Cellectis’ 3rd TALEN®-based Gene-Edited Allogeneic CAR T-Cell Product Candidate Entering Clinical Development

NEW YORK, NY, USA I June 4, 2018 I Cellectis (Euronext Growth: ALCLS – Nasdaq: CLLS), a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company focused on developing immunotherapies based on gene-edited allogeneic CAR T-cells (UCART), announced today that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved the Company’s Investigational New Drug (IND) application to initiate a Phase 1 clinical trial for UCART22, Cellectis’ second wholly controlled TALEN® gene-edited product candidate, for the treatment of B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL) in adult patients.

UCART22 is the 3rd allogeneic, off-the-shelf, gene-edited CAR T-cell product candidate approved by the FDA for clinical trials in the U.S., following UCART19 (exclusively licensed to Servier and under joint development agreement between Servier and Allogene), and Cellectis’ UCART123. Cellectis intends to begin the UCART22 Phase 1 study in the second half of 2018. The research for UCART22 will be led by Dr. Nitin Jain, Assistant Professor, and Prof. Hagop Kantarjian, Chairman in the Department of Leukemia and University Chair in Cancer Medicine, at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston.

“The FDA’s approval of Cellectis’ UCART22 IND application for the treatment of B-ALL puts us one step closer to providing patients in need with a better access to an effective drug candidate for such a rare, devastating disease,” said Prof. Stéphane Depil, Senior Vice President, Research & Development, and Chief Medical Officer, Cellectis. “With this opportunity, Cellectis is well-positioned to further its work in the off-the-shelf gene-editing space, in the hope of helping patients to beat B-ALL in the near future.”

“Given that Cellectis is leading the allogeneic CAR-T approach across today’s medical landscape – first, with the FDA’s IND approval for UCART123 last year and now, with approval of UCART22 IND – we are eager to bring an innovative therapy to the market for patients who are suffering from B-ALL everywhere,” added Stephan Reynier, Chief Regulatory and Compliance Officer, Cellectis. “The bottom line is that patients are in dire need of effective, affordable and easily accessible treatments across the board, and our off-the-shelf product candidates aim to do just that.”

About UCART22

UCART22 is an allogeneic, off-the-shelf gene-edited T-cell product candidate designed for the treatment of B-ALL. Like CD19, CD22 is a cell surface antigen expressed from the pre-B-cell stage of development through mature B-cells. CD22 expression occurs in more than 90% of patients with B-ALL.[1]

UCART22 clinical trial is a Phase 1, open label dose-escalation and dose-expansion study to evaluate the safety, expansion, persistence and clinical activity of UCART22 (allogeneic engineered T-cells expressing anti-CD22 chimeric antigen receptor) in patients with relapsed or refractory CD22+ B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL). Dose level 1 to be administered is 1×105 UCART22 cells per kilogram. Dose levels 2 and 3 are respectively at 1×106 and 5×106.

ALL is a heterogeneous hematologic disease characterized by the proliferation of immature lymphoid cells in the bone marrow, peripheral blood, and other organs. It can start either with early B-cells or T-cells at different stages of maturity. The American Cancer Society’s estimates for acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL) in the United States for 2018 (including both children and adults) are about 5,960 new cases of ALL and about 1,470 deaths from ALL. Approximately 85% of ALL cases involve precursor B-cells (B-ALL).

The manufacturing process of Cellectis’ allogeneic CAR T-cell product line, Universal CARTs or UCARTs, yields frozen, off-the-shelf, non-alloreactive engineered CAR T-cells. UCARTs are meant to be readily available CAR T-cells for a large patient population. Their production is industrialized with defined pharmaceutical release criteria.

Information about ongoing clinical trials is publicly available on dedicated websites, such as:

www.clinicaltrials.gov in the U.S.

www.clinicaltrialsregister.eu in Europe

 [1] Shah et al., 2015

SOURCE: Cellectis