2021 Archived Content

Immuno-Oncology Biomarkers

February 16 - 17, 2021 ALL TIMES EST

As pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies increase their investment in immuno-oncology programs to facilitate rapid development of novel immunotherapies, there is increasing pressure to discover and validate relevant biomarkers. Cambridge Healthtech Institute’s 6th Annual Immuno-Oncology Biomarkers meeting will bring together biomarker experts from industry and academia to address rapid development of predictive and prognostic IO biomarkers, utility of these biomarkers in clinical trials, and their potential as companion diagnostics.

Tuesday, February 16

PREDICTIVE BIOMARKERS IN IMMUNO-ONCOLOGY

8:00 am

PD-L1 2021: All the Critics Are Jumping on the Bandwagon

Kenneth Emancipator, MD, Executive Medical Director, Early Oncology Development, Merck & Co., Inc., Kenilworth, NJ, USA

PD-L1 was always a controversial biomarker, in part because assays were not harmonized, and in part because many oncologists prefer “all-comers” rather than biomarker-selected drug indications. PD-L1 nevertheless is important biologically and, consequently, its importance as a selective biomarker continues to expand across more indications and across more drugs. This program will provide an overview of PD-L1 companion diagnostics and associated drug indications in 2021.

8:20 am

What Do We Know about the Mechanism of PD-1 Action?

Adil Daud, MD, Professor, Hematology/Oncology, University of California, San Francisco; Director, Melanoma Clinical Research, UCSF Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center

We have extensive clinical data on the effectiveness of PD-1 blockade in cancer. However, we lack a mechanistic understanding of PD-1 blockade despite many recent findings. While “exhausted’ T cells in the tumor microenvironment are known to be reactivated with PD-1 blockade, we also know that systemic priming and activation of T cells may provide the source of anti-tumor reactivity. In this presentation, all the current data is summarized on this topic.

Sara Pollan, Scientist, Multiplexing, NeoGenomics Laboratories

Head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) upregulates TIGIT, PD-1 and LAG-3 to inhibit T cell activation. Vectra® Polaris™ multiplex immunofluorescence panels and Indica Halo® algorithms reveal TIGIT-expressing T cells within HNSCC, including exhausted T cells (TIGIT+PD1+LAG3+CD3+(CD4+/CD8+), T helper cells (CD3+CD4+), T cytotoxic cells (CD3+CD8+) and T regulatory cells (CD3+CD4+FoxP3).

Andrea Pavesi, PhD, Investigator, Institute for Molecular and Cellular Biology, A-Star, AIM Biotech

The critical immunosuppressive role of the tumor microenvironment (TME) in cancer immunotherapy is now recognized in the research and clinical community. However, our understanding of the relationship between the TME components and the immune system is limited. We will explore AIM Biotech’s easy-to-use and versatile organ-on-a-chip platform to better understand immune-oncology biomarkers with relationship to the tumor microenvironment. Six examples will be presented and discussed. 

9:00 am

Predictive Biomarkers for IO in Lung Cancer

Fred Hirsch, MD, PhD, Executive Director, Center for Thoracic Oncology, Tisch Cancer Center; Professor, Medicine and Pathology, Icahn School of Medicine, Mount Sinai NY

PD-L1 IHC has demonstrated predictive value for IO monotherapy, but predictive role of this assay for combination therapies is more diffuse. PD-L1 assay is still used in most clinical lung cancer practices for guidance of IO. Tumor mutation burden (TMB) is an emerging predictive biomarker in tissue and plasma. The TMB assays need standardization. New and better predictive biomarker(s) for immunotherapy are needed.

9:20 am

Building a Better Biomarker for Immune Therapy: Lessons Learned from Colon Cancer

Robert Anders, MD, PhD, Associate Professor, Pathology, Johns Hopkins

Cancer samples are predictive biomarkers that have long been used to select a patient’s therapy. Predictive biomarkers such as the expression of proteins or DNA mutations are used to select patients for targeted therapies. It is unlikely a single biomarker will suffice selecting patients for therapy. These concepts will be discussed in the setting of colorectal cancer.

