- Therapeutics
- Michael Pollack
Human papillomavirus (HPV) is a group of human viruses known to cause various malignancies. Of the group, HPV-16 is the most prevalent strain – an estimated 90% of adults have been exposed. HPV-16 is also the strain most commonly associated with malignancy, causing the vast majority of cervical, anal, vaginal, vulvar, and penile cancers. Currently, HPV-positive malignancies non-responsive to surgery or radiation are incurable and poorly palliated by existing systemic therapies. Thus, an alternative therapeutic approach for HPV-positive malignancies is needed.
Researchers at the National Cancer Institute (NCI) developed a T cell receptor (TCR) that may be used in adoptive cell therapy to treat HPV-positive malignancies. The TCR confers high-avidity recognition of the HPV-specific E7 oncoprotein that drives malignant transformation in HPV-infected cells. Further, E7 is specific to and constitutively expressed by cancer cells, making it an ideal therapeutic target. The TCR targets human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-A*02-restricted epitope E711-19. The inventors successfully transduced T cells obtained from peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) with this TCR. An ongoing Phase I/II clinical trial is investigating the efficacy of the E7-targeting TCR in treating HPV-positive malignancies.
The NCI Center for Immuno-Oncology is actively seeking co-development partners and/or licensees for this E7-targeting TCR with therapeutic potential for HPV-positive conditions.
- Adoptive cell therapy against HPV-positive cancers
- Treatment of HPV-related infections and premalignant conditions
- Prevention of HPV-related infections and premalignant conditions
- Detection of HPV-infected or transformed cells for diagnostic purposes
- FDA approval of another first-in-class TCR therapeutic demonstrates treatment benefit of approach
- FDA approval of another first-in-class TCR therapeutic decreases regulatory risk
- High avidity for the HPV-specific E7 oncoprotein
- Specifically recognize HLA-A*02-positive HPV-16 cancer cells
- TCR can be used to transduce T cells isolated from PBMCs, an easily accessible source of human immune cells
Christian Hinrichs MD (NCI), Steven Rosenberg MD, PhD (NCI)
- Clinical
- U.S. Patent Issued: U.S. Patent Number , Issued 08 Jan 2019
- Foreign Issued: - Patent Number EP3149031B1, Issued 18 Dec 2019
- Foreign Issued: - Patent Number AU2015266818B2, Issued 03 Oct 2019
- Foreign Filed: - Patent Application 2950192A1, Filed 29 May 2015
- Foreign Filed: - Patent Application 113150112A, Filed 29 May 2015
- Foreign Filed: - Patent Application 248797A, Filed 29 May 2015
- Foreign Issued: - Patent Number , Issued 19 Aug 2020
- Cancer/Neoplasm
- Infectious Diseases