UroGen and MD Anderson to collaborate on bladder cancer treatment

pharmafile | January 14, 2021 | News story | |ย ย Cancer, UroGen Pharmaย 

UroGen Pharma, a biopharmaceutical company dedicated to treating specialty cancers and urologic diseases, and The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center have announced a strategic three-year collaboration agreement to advance combinatorial intravesical immunotherapy, which is delivered directly into the bladder, for the treatment of high-grade non-muscle invasive bladder cancer (HG-NMIBC).

Under the agreement, MD Anderson and UroGen will collaborate on the design and conduct of non-clinical and clinical studies with oversight from a joint steering committee, while UroGen will provide funding, developmental candidates, and other support.

The New York-headquartered companyโ€™s approach involves the local delivery of potent immunomodulators (UGN-201, a TLR 7/8 agonist and UGN-301, an anti-CTLA-4 antibody). UGN-301, an immune checkpoint inhibitor, is delivered using UroGenโ€™s proprietary RTGel platform to increase dwell time, which has been shown to significantly improve the effectiveness of intravesical therapy.

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UGN-201 and UGN-301 are being developed to ablate tumours by non-surgical means in the treatment of HG-NMIBC. Non-clinical data suggest treatment with the combination of UGN-201 and an anti-CTLA4 antibody, delivered using UroGen’s proprietary RTGel platform, may result in improved survival and decreased tumour size.

Dr Mark Schoenberg, Chief Medical Officer of UroGen Pharma, said: โ€œWe are pleased to enter into this collaboration with MD Anderson and its immunotherapy platform, which brings unique translational and clinical expertise in immuno-oncology.

โ€œThis agreement will help UroGen potentially bring next-generation immunotherapy to bladder cancer patients with a significant unmet need and limited clinical options other than bladder removal.โ€

James Allison, Chair of Immunology, Executive Director of the Immunotherapy Platform, and Co-Director of the Parker Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy at MD Anderson, also commented: โ€œImmune checkpoint inhibitors have become important treatment options for many patients with bladder cancer, and we look forward to working with UroGen to advance new immunotherapy strategies with intravesical delivery.

โ€œThis novel delivery approach has the potential to limit the adverse events seen with systemic immunotherapy treatment while providing clinical benefit, which would represent a major advancement to patient care.โ€

Darcy Jimenez

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