Sangamo Presents New Clinical Data at CROI 2012 Demonstrating Persistent Positive Effects of ZFN Therapeutic for "Functional Cure" of HIV/AIDS
Data Highlight Positive Effects of SB-728-T on Immune System and Viral Load Reduction and Further Validate Strategy of Ongoing Phase 2 Trials
RICHMOND, Calif., March 8, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- Sangamo BioSciences, Inc. (Nasdaq: SGMO) announced that new data from its program to develop a 'functional cure' for HIV/AIDS were described in two presentations at the 19th Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections (CROI), held in Seattle from March 5 to March 8, 2012.
"These data differentiate SB-728-T from other novel therapies as a feasible approach to controlling HIV/AIDS," said Ronald Mitsuyasu, M.D., Professor of Medicine, David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA and a principal investigator in Sangamo's SB-728-T studies. "The results suggest that SB-728-T has a positive effect on immune health of HIV-infected patients and this effect is persistent for over a year in some subjects. Most importantly, SB-728-T treatment provides HIV-resistant T-cells that are capable of mounting an immune response to an inflammatory event in lymphoid tissues and has yielded encouraging effects on HIV viral load when antiretroviral drugs are withdrawn during a treatment interruption."
"These data add to our understanding of the positive viral load changes in SB-728-T-treated subjects, and suggest that an early cytokine burst may initiate the dramatic and prolonged increase in CD4 counts observed following SB-728-T treatment," said Dale Ando, M.D., Sangamo's vice president of therapeutic development and chief medical officer. "They also confirm that SB-728-T meets key requirements for our strategy for a 'functional cure' for HIV, by demonstrating durable engraftment and prolonged trafficking and dynamic immunological responsiveness in the gut mucosa. Together, these data further validate our strategy for the continued development of this ZFP Therapeutic as a 'functional cure' for HIV in two ongoing Phase 2 clinical trials designed to extend the observation of a statistically significant correlation between levels of bi-allelic modification of CD4 T cells and viral load reductions during treatment interruptions in HIV infection. The first study builds on the approximate doubling of bi-allelic engraftment that can be achieved in CCR5 delta-32 heterozygotes and seeks to confirm the occurrence of aviremia during treatment interruption as observed in one such patient in our Phase 1 program. The other clinical trial will examine the ability of a lymphopenic preconditioning regimen to enhance bi-allelic engraftment, and reduce viral load during treatment interruption, in non-CCR5-mutated HIV subjects."
Clinical Trial Data Summary
Abstract # 155 "Induction of Acquired CCR5 Deficiency with Zinc
Finger Nuclease (ZFN) Modified Autologous CD4 T-cells (SB-728-T)
Correlates with Increases in CD4 Count and Effects on Viral Load
(VL) in HIV-infected Subjects" -Thursday, March 8, 2012
21 HIV-infected subjects were enrolled in Phase 1 clinical studies
at the University of Pennsylvania and in California (SB-728-902)
and received a single dose of SB-728-T (5 to 30 billion cells). All
subjects were taking highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART)
and had stably controlled undetectable levels of HIV in their
blood. Subjects were classified into two groups based on
their CD4+ T-cell counts: one group of 15 subjects, with CD4+
T-cell counts below 500 cells/ ul designated Immune Non-Responders
(INR), and a second group of six subjects with CD4+ T-cell counts
of greater than 450 cells/ ul designated Immune Responders
(IR). One month after SB-728-T treatment, six subjects in the
INR group enrolled in the University of Pennsylvania study
underwent a 12-week treatment interruption (TI) of their HAART.
The studies evaluated safety and tolerability, changes in CD4+ T-cell counts and the ratio of CD4+ to CD8+ T-cells as well as persistence of SB-728-T in the blood and trafficking of these ZFN-modified cells into gut-associated lymph tissue. In addition, viral DNA and changes in viral load (VL), as measured by HIV-RNA, were measured during the TI in the six INR subjects.
These studies demonstrated:
•During the TI, the viral load, as measured by HIV-RNA
levels, initially increased as expected in all six subjects.
Subsequently, a 0.8 to >2.0-log reduction in VL from peak
achieved during the TI was observed in 3 of 6 subjects with the
highest estimated circulating levels of cells with biallelic
modification of their CCR5 gene. In one subject
(Subject 205) VL decreased to undetectable levels such that the
subject was aviremic at the end of the TI period. This
subject entered the study carrying the natural CCR5 delta-32
mutation on one copy of his CCR5 gene resulting in an estimated
percentage of biallelically-disrupted CCR5 genes that was twice
that of subjects entering the study with wild-type CCR5
genes.
•Control of HIV-RNA (suppression of VL) correlates
significantly (p<0.05) with calculated levels of circulating
CD4+ T-cells that have undergone biallelic modification (i.e.
modification of both copies) of the CCR5 gene.
•The level of circulating viral DNA, a measure of the viral
reservoir, exhibited a limited increase in five of six subjects
over this period and was elevated in only one subject whose
SB-728-T engraftment was the lowest of the group.
•Confirmation and extension of previous observations of
unprecedented improvements in overall CD4+ T-cell counts and CD4+
to CD8+ T-cell ratios, a measure of immune health, for over a year
post administration of SB-728-T.
