IMU 6.25% 6.0¢ imugene limited

Hi BenAnother great post - thanks!I really enjoyed it, and I...

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    Hi Ben

    Another great post - thanks!

    I really enjoyed it, and I pretty much agree with most of what you say. I just want to make one small correction. You write that "Initial preclinical trials of Her Vaxx when dosed in combination with PD1 Vaxx were encouraging." However, I think you are mistaken in believing that Her-vaxx was trialled in combination with PD1-vaxx. Yes - Her-vaxx has been trialled in mice in combo with an anti-PD1 drug, but the combo drug used was not PD1-vaxx.

    You explain your comment by stating that "When PD1 was trialled in mice in combination with Her-vaxx researchers noted “The anti tumor effect of our Her-2/neu vaccine (HerVaxx)62,63 was shown to be potentiated when combined with JT-mPD1.39." Your quote is from the article by Prof Wiedermann and her team: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2059702921002404 but they are not referring there to PD1-vaxx. PD1-vaxx is the anti-PD1 drug developed by Prof Kaumaya at the University of Ohio, as you have explained so well in your post, but JT-mPD1.39 is an entirely separate drug developed by Prof Wiedermann and her team at the Medical University of Vienna, using the Mimotope platform which also produced Her-vaxx. JT-mPD1.39 and PD1-vaxx are both B cell immunotherapies, and they are both PD-1 checkpoint inhibitors, but they are different drugs developed by different teams using different methods.

    This is not a bad thing mind you! It actually illustrates the remarkable breadth of IP brought together by Imugene, and the depth of research available to them. To understand what's happening here we need to jump way back in time to the year 2015......

    Back then, Imugene possessed just one (highly promising) drug candidate - Her-vaxx - which had been developed by Professors Wiedermann and Zielinski and team at the Medical University of Vienna. However, the underlying drug development technology used by the Vienna team - the "Mimotope platform" - enables the development of other B-cell vaccines which could (just like Her-vaxx) attack anti-cancer targets already validated by existing commercially and clinically successful T-cell drugs.

    I had bought in to Imugene in 2014 based on the prospects for success of Her-vaxx. The science looked compelling, with huge advantages over the T-cell Manufactured Antibody drugs like Herceptin which was making billions of dollars for Roche, but I was concerned that Imugene was a one trick pony - and I limited my investment for that reason.

    Then, on 27 August 2015 we heard the news that Leslie Chong had been appointed as "Chief Operating Officer" - jumping ship from Genentech (the company which developed Herceptin and was bought by Roche for $46.8b !). My comment at the time is recorded here: https://hotcopper.com.au/threads/ann-immuno-oncology-specialist-appointed-chief-operating-officer.2581879/
    It was still a one trick pony on paper, but stealing the "Senior Clinical Program Leader" from Genentech looked like a pretty strong extra trick to me, so I went and doubled my holding. It didn't cost me much. Imugene was trading at just 0.8 cents a share.......

    Then, on January 20th 2016, Imugene made an announcement which transformed my view of the company and confirmed my view that LC was a fabulous appointment. They announced that they had secured a partnership with the Vienna team to use the Mimotope Platform itself, with the intention of developing a whole range of novel B-cell immunotherapy drugs. For any readers who are new to Imugene I strongly suggest that it is worth reading that announcement, and for long termers I suggest it is worth reading again, because we are likely to hear a lot more about the Mimotope Platform. Take a moment and check it out here: https://hotcopper.com.au/threads/ann-partnership-to-develop-mimotope-immuno-oncology-platform.2682798/

    Under the extended partnership, Imugene would develop a whole pipeline of B-cell therapies and own the IP to them. No longer would they be a one trick pony..... And the share price? Still only 1.1 cents a share....

    Sure enough, before the year ended Imugene announced not one, but THREE new drug patent applications, and a 4th patent application to protect the Mimotope Platform itself. This was electrifying news: "Three of the patents filed under the name of Imugene Ltd specifically protect new mimotope B-cell vaccine compositions which are directed to commercially validated immuno-oncology targets. Each of the targets already has a monoclonal antibody synthetic drug on market generating sales in the hundreds of millions treating cancers such as melanoma, non-small cell lung cancer, multiple myeloma and bladder cancer."
    https://hotcopper.com.au/threads/ann-imugene-progresses-mimotope-platform.3121994/