Vanessa Tumilasci, PhD, Commercial Director, Trans-Hit Biomarkers

Biospecimen sourcing is becoming a challenge for many scientists who need to respect timelines for R&D plans as well as regulatory and ethical constraints. Are the scientists working with the samples aware of all the imperatives to obtain them; quality, respect of laws, ethics and regulations?

10:10 am PANEL DISCUSSION:

Moderated Q&A

Panel Moderator:
Kenneth Emancipator, MD, Executive Medical Director, Early Oncology Development, Merck & Co., Inc., Kenilworth, NJ, USA
Panelists:
Robert Anders, MD, PhD, Associate Professor, Pathology, Johns Hopkins
Adil Daud, MD, Professor, Hematology/Oncology, University of California, San Francisco; Director, Melanoma Clinical Research, UCSF Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center
Vanessa Tumilasci, PhD, Commercial Director, Trans-Hit Biomarkers
Andrea Pavesi, PhD, Investigator, Institute for Molecular and Cellular Biology, A-Star, AIM Biotech
10:35 am Session Break - View Our Virtual Exhibit Hall

PLENARY KEYNOTE SESSION: POWER OF COLLABORATION IN PANDEMIC RESPONSE: ADVANCING COVID-19 MOLECULAR DIAGNOSTICS, VACCINES & BIOTHERAPEUTICS

10:55 am

FDA Update on COVID-19 Molecular Diagnostic Testing

Timothy Stenzel, MD, PhD, Director, Office of In Vitro Diagnostics and Radiological Health, FDA
Bryan Bothwell, Director of Strategy and Business Development, Biotechnologies, Qorvo Biotechnologies
11:20 am

RADx Tech: A New Paradigm for MedTech Development

Steven Schachter, MD, Professor, Neurology, Harvard Medical School; Chief Academic Officer and RADx Chief, CIMIT

On April 24, 2020, Congress appropriated $1.5 billion for SARS-CoV-2 testing to the NIH. Within 5 days after the legislation was signed into law, the NIH launched RADx Tech to support the development, production scale-up, and deployment of accurate, rapid tests across the country. One of the goals of the RADx Tech initiative was to expand capacity so that approximately 2% of the U.S. population can be tested per day, with more tests ready for rapid deployment. There are numerous aspects of RADx Tech that make it a validated model for medtech development, as will be detailed in this presentation.

11:40 am Sponsored Presentation (Opportunity Available)
11:45 am

From Influenza, to Ebola to Zika: How a Decade of Experience and Investments Prepared Us to Respond to This Pandemic

Robert A. Johnson, PhD, Influenza Director, Biomedical Advanced R&D Authority, US Department of Health & Human Services
Helen Roberts, PhD, President, Seegene Technologies
12:10 pm

Global Public Health Consortium: A Path for Global Biosecurity through Equity and Transparency

W. Ian Lipkin, MD, Director, Center for Infection and Immunity, Columbia University

COVID-19 has exposed our vulnerability to pandemic risk and the urgency of addressing the challenges of climate change, food security, and the viral dissemination of misinformation. New molecular diagnostic platforms, investments in wildlife, domestic animal, and human microbial surveillance, and the advent of social media tools that mine the world wide web for clues to outbreaks of infectious disease are all proving invaluable in early recognition of threats to public health. However, inequities in the distribution of resources required for diagnostics and discovery, and lack of trust and transparency remain threats to biosecurity. To address these challenges, we are establishing a global public health consortium comprising of ministries of health and academic institutions. This collaborative global program will focus on creating an infectious disease epidemiology network and has three main objectives: (1) develop a model realizing and extending the goals of the International Health Regulations established by the WHO in 2005 by providing inexpensive, rapid tools for diagnosis discovery, and surveillance of infectious diseases, (2) identify and prioritize infectious agents based on pandemic risk, and (3) share data and build the infrastructure needed to produce, validate and implement drugs and vaccines to reduce morbidity and mortality.

