Immunocore announces publication of preclinical data in Hepatology showing the potential of ImmTAV® bispecific molecules for functional cure of chronic hepatitis B

PRESS RELEASE

Immunocore announces publication of preclinical data in Hepatology showing the potential of ImmTAV® bispecific molecules for functional cure of chronic hepatitis B

New preclinical data show potential of ImmTAV platform to facilitate specific and rapid elimination of Hepatitis Binfected cells with the goal of achieving functional cure

Lead bispecific candidate, IMC-I109V, to progress into firstinhuman clinical trials for the treatment of chronic Hepatitis B

(OXFORDSHIRE, England & CONSHOHOCKEN, Penn. & ROCKVILLE, Md., US, 27 August 2020) Immunocore (or the “Company”), a pioneering, clinical‐stage T cell receptor biotechnology company working to develop and commercialise a new generation of transformative medicines to address unmet needs in cancer, infection and autoimmune disease, today announces publication of a novel therapeutic approach with the potential to provide a functional cure for chronic hepatitis B, in leading peer reviewed journal Hepatology.

Achieving functional cure, a sustained loss of circulating HBsAg and HBV DNA, is a challenge for the field due to the persistence of cells capable of producing HBsAg and which act as a reservoir for virus production. These cells can contain integrated HBV-DNA or long-lived covalently closed circular DNA (cccDNA), both of which are difficult for direct-acting anti-viral therapies to permanently eradicate. Additionally, HBV-specific immune responses in people living with Hepatitis B are often exhausted, making it difficult for them to eliminate the infected cells.

With this in mind, the team at Immunocore is utilising its immune‐mobilising monoclonal T cell receptors against virus (ImmTAV®) platform to address these challenges. These bi-specific molecules consist of a targeting arm which tightly binds viral protein fragments on the surface of infected hepatocytes, and an immune‐activating arm to redirect non-exhausted T cells to eliminate infected hepatocytes, bypassing exhausted HBV‐specific T cells. The team were able to generate multiple ImmTAV molecules to specifically recognise fragments of 3 different viral proteins and achieve potent T cell redirection in vitro.

To achieve a functional cure, sources of HBsAg (Env) must be eliminated. Therefore, ImmTAV-Env molecules were further characterised and shown to redirect a broad range of T cells subsets towards HBsAg positive cells, with T cell responses observed from both healthy and HBV‐infected donors. Crucially, the redirection of T cells by ImmTAV‐Env resulted in elimination of cells representative of both major sources of HBsAg, hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) cells containing integrated HBV-DNA, and cells infected with HBV in vitro, causing a substantial reduction of HBeAg and specific elimination of up to 97% of cells expressing viral RNA.