Anti-CD47: New Therapy Advancing

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Anonymous
Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
Anti-CD47: New Therapy Advancing

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  • Cure-ious
    Cure-ious Member Posts: 2,626
    edited March 2017

    A new video from Irv Weissman (Stanford) has come out that updates the status of the experimental anti-CD47 monoclonal antibody immunotherapy- it is progressing through phase 1 and they are in the planning stages for trials involving breast cancer, in this case starting with HER2-positive patients and combining the anti CD-47 with Herceptin. He shows the drug has remarkable synergy with Herceptin in mice (around the 15-16 minute mark). The approach they are planning to take is also remarkable. First, the metastatic breast cancer cells are removed from the marrow, dropping the tumor burden remarkably. They showed in trials 20 years ago that this step alone CURED about 20% of the patients! To improve on those numbers, in this trial they will restore the immune system and then treat the remaining (now much smaller number) of metastatic cancer cells with Herceptin and anti-CD47. Important to note that although the trial will be HER2-positive patients, this therapy in principle should also work well in the other subtypes of breast cancer, and indeed in most cancers, at least when added in combination with targeted therapies. Keep an eye on this area..

    Here is a link to the new video:


  • Cure-ious
    Cure-ious Member Posts: 2,626
    edited March 2017

    Irv can be a bit hard to follow (if you aren't an immuno-oncologist), so here is a lay presentation about the therapy:



  • zarovka
    zarovka Member Posts: 3,607
    edited March 2017

    Here are some trials that target the CD47 receptor and accept breast cancer patients.

    Trial of Intratumoral Injections of TTI-621 in Subjects With Relapsed and Refractory Solid Tumors and Mycosis Fungoides

    TTI-621 (SIRPαFc) is a soluble recombinant fusion protein created by directly linking the sequences encoding the N-terminal CD47 binding domain of human SIRPα with the Fc domain of human immunoglobulin (IgG1). TTI-621 acts by binding human CD47 and preventing it from delivering an inhibitory "do not eat" (antiphagocytic) signal to macrophages.

    In this trial they inject the tumor directly, so you need to be IDC with tumors they can reach. It is not out of Stanford, but has sites in Los Angeles (City of Hope) and Seattle, Pennsylvania and Oregon.

    Phase 1 Trial of Hu5F9-G4, a CD47-targeting Antibody

    This is the trial led by Irv Weissman's company. The sites are Stanford, Michigan and Texas. First in human, first in class. Any solid tumor will do. This is the paper that reviews the pre-clinical data that supports the trial. This trial has reported preliminary safety data and it appears to be well tolerated. I wouldn't hesitate to try it based on safety concerns, but I would prefer to have some efficacy data as well to know if it was worth betting on.

    A Phase 1, Dose Finding Study of CC-90002 in Subjects With Advanced Solid and Hematologic Cancers

    CC-90002-ST-001 is an open-label, Phase 1, dose escalation and expansion, first in human (FIH) clinical study of CC-90002, administered by intravenous (IV) infusion, in subjects with advanced, refractory solid and hematologic cancers.

    This trial is Arizona, UCSF and San Antonio, TX. It looks like they combine it with standard of care, but it's not clear how that works with MBC. This is IV ever 28 days for a while.

    The video talks about a trial done a long time ago of high dose chemo followed by stem cell recovery. This is a good article summarizing the outcomes of that trial. They are very promising, but I don't see ongoing trials.

    Personally, I am holding off on immunotherapy trials until I have burned through at least the hormonals and possibly the easy chemos. I'd like to give immunotherapy more time to develop. However, if you have no more standard of care options that you want to consider, these are all powerful trials.

    >Z<



  • jcatalina971
    jcatalina971 Member Posts: 11
    edited October 2019

    I'm starting the first trial you listed on Monday. I already did my consent and had testing last week. I have already been on Tecentriq and Abraxane for 5 cycles. It's working systematically but I have tumors under my arm and one on the breast that keep getting bigger. I've already had two surgeries and radiation under the arm so I didn't have too many treatment options for under the arm left. So I will have the immunotherapy and the TTI injection on Monday, then I have the injections again on Wednesday and Friday. They told me that most people find the injections painful and the biopsies are 4mm punch biopsies not needle. I can't be on the Abraxane during the trial. They only made me do a two week wash out. I'm praying it works. I'll let you know If it helps

  • Cure-ious
    Cure-ious Member Posts: 2,626
    edited October 2019

    Catalina- Best of luck!!! We have not heard a lot about CD47 for solid tumors, so I am going to go see if there have been any updates about this or any of the other trials using it. As I understand it, you will be getting both anti-CD47 and checkpoint inhibitors (so, a double-dose of immunotherapy)?

  • jcatalina971
    jcatalina971 Member Posts: 11
    edited October 2019

    I do continue to get my Tecentriq every two weeks. The first day they gave me the Tecentriq and 30 min later did the TTI injections. Within 15 min I felt like I have in the past when I’m neutropenic. They did blood work every hour. Before injections my WBCs were 6.2. First hour bloodwork showed WBCs dropped to 1.3 but then the next hour they went back up to 7. Platelets dropped a lot too. I think they went down to 98. RBCs dropped slightly... So I’ve been injected 3 more times since that first day, without having Tecentriq and I’ve felt fine. I was starting to feel discouraged, but this morning I have acouple little blisters and drainage from the tumors, so I’m praying that it’s doing it’s job. I’ll keep you posted.

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