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Immetas Therapeutics announces Series A financing to advance research on inflammation pathways in aging and develop therapeutics for cancer and inflammatory disease

Immetas Therapeutics Announces Series A Financing to Advance Research on Inflammation Pathways in Aging and Develop Therapeutics for Cancer and Inflammatory Disease,

EAST HANOVER, N.J.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Immetas Therapeutics today announced it has raised a Series A financing of $11 million to advance research on inflammation pathways in aging and the development of novel, immune modulating treatments for cancer and inflammatory disease. Morningside Ventures was the sole investor in the financing round.

“Morningside’s investment is a significant endorsement of our approach to targeting inflammation pathways in aging and our clinical evidence-based discovery strategy,” said J. Gene Wang, MD, PhD, co-founder and CEO. “Emerging research that molecular pathways driving both aging and age-related diseases converge around chronic, low grade inflammation is creating a new set of opportunities to treat cancer and other serious diseases. Immetas is well positioned to capitalize on these new advances.”

Dr. Wang added, “Our approach prioritizes clinical evidence and a deep interrogation of disease mechanisms to guide drug discovery. This strategy is designed to reduce development risk resulting from the ‘translational’ gap between laboratory findings and patients and ensure the development of superior and well-differentiated drugs.”

Dr. Wang co-founded Immetas after a 20-year career at large pharmaceutical companies, including Merck, Abbott, GSK and Novartis, where he played integral roles in the successful development of major drugs, including Humira® (adalimumab), Varubi® (rolapitant), Zolinza® (vorinostat) and Gardasil® (human papilloma virus vaccine), and led multiple programs from discovery to clinical proof-of-concept. Dr. Wang received his M.D. from Peking University Medical Center and Ph.D. in Immunobiology from Yale University, followed by medical residency training at Yale New Haven Hospital.

Immetas other co-founder, Dr. David Sinclair, is an internationally recognized scientist known for his research on genes and small molecules that delay aging, including Sirtuin genes, resveratrol and NAD precursors. He was among TIME magazine’s “50 Most Influential People in Healthcare” in 2018. Dr. Sinclair is Professor of Genetics at Harvard Medical School and co-Director of the Paul F. Glenn Center for Biology of Aging Research at Harvard and he serves as a science advisor to the Company.

“We have a shared vision that inflammation is the fundamental and ultimate process driving aging and age-related cancers and inflammatory diseases,” said Dr. Sinclair. “Our approach is distinct from others that have targeted conventional age-related pathways and to date have proved challenging.”

The Company is building a pipeline of biologic and small molecule drugs internally and through collaborations. Immetas’ lead program is aimed at designing a series of bi-specific antibodies to regulate inflammation in the tumor microenvironment and overcome resistance to conventional immune checkpoint therapies.

In connection with the financing, Dr. Lu Huang, MD, MBA, Managing Director at Morningside Ventures, joined the Immetas board of directors. Since joining Morningside in 2003, Dr. Huang has led nearly three dozen healthcare / life science investments in China and the United States.

About Immetas Therapeutics

Immetas discovers and develops novel therapeutics that modulate the innate immune system to treat age-related cancers and inflammatory diseases. The company’s approach is based on emerging evidence that chronic low-grade inflammation is a fundamental process governing aging and age-related diseases and anchored in clinical evidence to mitigate development risk. Immetas was founded by J. Gene Wang, MD, PhD, a veteran in discovery and translational drug development in immunology/ inflammation and oncology, and David Sinclair, PhD, Professor of Genetics at Harvard Medical School and a leader in the molecular mechanisms of aging. The lead program in the company’s growing pipeline is focused on engineering bispecific antibodies to modulate inflammation in the tumor microenvironment and overcome resistance to the conventional immune checkpoint therapies. Learn more at www.immetas.com

Contacts

J. Gene Wang

gene@immetas.com

Peter Steinerman

prsteinerman@gmail.com

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Healthcare

TYME announces outcome of interim futility review for HopES Sarcoma Phase II study

  • Principal Investigator of the HopES Sarcoma Study Recommended Continuation of the Trial

BEDMINSTER, N.J.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–$TYMETyme Technologies, Inc. (NASDAQ: TYME), an emerging biotechnology company developing cancer metabolism-based therapies (CMBTs™), announced today a positive outcome of an interim futility review for the HopES Sarcoma Phase II clinical trial that is evaluating TYME’s lead cancer metabolism-based candidate, SM-88, as a potential oral treatment for patients with Ewing’s Sarcoma and other high-risk sarcomas.

