Candel Therapeutics Announces Publication of Phase 1b Clinical Trial Data on the Combination of CAN-2409 and Nivolumab plus Standard of Care in Newly Diagnosed High-Grade Glioma Patients

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Candel Therapeutics
Candel Therapeutics

Data published in Neuro-Oncology demonstrate promising safety profile and potential survival benefit when combining CAN-2409 and nivolumab with standard of care

NEEDHAM, Mass., April 01, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Candel Therapeutics, Inc. (Candel or the Company) (Nasdaq: CADL), a clinical stage biopharmaceutical company focused on developing multimodal biological immunotherapies to help patients fight cancer, today announced the publication of a manuscript reporting the results of a phase 1b clinical trial exploring safety and tolerability of the combination of CAN-2409 plus prodrug (valacyclovir) and nivolumab, in addition to standard of care (neurosurgery, radiotherapy, and temozolomide), in patients with newly diagnosed high-grade glioma. The study, which includes evidence of clinical activity and extensive biomarker analysis, has been published online in Neuro-Oncology, the official journal of the Society for Neuro-Oncology (22 March 2025).

High-grade glioma (primarily glioblastoma) remains one of the most aggressive forms of primary brain cancer, affecting more than 13,000 new patients in the United States annually. Despite optimal therapy with surgery, radiation, temozolomide chemotherapy, and, in some cases, tumor-treating fields, the prognosis remains poor with median survival of approximately 20 months from the time of diagnosis for patients without methylguanine methyltransferase (MGMT) promoter methylation and about 2 years for those with MGMT promoter methylation.1 Poor survival is associated with paucity of intratumoral T cell infiltrates and a highly immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment. To date, clinical trials of conventional tumor vaccines and checkpoint inhibitors have failed to demonstrate clinical benefit in this indication.

The publication, titled “A multi-institutional phase 1 clinical trial exploring upfront multimodal standard of care and combined immunotherapies for newly diagnosed glioblastoma,” (Wen, P. Y., et al.) demonstrates that the addition of CAN-2409 and nivolumab and standard of care was generally well tolerated and extended survival in a subset of patients with evidence of local and systemic immune activation after experimental treatment. The clinical trial (NCT03576612) enrolled 41 patients, with 35 completing the full treatment regimen, and assayed tumor and blood for genetic and immunological biomarkers before and during treatment.

“The results from this mechanistic clinical trial confirm and extend previous observations in clinical trials that have shown clinical and immunological activity of CAN-2409 across different solid tumors,” said Paul Peter Tak, MD, PhD, FMedSci, President and Chief Executive Officer of Candel. “In this trial, treatment with CAN-2409 plus valacyclovir was associated with discrete longitudinal changes in peripheral cytokines, immune cells, and T cell clone diversity, particularly at early timepoints, after patients had been treated with neurosurgery, radiotherapy, and CAN-2409 plus prodrug, but before combination therapy with nivolumab was initiated. The most noteworthy serial systemic immune changes were observed in a long-term survivor subset of patients. While we are not currently developing CAN-2409 for high-grade glioma, in light of portfolio prioritization (We are developing CAN-3110 in recurrent high-grade glioma (rHGG)), the data support the notion that CAN-2409 may be a pan-solid tumor therapy that could invoke individualized anti-cancer immune response in different indications. CAN-2409 is in late-stage development for localized prostate cancer, borderline resectable pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma, and non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC).”