    Wow. It was still just 1.5 cents a share, but Imugene clearly had their sights set on something much much bigger. Their announcement was careful not to name the commercial drugs they were seeking to emulate, but I made a pretty good guess at the time. It seemed certain to me that Imugene would try and develop a B-cell PD1 drug which could do what Opdivo and Keytruda does. I set out my reasoning for that, and I added the comment that "if I can scrape up some more cash I will be buying more while it is (in my personal and possibly mistaken view) so amazingly, ridiculously, astonishingly cheap." https://hotcopper.com.au/threads/ann-imugene-progresses-mimotope-platform.3121994/page-6?post_id=21441890

    The next wait was longer, but on 12 February 2018 Imugene announced that the Vienna team had, indeed, developed a B-cell PD-1 Checkpoint Inhibitor drug which might just knock Opdivo and Keytruda off their perch. "Professor Dr Ursula Wiedermann and Imugene CEO Leslie Chong said in a joint announcement “Development of this new immunotherapy has positioned Imugene to be a new and competitive player in the immuno-oncology revolution in cancer therapy. This expands our pipeline and transforms Imugene into a multi-asset biopharmaceutical company."
    The previous day's closing price was 1.7 cents. Imugene opened at 2.1 cents and it felt like the first faint taste of future success...

    Then came a really big surprise. On 7 June Imugene announced out of the blue that they were licensing an entire new B-cell immunotherapy-oncology portfolio from Professor Pravin Kaumaya at the University of Ohio. The reason? In complete isolation from the Vienna team, Prof K had also been working B-cell immunotherapy! He already had one drug in Phase 2 clinical trials (B-vaxx) and, of huge interest to Imugene, he also had a PD-1 Checkpoint Inhibitor drug in advanced stages of development.

    In one deal, Imugene acquired a "Substantial intellectual property estate with a broad patent portfolio including six patent families comprising 16 issued patents or pending applications for compositions of matter and/or methods of use of a large range of B-cell peptide and cancer vaccines comprising PD-1, HER1, HER2, HER3, VEGF, IGF-1R, CD28 peptides and combinations thereof." AND the deal came with "an FDA IND-ready PD-1 checkpoint inhibitor B-cell vaccine for Phase 1 trial."

    Amazing! It cost them some $ and they had to do a CR and get shareholder approval, but as they stated in the CR Presentation at the time, the acquisition enabled their " PD-1 and HER2 + PD-1 combination programs to accelerate by 24+ months." Source: https://www.asx.com.au/asxpdf/20180607/pdf/43vm254rtm2dfv.pdf

    Your Uncle Dave pawned his favourite mountain bike and his left testicle, smashed his piggy bank and raced off to buy some more magic beans Imugene shares for 2.5 cents each.

    Having come across Professor K's work, Imugene had a choice - compete, or collaborate? The decision to join forces and collaborate, and their ability make that deal happen, were further clear signs that Leslie Chong was a brilliant appointment as CEO and that Paul Hopper as Executive Chair made them a perfect partnership, working closely with a first class Board of Management. Professor Kaumaya's statement at the time said it all "I am delighted to join forces with Imugene. Their research has closely paralleled my own work over the past two decades, and together we will form a significant team driving multiple combination immunotherapy drugs through the clinic targeting breast, gastric and other cancer targets. This collaborative venture with Imugene will support rapid development to achieving a potential cure for several important cancer targets." https://hotcopper.com.au/threads/ann-imugene-licences-extensive-b-cell-immuno-oncology-portfolio.4232320/

    Professor K's PD1 drug was eventually renamed as PD1-vaxx and the rest is history in the making, but there is a little more to the story. We all hope (and some expect) that PD1-vaxx will go on to confirm and extend the early indications of clinical success that we have already seen, and become one of Imugene's first big commercial successes as well. In the background though, Imugene's first PD-1 Checkpoint Inhibitor drug, developed by the Vienna team using the Mimotope Platform, has had further development. On 28 May 2020 the Vienna team published highly encouraging results of pre-clinical trials of their drug: https://hotcopper.com.au/threads/ann-new-mimotope-cancer-vaccine-results-published.5418241/

    We also know from a couple of articles, including the study you quote from, Ben, that they have trialled it in mice, in combination with Her-vaxx - and with very good results.

    In addition, in a recent video LC has made verbal reference to further development of the Mimotope Platform, so I think there is more on this to come.

    From 0.8 cents a share to 58 cents a share - it's been quite a ride, but every step in the share price has been backed by solid growth in the size, diversity and potential of Imugene's IP, product portfolio and partnerships. I see no reason to sell now, apart from simple profit taking, and several compelling reasons to believe that their greatest achievements are yet to come.

    So I'm staying on board. Reckon I'll be buying some more magic beans Imugene shares too.

    Cheers

    Dave





 
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