Earnings Labs

MiNK Therapeutics, Inc. (INKT)

Q2 2022 Earnings Call· Sat, Aug 13, 2022

$10.81

-3.01%

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Transcript

Operator

Operator

Good day, and welcome to the MiNK Therapeutics Second Quarter 2022 Earnings Conference Call. Please note, today's conference call is being recorded. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speakers' remarks there will be a question-and-answer session. Thank you. At this time, I would like to turn the conference over to Kimberly Ha, Head of Investor Relations.

Kimberly Ha

Management

Thank you, operator, and thank you all for joining us today. Today's call is being webcasted and will be available on our website for replay. I'd like to remind you that this call will contain forward-looking statements, including statements regarding our clinical development, regulatory and commercial plans, as well as timelines for data release and partnership opportunities. These statements are subject to risks and uncertainties, and we refer you to our SEC filings for more details on these risks. Joining me today on the call are Dr. Jennifer Buell, President and Chief Executive Officer; Dr. Joy Zhou, Vice President of Manufacturing; Christine Klaskin, Principal Financial and Accounting Officer; and Melissa Orla, Director, Global Financial Operations. Now I'd like to turn the call over to Dr. Buell to highlight our progress and speak to our outlook for the remainder of the year.

Jennifer Buell

Management

Thank you very much, Kimberly, and thank you all for joining us for our first quarterly earnings call. MiNK Therapeutics was launched as an IPO just about 10 months ago and today, we stand as the most advanced company pioneering, allogeneic or off-the-shelf in invariant natural killer T cells or iNKT cells in three active clinical programs. We have shown that we can isolate these cells from healthy donors. We can produce them at scale in our in-house GMP manufacturing suite. And we've also demonstrated that our product retains both potency and tumor-killing potential after freezing. Thus for all of our clinical trials, our cells are at the site when the patient needs them. Our focus is on isolating the most highly considered cells in immunity and delivering them to patients who need them most, patients whose immune system has failed to eliminate cancer or prevent serious complications from infection. Currently, we have three active clinical programs, and we expect to share data from these programs at a conference this year. As a pioneer in the field, we appreciate that MiNK must not only advance science at record-breaking paces, but also contribute to the growth of information and the application of iNKTs in immune-related diseases. By way of background, our immune system has two distinct arms to immunity, innate or natural immunity that which we are born with and responds immediately when faced with a threat and adaptive immunity that which we acquire over time to adapt to new external threats like COVID-19. At MiNK, we are pursuing iNKT cells because of their unique properties to modulate both arms of immunity and leverage the strength of both T cells and NK cells. This makes them critical in every line of the body's natural defense. So what happens without iNKT cells…

Christine Klaskin

Management

Thank you, Jen. We ended the second quarter of 2022 with a cash balance of $29.8 million as compared to $38.9 million at December 31, 2021. Cash used in operations for the six months ended and second quarter ended June 30, 2022, was $8.8 million and $4.6 million respectively, compared to $7.6 million and $3.4 million for the same period in 2021. Net loss for the quarter ended June 2022 was $6.1 million or $0.18 per share compared to a net loss for the same period of 2021 of $6.3 million or $0.26 per share. Net loss for the six months ended June 2022 was $13.9 million or $0.41 per share compared to $10.2 million or $0.42 per share for the six months ended June 2021. I'll now turn the call back to Jen.

Jennifer Buell

Management

Thank you very much, Christine. And operator, we will now open up the call for Q&A.

Operator

Operator

Your first question comes from the line of Kalpit Patel with B. Riley Securities.

Kalpit Patel

Analyst

Yes. Hey, good morning. Thanks for taking the questions. I guess, first, starting with the clinical update for AgenT-797 in second half, can you provide details on expectations for this update? Maybe how many patients' worth of data would be included? And should we see results from both the monotherapy and combination based arms?

