CellxLife has developed a dendritic cell-based therapy to treat children with recurring metastatic Ewing sarcoma and osteosarcoma. Osteosarcoma, also known as bone cancer, is an aggressive disease where malignant tumors form inside the bones. Teens are the most commonly affected age group when it comes to bone cancer.
The data indicates that in the Phase I trial (human data), 75% of the children with metastatic osteosarcoma, who responded well to surgery, overcame their cancer and are still alive today. Out of all the participants of the trial, 62.5% of children with metastatic osteosarcoma that were treated with the dendritic cell-based therapy lived for over 15 years. For children with recurring metastatic Ewing or osteosarcoma, the 5-year survival rate is usually less than 20% (Dana Farber Cancer institute).
This immunotherapy does not contain chemotherapy, and the side effects of the cell-derived therapy were generally considered to be milder than other treatment options. The research has demonstrated that this particular cell-based therapy could also be used to treat other solid tumors in the case of breast, ovarian, cervical, lung, prostate, stomach and brain cancer.
For children suffering from osteosarcoma, treatment options are limited. The most common treatment is surgery in combination with radiation and chemotherapy, which is an excruciating experience for both patients and their family members. Especially since 80% of the children succumb to their disease within five years. Often, despite the removal of tumors, the cancer is likely to return. The same also applies to other cancers that produce solid tumors: the primary tumor can be surgically removed but cancer cells remain in the body, leading to recurrence.
Through CellxLife’s proprietary therapy, cancer cells are taken from the body and altered using a cell- based methodology to fight the disease, then re-administered back into the body. The scientific data has indicated that the altered cells will shape the immunological memory and the response to remaining cancer cells in the body, greatly reducing the chances of the cancer returning.
The original trial for the dendritic cell-derived therapy was conducted in Austria in the early 2000s. The cell-based therapy, which travels directly to the lymph nodes and the immunological memory and response to cancer cells, was evaluated in eight children, five of whom lived for 15 years or longer and three who are still alive today. The data demonstrates that the children who responded well to the surgical removal of the tumor had the best results (75%). All of the children in the trial had recurring metastatic cancer, which has the worst outcomes.
The technology has been further developed over the last twenty years including the refinement of the manufacturing processes. The research has indicated that the proprietary technology can also be used to treat other solid tumors. The foundation laid out by these scientists will allow the research to enter a Phase II trial. Since it is an orphan designation indication, it will most likely be fast-tracked through the FDA. This will cut the time it takes to get through the final regulatory hurdles from 6-8 years to 3-5 years.
Clinical-Stage Oncology Program Focused on High Unmet Need Indications
> Pediatric focus on children with terminal relapsed, metastatic Ewing Sarcoma and Osteosarcoma
> Exceptional activity in Phase 1 (63% >10-year survival rate; 50% > 15-year survival; 38% still alive)
> Disease with limited treatment options, poor survival, and no new approaches since 2000
> Fastest growing orphan drug space with clear path to reimbursement (Global Sarcoma Market worth >$2B)
Differentiated and Derisked Clinical Asset
> Autologous cell-derived immunotherapy with distinct mechanism of action
> A powerful way to engage the interplay between the innate and adaptive immune systems
> Established and proprietary manufacturing processes
Accelerated Path to Market and Early Exit Potential
> Orphan Designation and potential for Rare Pediatric Priority Review Voucher (PRV)
> Partnerships with university and leading clinical centre that enable rapid trial recruitment
Immunotherapy is a type of cancer treatment that helps the patient’s immune system fight cancer
Patient’s immune cells are made to recognize the cancer and attack it, just as they would a foreign agent causing infectious disease
Unlike chemotherapy & radiation therapy, which can have many adverse side-effects, cancer
immunotherapy can have significantly less toxicity
However, autologous cancer vaccines have not delivered on their potential
> A unique process modifying the mechanism of action to greatly boost autologous cell immunotherapy
> Unlike cytotoxic or radiation therapies and transplants, is well-tolerated
> Potential to dramatically increase survival in pediatric bone cancers and achieve curative outcomes
>> Special processing in the original TUVAC1 trial resulted in a unique, modified cancer vaccine product that correlates with long-term patient survival
Board of Advisors
R. Todd Ruppert is the founder and CEO of Ruppert International, a firm with diversified interests globally in various fields including education, financial services, disruptive technologies, arts & entertainment, and strategy consulting. He is chairman of RSR Partners, The World Trade Center Institute, and London's Royal Parks Foundation (USA). He is a
global ambassador for The Duke of Edinburgh's International Award, and a board member of Afriex, Antler, BoxMedia,
Credrails, Culture3, Spod, Hitlab, mPokket, Peko, Pirkx, Shetland Space Centre, Storelli Sports, The International Centre for Missing and Exploited Children, Trinity Street Asset
Management, and The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. He was a board member of INSEAD Business School from 2012-2021 and currently is a member of its Advisory Council.
