Cancer vaccines poised to unlock 'new treatment paradigm' with Merck/Moderna
data
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[June 06, 2023]
By Julie Steenhuysen
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Adding an experimental mRNA-based vaccine from
Moderna Inc and Merck & Co reduced the risk that the most deadly skin
cancer would spread by 65% over treatment with an immunotherapy alone in
a mid-stage trial, the companies reported on Monday.
With this and earlier data, Moderna is considering seeking faster
approval from regulators for the treatment, the company told investors
after having presented the results at the American Society of Clinical
Oncology meeting in Chicago.
"Some of the residual uncertainty seems to be going away on that
potential (option)," said Moderna President Stephen Hoge.
The data followed earlier promising data from the trial showing the
customized mRNA vaccine given in combination with Merck's Keytruda cut
the risk of death or recurrence of melanoma by 44% compared with
Keytruda alone.
The findings add to a growing body of evidence suggesting that mRNA
technology, which rose to prominence during the COVID-19 pandemic, can
be used to assemble personalized vaccines that train the immune system
to attack the specific type of cancer cells in a patient's tumors.
Scientists have been chasing the dream of vaccines to treat cancer for
decades with few successes. Experts say mRNA vaccines, which can be
produced in as little as eight weeks, paired with drugs that rev up the
immune system may lead to a new generation of cancer therapies.
The hope is for "a completely new treatment paradigm in cancer that will
be better tolerated and unique to individual patients' tumors," said Dr.
Jane Healy, an executive overseeing in early cancer treatment
development at Merck.
Moderna said during its investor call that it was starting a Phase 3
confirmatory study, which it hoped to open in the third quarter of this
year.
The Merck/Moderna collaboration is one of several combining powerful
drugs that unleash the immune system to target cancers with mRNA vaccine
technology. Pfizer's COVID vaccine partner BioNTech SE and Gritstone Bio
Inc are taking similar approaches using mRNA technology.
The vaccines all target neoantigens, new mutations that are only present
on tumors. Aiming at these unique proteins allows the immune system to
kill cancer cells while leaving healthy tissue unscathed.
The trick is determining which of many mutations is driving the cancer.
To accomplish this, tumors are removed and their genetic makeup is
mapped using next-generation DNA sequencing. Companies use artificial
intelligence to predict which mutations will be the most effective
targets. These are used to build an individualized vaccine targeting
only mutations in the patient's tumor.
During this process, patients typically receive an immunotherapy such as
Keytruda or Roche's Tecentriq, which block a mechanism cancer uses to
hide from the immune system.
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A sign marks the headquarters of Moderna
Inc in Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S., May 18, 2020. REUTERS/Brian
Snyder/File Photo
'A STARTING POINT'
Long before COVID, companies had been eyeing messenger RNA (mRNA)
technology, which carries instructions for cells to make specific
proteins, as a vehicle for delivering a cancer vaccine.
Merck and Moderna have been collaborating since 2016. Researchers at
Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center (MSK) in New York began
working with Germany's BioNTech in 2017.
At that time, there was already proof that immunotherapy could work
in so-called "hot" tumors, or highly mutated cancers, such as
melanoma. There was little hope it would work in "cold" cancers with
few mutations, such as pancreatic cancer, said MSK's Dr. Vinod
Balachandran.
With standard treatment, 90% of pancreatic cancer patients die
within five years of diagnosis.
Balachandran's team studied the rare long-term survivors and found
an immune system component called T cells in these individuals were
able to recognize mutations derived from the cancer, raising the
possibility of a targeted vaccine.
In a small ongoing trial testing a made-to-order BioNTech vaccine
plus Roche's Tecentriq, half of the 16 pancreatic cancer patients
mounted an immune response, and none showed signs of relapse after
18 months, according to data published last month in Nature.
Gritstone Bio is taking a different tack, combining two types of
customized vaccines in hopes of treating patients with metastatic
colon cancer, another cancer that has been largely unresponsive to
immunotherapy.
The approach first primes the immune system with an older technology
called a chimpanzee adenovirus vaccine that targets patients'
tumors. That is followed by a personalized self-amplifying mRNA
vaccine, which includes an enzyme that makes extra copies of the
antigens, reducing the required dose.
Gritstone is expecting data from a later-stage trial testing its
dual vaccine therapy in the first quarter of 2024.
"Based on everything we've shown and we've published, we're really
excited," said Gritstone CEO Andrew Allen.
Merck and Moderna are planning a larger Phase 3 trial in melanoma
and are also testing its combination in lung cancer.
"We see this as a starting point," Healy said.
(Reporting by Julie Steenhuysen and Patrick Wingrove; Editing by
Caroline Humer, Bill Berkrot and Sonali Paul)
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