12:30 pm Session Break - View Our Virtual Exhibit Hall

BIOMARKERS FOR CELL THERAPY AND COMBINATION IMMUNOTHERAPY

1:30 pm

Evaluation of Clinical Response to Cancer Therapy in the Post-PD-1 Treatment Setting

Emmett Schmidt, MD, PhD, Vice President, External Collaborations, Oncology Early Development, Merck

As PD-1 checkpoint inhibitor containing regimens become standard of care in first line therapy, oncologists and cancer biologists are shifting focus to address the care of patients after PD-1 treatment failure. Data addressing the biology of PD-1 treatment failure remain uncertain. Several prospective trials have shown increased efficacy of a variety of agents after PD-1 failure. A cross-sectional survey of available data from the post-PD-1 treatment clinical literature will be reviewed.

2:10 pm

Predictive Biomarkers of Response and Toxicity to Anti-CD19 CAR T Cell Therapy

John Rossi, PhD, Senior Vice President & Head, Translational Medicine, CERo Therapeutics

Data presented will include the pharmacologic profile of axicabtagene ciloleucel, a first in class anti-CD19 CAR T cell therapy approved for the treatment of  aggressive NHL. In addition, top-line results and the pharmacologic profile of KTE-X19 in the setting of r/r MCL will be presented. Biological factors that influence CAR therapy including product fitness, tumor immune microenvironment and tumor biology in relation to clinical outcomes will be described.

2:30 pm Sponsored Presentation (Opportunity Available)
2:50 pm Session Break - View Our Virtual Exhibit Hall
3:10 pm

Evaluating Biomarkers of JTX-8064 (Anti-LILRB2/ILT4 Monoclonal Antibody) to Inform Clinical Development

Johan Baeck, MD, Senior Vice President, Clinical Development and Medical Affairs, Jounce Therapeutics

JTX-8064 is a LILRB2/ILT4 antagonist mAb that may relieve myeloid cell immuno-suppression by shifting macrophages to an M1-like state and activating T cells. Using histoculture, pharmacodynamic (PD) responses to JTX-8064 can be measured preclinically in a human ex vivo tumor system. Ex vivo evaluation of human tumors identified hypotheses for both predictive and pharmacodynamic markers that can be evaluated in the clinical development of JTX-8064.

3:30 pm

New Developments in Immuno-Oncology Biomarkers

Andrea Webber, PhD, Assistant Head, Clinical Biomarkers, Translational Oncology, Merck & Co., Inc.

Biomarkers have become a cornerstone in the study of immuno-oncology. Biomarkers contribute to the elucidation of response and resistance to immunotherapies and co-administered agents and are used as selection criteria to enrich for response. Immunohistochemical markers such as PD-L1 in addition to next-generation molecular markers including MSI, TMB and gene expression signatures continue to deliver insights into novel I-O therapies and the dynamics within the tumor and its microenvironment.

3:50 pm Sponsored Presentation (Opportunity Available)
4:10 pm PANEL DISCUSSION:

Moderated Q&A

Panel Moderator:
Emmett Schmidt, MD, PhD, Vice President, External Collaborations, Oncology Early Development, Merck
Panelists:
Johan Baeck, MD, Senior Vice President, Clinical Development and Medical Affairs, Jounce Therapeutics
John Rossi, PhD, Senior Vice President & Head, Translational Medicine, CERo Therapeutics
Apostolia-Maria Tsimberidou, MD, PhD, Professor, Investigational Cancer Therapeutics, University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center
Andrea Webber, PhD, Assistant Head, Clinical Biomarkers, Translational Oncology, Merck & Co., Inc.
4:30 pm Close of Day

Wednesday, February 17

BIOMARKERS AND MECHANISM OF RESPONSE AND RESISTANCE TO IMMUNOTHERAPY

8:30 am

Integration of Multiplexed Immunofluorescence to Inform Drug Discovery in Immune-Oncology

Darrell R. Borger, PhD, Associate Director, Translational Sciences, Head, Integrated Translational Technologies, Oncology Drug Development Unit, Takeda

Developing the next generation of sophisticated immune oncology therapies will require new tools to identify and characterize cascades of changes within the larger tumor context. Spatial technologies are rapidly advancing and the balance between efficiency and depth of discovery will be addressed. Examples of how multiplexed immunofluorescence has been integrated into a larger immune oncology drug discovery program will be presented.