Jennifer Buell

Management

Thanks, Kalpit. Thanks for your question. We will share, of course, the size of the cohort. But what I can remind you of is that we launched the program actually in May of this year. We announced our first-in-human dosing with dose escalation with the monotherapy cells as well as in combination with approved checkpoint KEYTRUDA and OPDIVO in patients with solid tumors. We have enrolled these cohorts actually at quite a fast pace, really somewhat of a record pace because of the interest in the program. So I can share with you that the cohort will include, we believe, meaningful follow-up information on patients with advanced cancers enrolling in our Phase 1 study with our monotherapy as well as in combination with PD-1.

Kalpit Patel

Analyst

Okay, got it. And you mentioned early observations of disease-modulating activity in a patient with rectal cancer and then maybe another patient with refractory multiple myeloma. Can you provide additional color on these data where they on monotherapy or combination based therapy? And at what dose level did they -- what dose level of cells did they receive?

Jennifer Buell

Management

Stay tuned, Kalpit. We -- I don't want to compromise some of the data that's specified in our abstract. So we would look forward to getting this information out to you at the public presentation.

Kalpit Patel

Analyst

Okay, fair enough. And then how are you -- based on the activity that you're seeing to date, how are you thinking about approaching multiple doses of AgenT-797? Is there any data or learnings that you can point to that suggests multiple doses might be useful?

Jennifer Buell

Management

So I'll tell you, what we have launched -- when we launched the program, what our platform has been based on were really some very exciting findings of autologous iNKTs in solid tumor cancers, in neck cancer, lung cancer, hepatocellular carcinoma. These data are publicly available. And some of the underlying hypotheses of the performance of the autologous cells would be that they can home and traffic to tissue to their tissue dominant iNKTs, and that's why there's such low quantity in the periphery. Because of that trafficking, when they advance and through the lipid ligand, CD1d, B cells will home to the disease site and then they recruit T cells and NK cells, and they're actually one of the most highest interfering gamma secreting cells. The amount that they can produce really contributes to their ability to life. In the allo-setting, preclinically, we're seeing those same features. And now in the clinic, what we would expect to do is to recapitulate the data that has been observed with the autologous cells, but in a setting and with a platform that is scalable and accessible and, of course, affordable to patients. So the doses that were observed in the autologous setting to go to your specific question, we're really single administrations where we saw some pronounced benefit. Our dose plan today is a single administration. Of course, the patients are being dosed in combination with KEYTRUDA or OPDIVO, and we are now exploring persistence, how long the cells actually persist at the site of disease where we need them to be. Our preclinical data shows that they persist beyond the measurement time of about 36 days. Some of our clinical data show that we can do far beyond that in the clinic, and we will be exploring the best time to dose following the change in persistence of the cells. So that's still under evaluation, something that we'll explore. But the data that we have built our programs on has really been built on the autologous platforms that have shown really sufficient tumor control. And that tumor control is not only because of these cells ability to modulate both T and NK both arms of immunity and adaptive and recruit T and NK cells, but also to modulate the tumor microenvironment. And we also will be sharing some data that may also inform that these cells can impact different markers of exhaustion, which is quite important in durability of responses. So it's -- I think we'll have -- we'll be able to provide some additional color on next steps beyond the indications that we're going to be expanding in -- we'll provide some additional information on dose and dose frequency.

Kalpit Patel

Analyst

Okay, got it. And one -- maybe one last question related to lymphodepletion. Is the plan to continue exploring AgenT-797 without lymphodepletion in in future studies? Or do you think you might have, sort of, an exploratory cohort testing lymphodepletion before finalizing the next steps?