“It is evident that the salvage cohort will pass the futility test and meet the criteria for expansion,” said Sant Chawla, M.D., founder of the Sarcoma Oncology Center, Santa Monica, CA and principal investigator for the HopES Sarcoma trial.

The interim futility review was completed in late July and, based on the analysis of the data and recommendations of Dr. Sant Chawla, the study will proceed with the current trial design as planned. The next major milestone in the HopES Sarcoma trial is expected in calendar year 2021. Sarcomas represents a great unmet medical need and significant opportunity for all stakeholders. There are more than 12,000 patients diagnosed each year without meaningful treatment options.

“We are pleased to have reached this important point in the HopES Sarcoma trial and now await the final results of the trial to determine the potential of oral SM-88 in high-risk sarcomas in an effort to improve the lives of these patients with, what we believe could be, a better safer approach,” said Giuseppe Del Priore, M.D., M.P.H., Chief Medical Officer at TYME. “To date, SM-88 has demonstrated encouraging tumor responses in 15 different cancers across four separate studies with minimal serious grade 3 or higher adverse events.”

The HopES Sarcoma trial is a prospective open-label Phase II trial evaluating the efficacy and safety of SM-88, with the conditioning agents methoxsalen, phenytoin and sirolimus, in two cohorts of patients. Up to 24 evaluable patients (12 per cohort) will be enrolled. The first cohort will evaluate oral SM-88 as maintenance monotherapy following standard primary or palliative treatments for Ewing’s sarcoma patients with a high risk of relapse or disease progression. The second cohort will determine the clinical benefits of SM-88 as salvage monotherapy for patients with clinically advanced sarcomas. Patient dosing began in January 2020. The Joseph Ahmed Foundation is providing funding and patient support for this investigator-initiated Phase II (HopES) trial of SM-88 in patients with previously treated metastatic sarcoma, sponsored by the Sarcoma Oncology Research Center. The primary objectives are to measure efficacy events, including overall response, stable disease and progression free survival. Secondary objectives include duration of response, overall survival, clinical benefit rate using response evaluation criteria in solid tumors (RECIST 1.1), and incidence of treatment-emergent adverse events. Learn more at TYMETRIALS.com.

About Sarcomas and Ewing’s Sarcoma

Sarcomas are rare cancers in adults but are more common in children. There are approximately 12,0001 new sarcoma cases annually in the U.S. alone. There are many “subtypes” of sarcoma, as it can arise in many tissue structures throughout the body (nerves, muscles, joints, bone, fat, blood vessels – collectively referred to as the body’s “connective tissues”). Sarcomas are most frequently found in the limbs, as this is where the majority of the body’s connective tissues are found but can also present within the sites of more “common” cancers (e.g., breast sarcoma, stomach sarcoma, lung sarcoma, ovarian sarcoma, etc.). Sarcoma cancers often grow hidden deep in the body and are often diagnosed when the tumor size limits effective treatment options.

Ewing’s sarcoma is a primary bone cancer within a group of cancers known collectively as the Ewing’s sarcoma family of tumors. Ewing’s sarcoma is a type of tumor that forms in the bone or soft tissue. It is a rare type of cancer that is often overlooked and receives minimal recognition and research funding. Although Ewing’s sarcoma is typically a pediatric cancer, (it accounts for 30% of bone cancers in children), it can also be found in adults. The most commonly affected areas include the pelvis, thigh, lower leg, upper arm, and chest wall.