8:50 am

The Influence of the Cancer Genome on Immunotherapy

Nadeem Riaz, MD, Associate Director, Immunogenomics and Precision Oncology Platform, Radiation Oncology, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

The cancer genome plays a fundamental role in the ability of the immune system to recognize a cancer as foreign. Here we will review the latest updates in understanding how TMB, HLA, mutations in the DNA damage response, neoantigen prediction algorithms, amongst others can help identify which tumors are the most immunogenic and likely to benefit from immunotherapy based treatment approaches.

Abbey Cutchin, PhD, Manager, Oncology Segment Marketing, 10X Genomics

Through innovations in single cell sequencing and spatial transcriptomics, solutions from 10x Genomics help researchers dissect the immune and tumor microenvironment, track the anti-tumor immune response, and uncover immune cell types and states governing response and resistance to immunotherapies. Join 10x Genomics to learn how researchers are using our single cell assays and spatial tools to gain a multidimensional view of cancer immunity.

9:30 am

Multi-Modality Approach to Predicting and Monitoring Melanoma Immunotherapy Response and Resistance

Genevieve Boland, MD, PhD, Assistant Professor, Surgery; Director, Melanoma Surgery Program, Massachusetts General Hospital

Recent changes in the understanding of melanoma immunotherapy response and resistance have resulted in the identification of new tumor and blood-based biomarkers for prediction and/or monitoring melanoma patients prior to and during treatment with immunotherapy. Integration of multiple data sets will be critical for utilization of this data for clinical care.

9:50 am

Immune Mechanisms of PD-1/PD-L1 Resistance

Kathleen Mahoney, MD, PhD, Clinical Instructor, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center; Research Fellow, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute

Blocking either the PD-1 receptor or its ligand PD-L1 has improved overall survival in patients across tumor types. While some tumors fail to respond due to a lack of immune cells infiltrating the tumor, others fail despite immune cells in the tumor. By targeting other B7 pathways such as VISTA and HHLA2, we may be able to improve outcomes for patients with these "hot" tumors.

10:10 am Session Break - View Our Virtual Exhibit Hall

KEYNOTE PANEL DISCUSSION: WOMEN IN SCIENCE

10:30 am KEYNOTE PANEL DISCUSSION:

Women in Science

Panel Moderator:
Karen Kaul MD, PhD, Chair, Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine; Duckworth Family Chair, NorthShore University HealthSystem; Clinical Professor, Pathology, University of Chicago Pritzker School of Medicine
Panelists:
Maliheh Poorfarhani, Director, Digital Health and R&D, Bayer
Theresa L. Whiteside, PhD, Professor, Pathology, Immunology & Otolaryngology, University of Pittsburgh
Janice Chen, PhD, Co-Founder & CTO, Mammoth Biosciences

LIQUID BIOPSY IN IMMUNO-ONCOLOGY

11:00 am

Small Extracellular Vesicles as Promising Biomarkers in Immuno-Oncology

Theresa L. Whiteside, PhD, Professor, Pathology, Immunology & Otolaryngology, University of Pittsburgh

Exosomes, a subset of small extracellular vesicles (EVs), are emerging as key components of liquid tumor biopsy in cancer and as biomarkers of immune competence. Plasma-derived exosomes can be separated by immune capture into tumor cell-derived and T cell-derived fractions. Each fraction carries information about the tumor or immune competence of the cancer patient, respectively. Simultaneous real-time molecular profiling of the tumor and of the host immune status by plasma-derived exosomes suggest that sEVs are highly promising biomarkers in immune oncology.

