Bio-Path Holdings, Inc.
Q1 2021 Earnings Call Transcript
Published:
- Operator:
- Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. Welcome to the Bio-Path Holdings' First Quarter 2021 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. Following the formal remarks, we will open the call up for your questions. I would now like to turn the call over to Will O’Connor of Stern Investor Relations. Please proceed.
- Will O’Connor:
- Thank you, operator. Welcome to the Bio-Path Holdings conference call and webcast to review the company's first quarter 2021 financial results, and to provide an update on recent pipeline and corporate developments. Earlier, we issued a press release which outlines the topics that we plan to discuss on today's call. The release is available at biopathholdings.com.
- Peter Nielsen:
- Thanks, Will. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us. 2021 is off to a terrific start, marked by substantial progress across our portfolio of targeted nucleic cancer drugs. We’re excited by the advances we've made, but are even more excited by what is to come for Bio-Path. Let me now turn to discuss these advances and opportunities in greater detail. I'll begin with our lead product candidate prexigebersen, where we continue to make solid progress. In April, we were delighted to publish an analysis highlighting the potential of prexigebersen within the antisense oligonucleotide drug delivery landscape in the peer-reviewed journal, Biomedicines. In addition, Stage 2 of our Phase 2 clinical trial of prexigebersen for the treatment of acute myeloid leukemia, or AML, in combination with frontline therapies, decitabine and venetoclax continues. As we have previously reported, Phase 2 clinical development of prexigebersen in AML commenced with Stage 1 of our Phase 2 clinical trial, which was open label and treated de novo AML patients with a combination of prexigebersen and low-dose cytarabine, or LDAC. The combination of prexigebersen and LDAC was shown to be safe and more efficacious to treat this class of patients than with LDAC alone. As many of you know, there has been an evolving landscape for standard of care in AML. Despite these new therapies, there are still patients who are refractory or resistant, and those are the patients we aim to help. As standard of care evolved, we adapted our trial design to reflect these changes. The amended Stage 2 of this Phase 2 trial in AML is an open label Phase 2 two-stage multicenter study of prexigebersen in combination with decitabine and venetoclax in two cohorts of patients with previously untreated AML and relapsed/resistant AML. A third cohort includes treating relapsed resistant AML patients who are venetoclax resistant or intolerant with the two drug combination of prexigebersen and decitabine. The full trial design plans have approximately 54 evaluable patients for the cohort treating relapsed/refractory AML patients with a triple combination treatment of prexigebersen, decitabine and venetoclax, and the cohort treating AML patients who are venetoclax resistant or intolerant with a two dose combination of prexigebersen and decitabine with a review of both cohorts performed after 19 evaluable patients.
- Anthony Price:
- Thanks, Peter. The company reported a net loss of 2.4 million or $0.43 per share for the three months ended March 31, 2021 compared to a net loss of 3.3 million or $0.90 per share for the three months ended March 31, 2020. Research and development expense for the three months ended March 31, 2021 decreased to 1.3 million compared to 2.0 million for the three months ended March 31, 2020, primarily due to decreased preclinical expense related to timing of activities for BP1003 as well as decreased clinical trial expense due to timing of activities for a Phase 2 clinical trial of prexigebersen in AML and our Phase 1 clinical trial of BP1002 in lymphoma. General and administrative expense for the three months ended March 31, 2021 decreased to 1.2 million compared to 1.3 million for the three months ended March 31, 2020, primarily due to decreased franchise tax expense. As of March 31, 2021, the company had cash of 30.8 million compared to 13.8 million as of December 31, 2020. Net cash used in operating activities for the three months ended March 31, 2021 was 1.6 million compared to 2.5 million for the comparable period in 2020. Net cash provided by financing activities for the three months ended March 31, 2021 was 18.6 million. With that, I'll now turn the call back over to Peter.
- Peter Nielsen:
- Thanks, Anthony. As I hope we've conveyed on the call this morning, we have made great progress in 2021 that leaves us well positioned to achieve value creating milestones throughout the balance of the year. With our continued publication and presentation of data, we are building a body of scientific and clinical evidence in support of our programs while greatly enhancing the visibility of our platform among relevant audiences. It is my hope that with this expanded knowledge of the potential of our DNAbilize platform, we are building a groundswell of interest in our technology, and the various ways it can be used. This should enhance clinical trial in enrollment, business development efforts and more. This is just the start, and I couldn't be more excited about the future of Bio-Path. With that operator, we are ready to open the call for questions.
- Operator:
- . Our first question is from the line of Jonathan Aschoff with ROTH Capital Partners.
- Jonathan Aschoff:
- Peter Nielsen:
- Yes. Good morning, Jonathan. As you know, I've been rebuilding my drug supply and we had a COVID plant occurrence that pushed off some of our batches. So we've been managing our enrollment to the supply we have that will start ramping up starting early next week and we have some more batches planned through the end of the year. With that being said, I think that -- we’re over half the ways towards '19 evaluable in one of the cohorts, and there is a possibility we’ll get that readout by the end of the year. And certainly by, I think the first half of the following year would be any remaining -- the remaining two cohorts. But we had pretty high response of treating. We were at one point treating 12 to 15 patients. But we needed to manage our supply. So that’s the current view. We’ve been getting good results. If you recall, we put on the six evaluable safety run-out patients. The safety profile was excellent. And we had positive efficacy enhancement over all of the various frontline treatments in the three cohorts. Obviously, it’s a small dataset. So that’s the view I have right now.
