STRASBOURG, France--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Regulatory News:
Transgene (Paris:TNG), a biotech company that designs and develops virus-based immunotherapies, will be presenting three posters highlighting the Company’s world-leading viral vector expertise and their potential to transform the fight against cancer at the annual meeting of the Society for Immunotherapy of Cancer (SITC) to be held November 7-11 in Washington DC (USA).
They will cover:
- Invir.IOTM: a new generation of multifunctional oncolytic viruses;
- myvacTM: an individualized immunotherapy based on a viral vector (MVA);
- a next generation viral vector for cancer immunotherapy (PCPV).
Invir.IOTM
Antibody-armed oncolytic Vaccinia virus to block immunosuppressive pathways in the tumor microenvironment
- Authors: Marchand JB, Semmrich M, Fend L, Tornberg UC, Silvestre N, Frendéus B, Quéméneur E
- Poster number: P615
myvacTM
Viral based vaccine for highly personalized neoantigen-directed cancer therapies
- Authors: Ottensmeier C, Savelyeva N, McCann K, Wang C, Greenbaum J, Finn CN, Hoffmann C, Schultz H, Silvestre N, Marchand JB, Quéméneur E, Bendjama K
- Poster number: P148
PCPV
Pseudocowpox virus (PCPV), a potent tumor antigen-independent viral vector for cancer immunotherapy
- Authors: Rittner K, Tosch C, Thioudellet C, Remy-Ziller C, Claudepierre MC, Sansas B, Foloppe J, Erbs P, Silvestre N, Bendjama K, Quéméneur E
- Poster number: P181
The posters will be on display both Friday, November 9 and Saturday, November 10 in the Poster Hall (Hall E).
About Transgene
Transgene (Euronext: TNG), part of
Institut Mérieux, is a publicly traded French biotechnology company
focused on designing and developing targeted immunotherapies for the
treatment of cancer and infectious diseases. Transgene’s programs
utilize viral vector technology with the goal of indirectly or directly
killing infected or cancerous cells. The Company’s lead clinical-stage
programs are: TG4010, a therapeutic vaccine against non-small cell lung
cancer, Pexa-Vec, an oncolytic virus against liver cancer, and TG4001, a
therapeutic vaccine against HPV-positive head and neck cancers. The
Company has several other programs in clinical development, including
TG1050 (a therapeutic vaccine for the treatment of chronic hepatitis B)
and TG6002 (an oncolytic virus for the treatment of solid tumors).
With
its proprietary Invir.IOTM, Transgene builds on its expertise
in viral vectors engineering to design a new generation of
multifunctional oncolytic viruses.
MyvacTM, an
individualized MVA-based immunotherapy integrating neoantigens,
completes this innovative research portfolio.
Additional
information about Transgene is available at www.transgene.fr.
Follow
us on Twitter: @TransgeneSA
Disclamer
This press release contains
forward-looking statements, which are subject to numerous risks and
uncertainties, which could cause actual results to differ materially
from those anticipated. The occurrence of any of these risks could have
a significant negative outcome for the Company’s activities,
perspectives, financial situation, results, regulatory authorities’
agreement with development phases, and development. The Company’s
ability to commercialize its products depends on but is not limited to
the following factors: positive pre-clinical data may not be predictive
of human clinical results, the success of clinical studies, the ability
to obtain financing and/or partnerships for product manufacturing,
development and commercialization, and marketing approval by government
regulatory authorities. For a discussion of risks and uncertainties
which could cause the Company’s actual results, financial condition,
performance, or achievements to differ from those contained in the
forward-looking statements, please refer to the Risk Factors (“Facteurs
de Risque”) section of the Document de Référence, available on the AMF
website (http://www.amf-france.org)
or on Transgene’s website (www.transgene.fr).
Forward-looking statements speak only as of the date on which they are
made and Transgene undertakes no obligation to update these
forward-looking statements, even if new information becomes available in
the future.