19 August 2025 | Tuesday | News
Anixa Biosciences, Inc. a biotechnology company focused on the treatment and prevention of cancer, announced that the second patient in the fourth dose cohort has been treated in the ongoing Phase 1 clinical trial evaluating the Company's novel chimeric antigen receptor-T cell (CAR-T) therapy for recurrent ovarian cancer. The study is being conducted through a research partnership with Moffitt Cancer Center ("Moffitt").
Patients in the fourth cohort are receiving a dose of three million CAR-positive cells per kilogram of body weight—representing a 30-fold increase over the initial dose level. To date, no dose-limiting toxicities (DLTs) have been observed in the fourth cohort.
Anixa's proprietary CAR-T program targets the follicle-stimulating hormone receptor (FSHR), which preclinical research indicates is selectively expressed on ovarian cells, tumor vasculature, and certain cancer cells—but not in healthy tissue. The ongoing first-in-human clinical trial (NCT05316129) is enrolling adult women with recurrent ovarian cancer who have progressed after at least two prior lines of therapy. The Phase 1 study is designed to evaluate safety, determine the maximum tolerated dose, and monitor initial signals of clinical activity.
"Our therapy continues to demonstrate a favorable safety profile, even at significantly higher cell doses," stated Dr. Amit Kumar, Chairman and CEO of Anixa Biosciences. "While this study is primarily designed to assess safety, we remain encouraged by early indications of potential efficacy as the trial progresses."
Anixa's CAR-T technology was invented by Jose R. Conejo-Garcia, M.D., Ph.D., Professor of Immunology in the Department of Integrative Immunobiology at the Duke University School of Medicine. The ongoing clinical trial is being conducted at Moffitt under the direction of Dr. Robert Wenham, Chair of the Gynecologic Oncology Program. Anixa holds an exclusive worldwide license to the FSHR-targeting CAR-T technology from The Wistar Institute.
Most Read
Bio Jobs
News
Editor Picks