11:20 am

cfmiR in Monitoring IO Therapies in Melanoma

Dave S.B. Hoon, PhD, Director, Translational Molecular Medicine and Genome Sequencing, Saint John's Cancer Institute

In recent years metastatic melanoma patients have had improved survival on treatment with checkpoint inhibitor immunotherapies (CII).  Efficient real-time monitoring of patients' disease progression is needed to improve management. Cell-free nucleic acids detection is a sensitive blood biomarker assay. A robust next-generation sequencing targeted assay was developed to assess plasma cell-free microRNA (cfRNA) to assess patients' disease status during CII. cfmiR signature can be used to monitor CII responders and nonresponders.   

11:40 am

Role of Central Memory CD8+ T Cells in Cancer Immunotherapy

Holden T. Maecker, PhD, Research Professor, Microbiology & Immunology, Stanford University

Our lab is interested in finding blood-based biomarkers that could be predictive of immunotherapy success, for different tumor types and different immunotherapy settings. We use CyTOF mass cytometry, with in vitro polyclonal stimulation, to read out a broad range of cell type frequencies and functions. In two trials involving CTLA-4-based immunotherapy of advanced melanoma, we found CD8+ T cells with a central memory (CM) phenotype, or that are capable of producing IL-2, to be increased in responders compared to non-responders. Because CM T cells are capable of greater proliferation and functional differentiation than more effector-like T cells, their abundance may be one indicator of the ability to mount an effective anti-tumor T cell response. However, in anti-PD-1 treated melanoma patients, we did not find a significant correlation of CM CD8+ T cell frequencies and response. Instead, we found activated NK cells to be increased in responders vs. non-responders, suggesting a possible unexpected mechanism of action of PD-1 through NK cells. We anticipate that, while CM CD8+ T cells may be important for anti-tumor T cell immunity generally, and for CTLA-4 based therapy in particular, there will be other blood-based predictive biomarkers unique to certain immunotherapy agents.

12:00 pm Sponsored Presentation (Opportunity Available)
12:30 pm PANEL DISCUSSION:

Moderated Q&A

Panel Moderator:
Theresa L. Whiteside, PhD, Professor, Pathology, Immunology & Otolaryngology, University of Pittsburgh
Panelists:
Darrell R. Borger, PhD, Associate Director, Translational Sciences, Head, Integrated Translational Technologies, Oncology Drug Development Unit, Takeda
Dave S.B. Hoon, PhD, Director, Translational Molecular Medicine and Genome Sequencing, Saint John's Cancer Institute
Holden T. Maecker, PhD, Research Professor, Microbiology & Immunology, Stanford University
12:55 pm Session Break - View Our Virtual Exhibit Hall

PLENARY KEYNOTE SESSION: BIG PHARMA'S RESPONSE TO COVID-19: RAPID DEVELOPMENT OF VACCINES AND BIOTHERAPEUTICS

1:20 pm

Exploring New Therapies for COVID-19: Focus on AstraZeneca’s Long-Acting Monoclonal Antibody Combination

Mark T. Esser, PhD, Vice President, Microbial Sciences, BioPharma R&D, AstraZeneca

This talk will provide an overview of convalescent plasma and monoclonal antibodies currently in development for treating COVID-19 with a focus on the discovery and development of AstraZeneca's long-acting antibody (LAAB) combination (AZD7442) currently being evaluated for both the prevention and treatment of COVID-19.

1:40 pm Sponsored Presentation (Opportunity Available)
2:05 pm Sponsored Presentation (Opportunity Available)
2:10 pm

Developing a COVID Vaccine in Ten Months

Sanjay Gurunathan, MD, Vice President and Head, Global Clinical Department, Sanofi Pasteur
2:30 pm Session Break - View Our Virtual Exhibit Hall
3:00 pm Close of Immuno-Oncology Biomarkers Conference





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