cell Therapy for Solid Tumours

 

Astero Klampatsa, Team Leader, Cancer Therapeutics, Institute of Cancer Research

Major challenges within the hostile tumour microenvironment, including tumour antigen heterogeneity contribute to CAR treatment limitations in solid tumours. In this talk, a study is discussed looking into the limitations in efficiency of CAR T cell therapy in an antigen-heterogeneous syngeneic tumour model, and whether this can be overcome by CAR T cell induction of bystander effects. 

15:35

Immunotherapy of Refractory Cancers with Parallel CAR T Cells that Provide Dual Co-Stimulation

John Maher, PhD, Consultant & Senior Lecturer, Immunology, Kings College London; CSO, Leucid Bio

CAR T cells elicit remarkable efficacy in haematological malignancies, but not other cancers. We postulate that dual CD28 and 4-1BB co-stimulation could enhance potency, enabling effective implementation against solid tumours. Consequently, we designed parallel (p)CARs in which a 2G (CD28+CD3z) CAR is co-expressed with a 4-1BB-containing chimeric co-stimulatory receptor. We found that pCAR T cells consistently resist exhaustion and senescence, enabling superior anti-tumour activity compared to T cells that express traditional linear CARs.

16:05

CAR T Cells in Solid Tumors: Struggles and Future Strategies to Improve Therapeutic Potency

Christian Pellegrino, PhD, Postdoctoral Researcher, Clinic for Medical Oncology and Hematology, University Hospital Zürich

The majority of solid tumours create a hostile microenvironment, with many obstacles preventing the correct function and expansion of immuno-therapeutic agents such as CAR T cells. One of the hurdles is the highly heterogeneous population which together form the solid tumour lesion. Our research focuses on the employment of Adaptor FITC CAR T-cells which have the ability to recognise multiple tumour associated antigens, guided by bispecific adaptor molecules conjugated to Fluorescein.

16:35 Close of Conference





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Modulating the Tumour Microenvironment