Todd is an advisor to fintech advisory firm SenaHill. He is also an advisor to a number of VC/PE firms including Access Holdings, Antler, Balerion Space Ventures, Broadlight Capital,
CXO Fund, Fin Capital, Global Ventures, Launch Africa Ventures, Modi Ventures, Pact VC, Samos Ventures, Sure Ventures, Thirdbase Capital, and Unicorn Growth.
Todd has over 40 years of experience in the financial services industry. He retired from T. Rowe Price, the global asset management firm with over $1.5 trillion under management,
where he was CEO and president of T. Rowe Price Global Investment Services, co-president, T. Rowe Price International,
and a member of the operating steering committee of the T. Rowe Price Group. He also retired from Greenspring Associates, a $17 billion venture capital firm, where he was a venture partner.
His numerous advisory board roles are for the following organizations located around the globe:
Education: ActivEd, Duke University, MarcoPolo Learning, MPOWER
Financing: Financial Services/Disruptive Technologies: Behaviour Lab, Bite Investments, Fiduciary Investors
Symposium, GIST Impact, IMMO, ManageMy, Minimum, Molten Cloud, Moneyhub, Money360, Octopus Investments,
Opto Invest, PivotalPath, Q Ventures, Republic, Trove Arts and Entertainment: Bottletop, Flawlessai, MTArt Agency
Strategy Consulting: Gold Mercury International, Laurel Strategies
Other: Alta, lperionX, PowerX
Todd is the executive producer of three documentary films - A
Year in Burgundy, A Year in Champagne & A Year in Port.
Board of Advisors
Mr Goldman is the current President of Hillspire, a Family Office, responsible for financial and administrative functions, along with real estate, aviation and maritime activities.
Mr. Goldman is the former chief financial officer of Yahoo!. Mr. Goldman joined Yahoo! in 2012 and throughout his five year tenure was responsible for Yahoo!’s global finance functions including financial planning and analysis, controllership, tax, treasury and investor relations. Prior to joining Yahoo! Mr. Goldman served as senior vice president, finance and administration, and chief financial officer at Fortinet, Inc, a provider of unified threat management solutions, from 2007 to 2012. Mr. Goldman also served as senior vice president, finance and administration, and chief financial officer of Siebel Systems, Inc. During a professional career spanning over forty years, Mr. Goldman has served as CFO of multiple public and private companies and as CFO has helped take three companies public. In addition Mr. Goldman’s experience includes board director, audit committee chairman and financial advisory roles at more than 40 corporate boards, of which over 10 have gone public while he was a board member, including Zuora which is currently on file. Mr. Goldman currently serves on the board of directors of NXP Semiconductor, Trinet, RingCentral, GoPro, Inc. and other non-profit boards such as Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital Foundation Board.
Mr. Goldman was a member of the Board of Trustees of Cornell University from 2005 to 2013 and was subsequently designated as Emeritus Trustee; and is currently on the Harvard Business School California Research Center Advisory Board. Mr. Goldman was appointed in January 2015 to a three-year term to the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board’s (PCAOB’s) Standing Advisory Group (SAG), an organization that provides advice on the need to formulate new accounting standards or change existing standards. He was a member of the Treasury Advisory Committee on the Auditing Profession over the years 2007-2008, a public committee that made recommendations to encourage a more sustainable auditing profession. From December 1999 to December 2003, Mr. Goldman served on the Financial Accounting Standards Advisory Council (FASAC).
Mr. Goldman holds a B.S. in Electrical Engineering from Cornell University and an M.B.A. from the Harvard Business School. In his spare time, Ken enjoys skiing, windsurfing and kiteboarding and golf and resides in Atherton, Ca with his wife and has three children who reside locally.
Board of Advisors
Anjali joined CRISPR Therapeutics in 2021 as the
Global Development Lead for the Thalassemia trial of
CTX 001 (Exa-cel) gene therapy. She then transitioned
back to Oncology as the Global Development Lead for
CTX 130, a CD70-directed allogeneic CAR-T therapy.
Recently, she joined Gilead Sciences as the Pediatric
Oncology Global Development Lead.