About SM-88

SM-88 is an oral investigational modified proprietary tyrosine derivative that is believed to interrupt the metabolic processes of cancer cells by breaking down the cells’ key defenses and leading to cell death through oxidative stress and exposure to the body’s natural immune system. Clinical trial data have shown that SM-88 has demonstrated encouraging tumor responses across 15 different cancers, including pancreatic, lung, breast, prostate and sarcoma cancers with minimal serious grade 3 or higher adverse events. SM-88 is an investigational therapy that is not approved for any indication in any disease. Learn more.

About the Joseph Ahmed Foundation

The Joseph Ahmed Foundation (JAF) is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization that was founded in 2016 by the family of Joseph Ahmed, who lost his courageous battle with Ewing’s Sarcoma eight months after his diagnosis on September 1, 2014, at the age of 16. Through their tragic loss and grief, Joseph’s loved ones established the Joseph Ahmed Foundation which is dedicated to raising public awareness for the importance of early detection of the disease, and the urgent need of funding for research and development of innovative treatment and therapies to treat Ewing’s Sarcoma and other forms of pediatric cancer. JAF’s mission is to provide resources for research programs and support services through fundraising, philanthropic donations, corporate sponsorship and grants. JAF is comprised of passionate board members and volunteers who all share the same vision, finding a cure. The foundation can be reached at 212-867-8667. The global website is www.thejosephahmedfoundation.org

About Tyme Technologies

Tyme Technologies, Inc., is an emerging biotechnology company developing cancer therapeutics that are intended to be broadly effective across tumor types and have low toxicity profiles. Unlike targeted therapies that attempt to regulate specific mutations within cancer, the Company’s therapeutic approach is designed to take advantage of a cancer cell’s innate metabolic weaknesses to compromise its defenses, leading to cell death through oxidative stress and exposure to the body’s natural immune system. For more information, visit www.tymeinc.com. Follow us on social media: @tyme_Inc, LinkedIn, Instagram, Facebook and YouTube.

Forward-Looking Statements/Disclosure Notice

In addition to historical information, this press release contains forward-looking statements under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act that involve substantial risks and uncertainties. Such forward-looking statements within this press release include, without limitation, statements regarding our drug candidates, including SM-88, and their clinical potential and non-toxic safety profiles, our drug development plans and strategies, ongoing and planned preclinical and clinical trials, preliminary data results and the therapeutic design and mechanisms of our drug candidates; and readers can identify forward-looking statements by sentences or passages involving the use of terms such as “believes,” “expects,” “hopes,” “may,” “will,” “plan,” “intends,” “estimates,” “could,” “should,” “would,” “continue,” “seeks,” or “anticipates,” and similar words including their use in the negative or by discussions of future matters such as effect of the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic and the associated economic downturn and impacts on the Company’s ongoing preclinical and clinical trials and ability to analyze data from those trials, the cost of development and potential commercialization of our lead drug candidate and of other new products, expected releases of interim or final data from our clinical trials, possible collaborations, the timing, scope and objectives of our ongoing and planned clinical trials and other statements that are not historical. The forward-looking statements contained in this press release are based on management’s current expectations, which are subject to uncertainty, risks and changes in circumstances that are difficult to predict and many of which are outside of TYME’s control. These statements involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors which may cause the Company’s actual results, performance or achievements to be materially different from any historical results and future results, performances or achievements expressed or implied by the forward-looking statements. These risks and uncertainties include, but are not limited to, the severity, duration, and economic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic; that the information is of a preliminary nature and may be subject to change; uncertainties inherent in the cost and outcomes of research and development, including the cost and availability of acceptable-quality clinical supply and the ability to achieve adequate clinical study design and start and completion dates; the possibility of unfavorable study results, including unfavorable new clinical data and additional analyses of existing data; risks associated with early, initial data, including the risk that the final data from any clinical trial may differ from prior or preliminary study data; final results of additional clinical trials that may be different from the preliminary data analysis and may not support further clinical development; that past reported data are not necessarily predictive of future patient or clinical data outcomes; whether and when any applications or other submissions for SM-88 may be filed with regulatory authorities; whether and when regulatory authorities may approve any applications or submissions; decisions by regulatory authorities regarding labeling and other matters that could affect commercial availability of SM-88; the ability of TYME and its collaborators to develop and realize collaborative synergies; competitive developments; and the factors described in the section captioned “Risk Factors” of TYME’s Annual Report on Form 10-K filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on May 22, 2020, as well as subsequent reports we file from time to time with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission available at www.sec.gov.