•Elevated levels of certain T-cell cytokines (IL-2, IL-7 and
IL-15) in the blood in the first few days post SB-728-T infusion
which may have a role in the dramatic post-infusion expansion of
CD4+T-cells. The magnitude of this increase was marked in
Subject 205, who had an undetectable VL at the end of the
TI.
•Durable engraftment and persistence of ZFN-CCR5-modified
cells (SB-728-T) in the peripheral blood for over a year (range:
90-738 days).
•Ability of SB-728-T to traffic to the gut mucosa, an
important reservoir of active HIV infection.
•SB-728-T treatment continues to be safe and well tolerated
with only mild, reversible symptoms typical of infusion
reactions.
Abstract #433 "A Single Infusion of Zinc Finger Nuclease CCR5
Modified Autologous CD4 T Cells (SB-728-T) Increases CD4 Counts and
Leads to Decrease in HIV Proviral Load in an Aviremic HIV-infected
Subject" Wednesday, March 7, 2012
In one INR subject (01-104) who received a single dose of
SB-728-T (10 billion cells) an inflammatory event unrelated
to SB-728-T infusion was observed in the gut mucosa by histology
and surface marker staining of mucosal inflammatory cells from 3 to
6 months after infusion. Subsequently, a greater than 1 log
increase in SB-728-T was observed locally in the gut, preceding
resolution of the inflammation.
This study demonstrated:
•That SB-728-T is functionally active and capable of
participating in an immunologic response and has the potential to
maintain or restore health in the gastrointestinal tract.
•An associated increase in total CD4+ T-cells and percent of
ZFN-CCR5-modified CD4+ T-cells in the gut mucosa in response to the
inflammation event.
•Analysis of individual T-cell clones confirmed that this
significant increase in SB-728 was specific to the gut mucosa and
indicative of a precise response by these cells to local gut
inflammation.
•HIV-DNA levels in both the gut mucosa and the periphery
decreased from peak levels by about 1 log, coinciding with the
timeline of significant increases in SB-728-T at the site of
inflammation suggesting a possible SB-728-T antiviral effect.
"The data presented at CROI further support our fundamental
rationale for SB-728-T and, importantly, the design of our ongoing
Phase 2 clinical trials which will enable us to quickly maximize
the impact of SB-728-T on viral load and the overall immune system
of HIV-infected individuals," said Geoff Nichol, M.B., Ch.B.,
Sangamo's executive vice president of research and
development. "Our ZFP technology provides a novel platform
for the creation of transformational ZFP Therapeutics and we are
focused on using it to develop curative therapies for HIV and
multiple monogenic and rare diseases."
Webcasts of all the presentations at CROI 2012 can be accessed via the following link http://retroconference.org/static/webcasts/2012/
About SB-728-T
SB-729-T is an autologous CD4 T-cell product in which the gene for
CCR5, a co-receptor for HIV entry, is modified via ZFN-mediated
genome editing to disrupt the CCR5 protein. T-cells with a
disrupted CCR5 protein are resistant to infection by the most
common strain of HIV.
About Sangamo
Sangamo BioSciences, Inc. is focused on research and development of
novel DNA-binding proteins for therapeutic gene regulation and
genome editing. It has ongoing Phase 2 and Phase 1/2 clinical
trials to evaluate the safety and efficacy of a novel ZFP
Therapeutic® for the treatment of HIV/AIDS. Sangamo's
other therapeutic programs are focused on monogenic diseases,
including hemophilia, hemoglobinopathies such as sickle cell anemia
and beta-thalassemia, and a program in Parkinson's disease.
Sangamo's core competencies enable the engineering of a class of
DNA-binding proteins known as zinc finger DNA-binding proteins
(ZFPs). Engineering of ZFPs that recognize a specific DNA
sequence enables the creation of sequence-specific ZFP Nucleases
(ZFNs) for gene modification and ZFP transcription factors (ZFP
TFs) that can control gene expression and, consequently, cell
function. Sangamo has entered into a strategic collaboration
with Shire to develop therapeutics for hemophilia and other
monogenic diseases and has established strategic partnerships with
companies in non-therapeutic applications of its technology
including Dow AgroSciences and Sigma-Aldrich Corporation. For more
information about Sangamo, visit the company's website at
www.sangamo.com
ZFP Therapeutic® is a registered trademark of Sangamo
BioSciences, Inc.
This press release may contain forward-looking statements based on Sangamo's current expectations. These forward-looking statements include, without limitation, references relating to research and development of novel ZFP TFs and ZFNs and therapeutic applications of Sangamo's ZFP technology platform for the treatment of HIV/AIDS, including a potential functional cure of HIV/AIDS, the expansion of clinical studies of SB-728-T in HIV-infected individuals and the initiation of additional preclinical and clinical studies of ZFN-gene modification. Actual results may differ materially from these forward-looking statements due to a number of factors, including uncertainties relating to the initiation and completion of stages of our clinical trials, whether the clinical trials will validate and support the tolerability and efficacy of ZFNs, technological challenges, Sangamo's ability to develop commercially viable products and technological developments by our competitors. For a more detailed discussion of these and other risks, please see Sangamo's SEC filings, including the risk factors described in its Annual Report on Form 10-K and its most recent Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q. Sangamo BioSciences, Inc. assumes no obligation to update the forward-looking information contained in this press release.
SOURCE Sangamo BioSciences, Inc.
Posted: March 2012

