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Daily Newsletter

25 August 2023

Daily Newsletter

25 August 2023

XNK partners with Swedish hospital to develop AML therapy

XNK Therapeutics adds another research partner to evaluate XNK’s natural killer cell therapy candidate in acute myeloid leukaemia.

Phalguni Deswal August 24 2023

XNK Therapeutics has partnered with Sweden-based research university Karolinska University Hospital to evaluate the former’s natural killer (NK) cell therapy candidate, XNK02, in pre-clinical development.

The research collaboration will investigate XNK02 for treating acute myeloid leukaemia (AML). XNK partnered with The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Centre, which led to the development of XNK02.

A study to investigate the NK cells’ ability to kill the tumour cells will be conducted as a part of the research collaboration. To that end, a large-scale bioreactor culture study of AML patients' immune cells will be performed. Using XNK’s technology, these immune cells will then be activated and expanded to promote cell growth.

Cell therapies constitute a major share of the AML therapy market, with GlobalData forecasting the sales of these cell therapies to reach up to $3.1bn in 2031. Additionally, there are several novel therapies entering the AML market. Recently, positive Phase II data for a cell-based vaccine, vididencel, as a maintenance therapy for AML was reported by Mendus.

GlobalData is the parent company of Clinical Trials Arena.

XNK’s other lead candidate evencaleucel is in Phase II of clinical development as a combination therapy with Sanofi’s anti-CD38 antibody, Sarclisa (isatuximab). The company has partnered with Sanofi and a Sweden-based research institute, Karolinska University Hospital (Stockholm), for the evencaleucel drug development programme.

XNK also has two more drugs in pre-clinical development, namely XNK03 and XNK04, for the treatment of urothelial cancer and an undisclosed indication, respectively.

Cell & Gene Therapy coverage on Clinical Trials Arena is supported by CytivaEditorial content is independently produced and follows the highest standards of journalistic integrity. Topic sponsors are not involved in the creation of editorial content.

Multiple Myeloma (MM) pipeline is dominated by CAR-T cells

The success of CAR-Ts in MM has fueled R&D investment into this class of therapy, with more CAR-Ts in development than all other cell and gene therapy classes combined. The approval of the autologous CAR-T cell therapies Abecma and Carvykti sees the CAR-T pipeline mostly constituted of autologous drugs. However, there are also multiple allogeneic CAR-Ts in the pipeline, with these therapies having an “off-the-shelf” advantage over autologous therapies.

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