In 2015, she joined Amgen, initially as the US Medical
Lead for Aranesp and Nplate, and later became an
Early Development Lead for Hematology-Oncology.
Previously, she worked at UCSF in Pediatric Bone
Marrow and Stem Cell Transplant, then at Kaiser
Permanente in Pediatric Hematology-Oncology.
Anjali trained in Pediatric Hematology-Oncology at
Lucile Packard Children's Hospital, Stanford, and
completed a fellowship in Adult Bone Marrow
Transplant at Stanford. She earned her medical degree
at Lady Hardinge Medical School, New Delhi, and
completed her Pediatric residency at UIC, Chicago.
CEO
Eric has over 30 years of experience in managing and overseeing biotechnology projects, with a focus on cancer immunotherapy and technology development. Most recently he led development efforts at the startup company AffyImmune Therapeutics raising over $20M and advanced a novel CAR T cell therapeutic into the clinic against refractory thyroid cancer, an orphan indication. Previously he was at Antigen Express where he led the development of an immunotherapeutic vaccine for breast and prostate cancer, resulting in a collaboration with Merck and a valuation in excess of $300M. Prior to that he held positions at Millennium
Pharmaceuticals where he oversaw the advancement of ~$30M in internal technology development projects and personalized medicine. Previously, he was an Assistant Professor of Pharmacology at the University of Massachusetts Medical School and completed postdoctoral fellowships at the University of Zurich and Harvard.
Founder
Ruvin founded the healthcare advisory firm Bridle Path investments. Bridle Path assists healthcare companies with their financing and partnering strategy. Bridle Path has worked with biotech, diagnostics, biologics, regenerative medicine, devices and digital health companies. The company has worked directly with the venture capitalists Lumira Ventures and Epic Capital on their funds. The firm specialized in private sources of capital from Family Offices, UHNWIs and impact investors. The firm represented clients internationally: Germany, Britain, Australia, Canada and Switzerland. Prior to Bridle Path Investments, Ruvin worked in the tech, media and entertainment industry. He represented companies in the AI and loyalty space. He helped fund media companies and a film fund. He was previously a CEO of a content company that was involved in publishing and had an online presence. He has helped finance film projects independently.
Marketing/Comm. Strategy
Andrea is a strategic commercial/communication consultant that partners with New York City investment teams looking to fund innovative biotech, life science and health tech companies. As a multidisciplinary strategic commercial pre- launch and launch expert, she has had successful results with the strategic planning, implementation and team leadership for some of the largest and influential pharmaceutical brand launches in the last 10 years. Through promo med ed, HCP promotion, market access and PR channels, she has directed full life-cycle development, from early commercial, medical need/disease-shaping at phase 2 (Ilaris), brand development (Keytruda), franchise positioning (BMS PD1) and post-LOE strategy (Lipitor). Bartzen has also helped develop breakthrough medical communication platforms in each category: Keytruda (Immuno-oncology/PD1 inhibitor); Pradaxa (stroke); Lipitor (cardiovascular) Atripla(HIV); Botox, Vimpat (CNS), as well as successfully developed education and communication strategies that shift KOL and specialists' mindsets, leading to the transformation of medical paradigms and treatment norms.
Anton Neschadim is a biomedical industry executive, scientist, innovator, entrepreneur and venture capitalist with more than 20 years of combined industry and academic experience in research, drug development and venture capital. Anton's industry experience spans C- level and Director-level roles in biotech and medtech. Anton led transactions totalling billions in potential deal value. Anton's venture capital investment experience spans various deals across Seed and Series A financings and multiple exits . Anton is known for developing novel biological therapeutics and gene therapy treatment modalities, and published scientific works and patents across all major areas of biomedical research, including immunology, oncology, regenerative medicine, gene therapy and biological chemistry. Anton got his PhD, MBA, MSc, Hon. BSc and postdoctoral training at the University of Toronto, and executive education at the Harvard Business School, Yale School of Management, Stanford University, and MIT Sloan School of Management.
William has over 25 years experience working in the biotechnology and pharmaceutical fields. He previously held positions as research scientist at EMD Millipore, and as a consultant at Bullet Biotechnology in Menlo Park, CA. Prior to this, William held key research leadership and supervisory positions at Novartis, Wyeth, the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard University, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Mayo Clinic, The Scripps Research Institute, and others. William holds a Master of Science in Molecular Neuroscience from the Mayo Clinic Graduate School and a Bachelor of Science in Biology from the University of Oregon.