- Jonathan Aschoff:
- Peter, what cohort is most enrolled? Was the treatment naive one?
- Peter Nielsen:
- Currently is the third cohort with the venetoclax intolerant-resistant patients.
- Jonathan Aschoff:
- Okay. And then what’s your biggest treatment landscape evolution concerning AML that could possibly force you to redesign the clinical path for prex again?
- Peter Nielsen:
- I’m not really that focused in that regard because whatever the thing -- the way it’s worked before, it’s a combination treatment. So we obviously adapt if there is a change in the frontline because that’s typically the way people will want us to configure our treatment option. And I think venetoclax has settled in pretty much for these treatments, the main drug treatment that with dasatinib. And so I think we’re well on our way. The other thing is, every time we’ve done a treatment, comparison or development, pre-clinically, we always show an incremental efficacy benefit. So it’s really just keeping track with what’s going on in the frontline. And I view that to be a pretty stable thing right now. Certainly, in our third cohort where we have dasatinib and prexigebersen, dasatinib alone is the frontline for those patients. And I think that’s a relatively low bar for us. So I’m anxious for us to try to get to that. That’s kind of my view.
- Jonathan Aschoff:
- Thank you, Peter.
- Operator:
- Our final question comes from the line of Yi Chen with H.C. Wainwright.
- Peter Nielsen:
- Hi, Yi.
- Yi Chen:
- Thank you. Hi, Peter. Thank you for taking my questions. Could you tell us the current enrollment status of the Phase 1 lymphoma and CLL trial?
- Peter Nielsen:
- For the what?
- Yi Chen:
- The BP1002 trial, the current enrollment status?
- Peter Nielsen:
- That trial has had one evaluable patient enrolled and we’re currently looking at other patients. We have good cancer centers. BP1002 is starting out slow and the problem is, as you well know, when you do a dose escalating study, it’s hard to get people started at the low end because the oncologists will say, well, it’s a safety trial and you can’t expect a lot of benefit at the low. We’re starting at 20 milligrams per meter squared. So you have to kind of struggle through those early phases. So we’re looking to do that. But we had had very positive responses from our sites that want to participate. We have MD Anderson, Georgia Cancer Center and the Sarah Cannon. Those were all good sites. So we have three sites to do this dose escalating trial. So I think it will get more rapid once we get up into the higher doses.
- Yi Chen:
- And do you believe this Phase 1 trial can still report data before the end of this year?
- Peter Nielsen:
- Yes. It would be a cohort. And again the focus on the first one, for example, three patients at 20 milligrams per square meter would be the first cohort. It’d be safety. I don’t know how much efficacy you can report on that early dose. So it would go from 20, 40, 60 and 90 are our dose points. They may go to 135. But I think those first four are the ones that would be the principal focus. So we certainly ought to be able to get one of those first cohorts in.
- Yi Chen:
- Okay, got it. And for prexigebersen-A, how quickly do you think the Phase 1 trial in solid tumor can recruit patients in the current environment of the pandemic?
- Peter Nielsen:
- Well, there seems to be a lot of -- this is going to be a treatment for solid tumors that a systemic IV and endometrial and advanced ovarian or one of them, they can recruit in pancreatic. We’ve done testing on that. So the interest has been very high. And we have again MD Anderson in that. I recall we have a couple others that would be coming in. We have waited these extra four months, the FDA had asked us to do two more sets of testing and one of them was the particulates. And particulates are hard for us because of our product being a little bit different. You have to do it on the drug product, which is reconstituted liposome. And so you have to -- for those, you have to go through mechanisms to break down all the liposomes and just get the nanoparticles and some of the things you use to do that in aggregate cells and coalesce and make it a little more challenging. But we in fact have now just got the word in the last week or two that we’ve got that test successfully done. And so the FDA in the December call we had with them just gave us the two things we needed to do. So I think we’ll get our IND here fairly quickly now as they passed us in. And then there is a real need for this, Yi. And we’ve had -- as you know, we’ve had two AACR papers that have been well received, posters at their annual meeting. And so I think there is a lot of interest in getting a kind of treatment like this that can help manage that. Obviously, the first part again will be a safety assessment. Fortunately since prexigebersen is the same drug cell since the formulation is different to get a better nanoparticle, smaller particles, but since that safety is out there with AML, we get to start at the higher dose. I think it’s 60 milligram per meter squared. So we may not have to go through the hurdle of people not wanting to enroll our patients if they don’t think they can get any benefit. So I think we can maybe be better on that as well, but everything I know this is a treatment that’s really being looked for.
- Yi Chen:
- So we can expect this trial to be initiated in the third quarter, right?
- Peter Nielsen:
- Yes. And I think we’ll get the IND pretty quickly because we satisfied everything they want. And once we get that IND, we’ll be opened up ready to go. So certainly, we should be dosing our first patient in the third quarter for sure.
- Yi Chen:
- Got it. Thank you.
- Operator:
- Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, that’s the end of our Q&A session. I’d like to turn the call back over for any closing remarks.
- Peter Nielsen:
- Thank you, again, everyone for joining us and for your continued support of Bio-Path. Have a great day.
- Operator:
- Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today’s conference call. We ask that you now disconnect your lines.
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