Jennifer Buell

Management

Well, based on what we're seeing today, we would continue to proceed without lymphodepletion. We will consider exploratory programs, of course, in partnership with investigators, whether lymphodepletion could expand the benefit of our observations. However, lymphodepletion is really difficult for patients to endure. And what we've seen, of course, from data that has come out with the J&J, BCMA-CAR is that these lymphodepletion may be attributed to some of the secondary cancers that have been observed with their product. And to the extent that we can bring a more effective, durable and more tolerable product to patients, that would be our goal. And so our goal would be to administer the product without lymphodepletion. And we'll continue to explore all of the ways to optimize the experience for patients. But so far, our plan is no lymphodepletion.

Kalpit Patel

Analyst

Okay, great. Thanks very much for taking the questions.

Jennifer Buell

Management

Thank you.

Operator

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of Jack Allen with Arid.

Jack Allen

Analyst · Arid.

Thank you so much. This is Jack Allen from Baird. I really appreciate you taking the questions and congratulations on the progress. I guess the first one I had was a little bit outside of the solid tumor in multiple myeloma setting. But as it relates to the negotiations with the public entities around the COVID opportunity, I'd love to hear some more color about any comparative contracts think about the timing of that arm of the business moving forward?

Jennifer Buell

Management

Okay. So for the infectious disease program that we've discussed today in our annual program, so what I will share, what we have identified, of course, in patients when we launched our IND, of course, it was the very beginning of the pandemic. And the data that we had and others have generated show that these cells can modulate immune dysreculation, and they can dampen proinflammatory cytokines in lung, in particular, promote survival and influenza, benefit models, great benefit of models of pneumonia and have quite a significant impact in SARS CoV1 and MERS.

SITC

Analyst · Arid.

Now our -- as we have observed that just in the past, since 2013, we have had a number of pandemics. So we were first dealing with Ebola and then, of course, MERS and SARS, CoV2, monkeypox, et cetera. So our government is looking for variant agnostic approaches in which they can really mitigate immune disregulation. And these cells may actually present that opportunity. DARPA, of course, is -- their emphasis is on very high science, and that's something that we'll be partnering with them to elucidate mechanisms initially before expanding the cells in humans. So we have a partnership that's under discussion right now that will help us better understand mechanisms of these cells in mitigating the harmful side effects of infections more broadly and viral ARDS. And then we would expand those findings, of course, to an expanded clinical program that would go beyond the COVID-19 pandemic and possibly be applied much more broadly. You will hear more this year about that partnership.

Jack Allen

Analyst · Arid.

Great, thank you so much. And then just one other question and then I have one more follow-up. But on the graft versus host disease program, I know you mentioned that the positive central impact of the cells in graft versus host, I'd love to hear where things fit as it relates to advancing potentially AgenT-797 in that indication as well?

Jennifer Buell

Management

That's right. So we -- graft versus host disease, that's a beneficial profile, side effect really of these cells as it actually mitigates graft versus host -- and I think, Jack, we've shared with you and we could make public, certainly some public presentations and publications of our team and our advisory team members' results of the mechanism as to why these cells may mitigate graft versus host. Now there are two areas where these cells can be helpful. One is transplant uptake, the ability to actually have a successful hematopoietic stem cell transplantation and then mitigate graft versus host as well. So there are two points of intervention where we believe these cells can be helpful. Our focus for the first half of this year has really been advancing our solid tumor program and finishing up the work that we had started in viral-ARDS and multiple myeloma. We have now collective feedback from our scientific advisers and key opinion leaders in GVHD. And our program has been selected as a primary area of interest for hematologists. So we will be providing some more guidance of the launch of this trial, which we plan to launch this year, testing the cells and transplant acceptance as well as mitigation of GVHD, and we see an opportunity to do that, particularly in the earlier disease setting.

Jack Allen

Analyst · Arid.

Great, thank you so much. And then my final question was, more recently, there have been a few comments made by reporters as it relates to a peer of yours and the potential acquisition of an iNKT program out in the domain. I was wondering if you had any comments as it relates to business development of your assets moving forward? And how are you thinking about advancing the various pipeline programs that make into the clinic, maybe more of the CAR programs?

