These new data showed a greater progression-free survival time in patients receiving ICT-107 than expected in this patient population, ImmunoCellular Therapeutics said.
The Phase I clinical trial of ICT-107 was conducted to evaluate the safety and tolerability of the cancer vaccine in patients with GBM, the most common and aggressive form of brain cancer. The trial enrolled 19 patients - 16 with newly-diagnosed and three with recurrent disease-who received ICT-107 in addition to standard treatment with radiation and temozolomide, a chemotherapy product that was until recently the only approved drug for GBM.
According to the company, the median progression-free survival time in the 16 newly diagnosed patients enrolled in the trial was 19 months - 12 months longer than the historical progression-free survival time of 6.9 months. Seven of these 16 patients continue to show no signs of tumor recurrence, three of whom have gone more than two years with no disease progression.
With 80% of newly diagnosed patients (13 of the 16) still alive at a median time of 20 months, it is too early to determine the median overall survival time for this trial. Historically, only 26.5% patients survive two years with standard of care. ICT-107 was well tolerated, and no significant adverse events were reported during the trial.
Manish Singh, president and CEO of ImmunoCellular Therapeutics, said: "We are excited by these results, and hope to aggressively move this program forward by securing a partnership with a larger company to demonstrate that immunotherapy has the ability to provide safer and better treatment options to patients suffering from GBM and other incurable cancers."
http://www.datamonitor.com
Republication or redistribution, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without prior written consent. Datamonitor shall not be liable for errors or delays in the content, or for any actions taken in reliance thereon

More News:
Market Updates |
Stock Alerts |
All Trading News |
Stock Index