The information contained in this press release is as of its release date and TYME assumes no obligation to update forward-looking statements contained in this release as a result of future events or developments.

1 https://www.cancer.org/cancer/soft-tissue-sarcoma/about/key-statistics.html

Contacts

For Investor Relations & Media Inquiries:

Investor Relations

1-212- 461-2315

investorrelations@tymeinc.com
media@tymeinc.com

Categories
Local News

Breast cancer survivors tell stories at arts event

Breast cancer survivor, Billie Smith, of Lawrence, N.J., tells her story through performance at RWJ Hamilton’s WE vs. C breast cancer awareness event, Sunday, June 4, at Grounds for Sculpture in Hamilton.
–Provided photo

HAMILTON, N.J. – Twenty-two breast cancer survivors recently participated in the Project WE vs. C event at Grounds for Sculpture in Hamilton, where they told their stories in artistic ways.

Project WE vs. C was a two-day event led by Roxey Ballet and Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital at Hamilton, recognizing National Cancer Survivors Day.

Performances at the event featured personal stories of triumph from the 22 breast cancer survivors who are affiliated with RWJ Hamilton and YWCA Princeton Breast Cancer Resource Center.

One such survivor is Billie Smith of Lawrence, who has stage-one breast cancer, and who shared aspects of her journey, hoping to inspire others.

“Participating in a program like this gives you a different perspective,” said Smith. “When you hear the word cancer it is scary but this shows you can talk about it with people because you can live. We are all proof,” she said.

Smith said being a part of the breast cancer support group at RWJ and participating in the arts event at Grounds for Sculpture is good for her.

“So many people came up to me after the performance. This woman I didn’t know…hugged me and said, ‘I am going through cancer too.’ We just hugged and cried, but it makes you feel good when somebody got something out of what we did,” said Smith.

She believes in giving other breast cancer patients hope to fight the disease.

She said a benefit of being a part of RWJ cancer support group, she ‘’gets to hear from other women and…can tell her story and give others hope. I can fight this. We can fight this and give each other hope,” she said.

Smith got her diagnosis from a breast surgeon with Rutgers Cancer Institute of New Jersey and Program Director of the Cancer Center at RWJ Hamilton, Dr. Firas Eladoumikdachi, in July 2016 after an abnormal mammogram a month earlier.

At the Project WE vs. C event, her story inspired the performance, “Don’t Google ‘Til You Know What You Got.”

She explained that before she got her official diagnosis from her surgeon, she was reading about her illness and assumed she had stage four breast cancer, and was near dying.
“I had a really bad moment when I started reading, “ she said.

She also said her two sisters had breast cancer and have made so many advances since finding out. She believes that with the many advancements in technology, she too will make progress.

“So many things are different. New things are happening. My doctor is phenomenal,” she stated.

She said she tries to be strong for everybody and likes talking to survivors. She expresses her belief in medicines, and said RWJ Hamilton is redoing the cancer center, “putting the best technology for radiation.”

RWJ Hamilton believes that community involvement is critical to care and that was why the hospital created the Project WE vs. C, working with cancer survivors and the arts. They hope to spread the word about cancer in a meaningful and unique way.

Michael Ashworth, director of marketing and public relations at RWJ Hamilton, stated that the Grounds for Sculpture has designed and curated all of the Grounds for Healing gardens at RWJ Hamilton, and so they were inspired to hold their Cancer Survivors Day event at Grounds for Sculpture to showcase their arts – music, poetry, painting, fashion and printmaking.

The money raised will contribute to an $8.5 million, two-year project geared excusively for enhancements to RWJ Hamilton’s comprehensive cancer program, according to the hospital spokesperson.