Jennifer Buell

Management

Sure. So I think really importantly Jack you're bringing up an important point. The capabilities that we have at MiNK are really deep and broad. So our -- we're, of course, born out of a long-standing veteran in immuno-oncology Agenus. And as such, we have the capabilities of delivering a platform that I think is unprecedented that I've seen so far in this field. So we launched as a starting point, the cells in their native form because of the features that they boast and what they can do for patients. But we've also delivered now what I think is a superior engineered programs that we will be disclosing at upcoming conferences. And then our iNKT, our ability to launch our iNKT engager platform is something that I am not aware of any other companies have the capabilities to do, and we have the -- our Chief Scientific Officer, of course, Marc van Dijk an expert across these platforms and has designed and developed these platforms for MiNK. We will pursue business development very strategically. It's certainly nondilutive partnerships such as government partnerships that are really instrumental for our ability to expand and advance the technologies and capabilities that we have. Partners fall into that approach as well. We have a number of active discussions underway and we'll certainly keep you informed on our progress. We -- I think to the extent that if you take a look at the productivity of partnerships that our parent company Agenus has been able to deliver on, and that includes a number of programs that generated about nearly $1 billion in partnerships transactions and milestones. You can see the scale that we were able to actually monetize our research productivity to finance and fund the business and bring our lead programs forward independently and MiNK shares that philosophy. The opportunity to actually have strategic collaborations that will allow us to take full advantage of the depth and breadth of our research capability, that will be very important.

Jack Allen

Analyst · Arid.

Great, sounds good, good plan. Thank you so much for the questions and congratulations on the progress.

Jennifer Buell

Management

I appreciate it. Thanks so much Jack.

Operator

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of Matt Phipps with William Blair.

Matthew Phipps

Analyst · William Blair.

Hey Jen. A couple of questions from me. So first, I think this is the first time I've seen the word armored used to describe the BCMA CAR-T. Just wondering if you might be able to give us any hint of what that is ahead of seeing maybe closer to something I know others are looking at maybe cytokine secretion or things when they talk about armored CAR T cells?

Jennifer Buell

Management

Matt, you are so astute, and I so enjoy working with you for that reason. We will be giving you some more clarity when we announce details around this program this year. So we'll share with you how we've actually created a product that is differentiated not only by the CAR design itself, a CAR-iNKT, but also to how we engineered this to be differentiated, and we think to be potentially superior to what's available today. So stay tuned on that.

Matthew Phipps

Analyst · William Blair.

Okay thanks. And then I guess just wondering if you can give us an idea, if you're seeing any differences in the persistence and distribution of the cells and the ongoing solid tumor and myeloma indications compared to what you saw last year in the ARDS trial.

Jennifer Buell

Management

Yes. So -- now that's really important. So last year, we presented data in the ARDS trial, but it was based on peripheral data only. So the important point here is that these cells upon administration rapidly home to these sites of interest rapidly. So they are actually out of the periphery quite quickly. And the data we presented was exclusively the periphery, so it showed sort of a low window of persistence. What's very important about data that we'll be presenting at an upcoming conference is, we actually have insights into where these cells are homing and how long they persist in those -- in the locations that they are homing to. And that includes biopsies from patients as well as important tissues of interest. So I think that you will certainly see differences in the data that we present at upcoming conferences this year than what we've presented is the peripheral distribution in patients with ARDS.

Matthew Phipps

Analyst · William Blair.

Thanks, Jen. I look forward to the data.

Jennifer Buell

Management

I really appreciate it Matt. Thank you so much.

Operator

Operator

At this time, there are no further questions. I'll turn the call back to management for any closing remarks.

Jennifer Buell

Management

Thank you very much, operator, and thank you for your participation. We're really thrilled to have an opportunity to share an update on our progress, and we'll be looking forward to connecting at our upcoming data releases. Thank you again.

Operator

Operator

Thank you for participating. You may disconnect at this time.