공시 • May 16
Candel Therapeutics Reports Extended Clinical Benefit Over Multiple Clinical Endpoints In Patients From Phase 3 Trial Of Aglatimagene Besadenovec (CAN-2409) In Localized Prostate Cancer Under Prolonged Follow-Up At AUA 2026 Annual Meeting
Candel Therapeutics, Inc. announced new results from extended follow-up of its randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled pivotal phase 3 trial of aglatimagene besadenovec (aglatimagene or CAN-2409) in intermediate- to high-risk localized prostate cancer. Extended follow-up data from the phase 3 study (20 months after reported topline data, median follow-up 58 months) confirmed a statistically significant and clinically meaningful improvement in prostate cancer–specific disease-free survival (DFS) of 39% after aglatimagene administration compared to placebo, reinforcing the potential of aglatimagene to reduce the risk of tumor recurrence in men receiving radiotherapy for localized disease. Clinical benefit demonstrated in the intention-to treat (ITT) population by secondary and clinically relevant exploratory endpoints with numerical improvements observed in time to biochemical failure (TTBF), lower incidence of and increased time to metastases, and increased time to salvage anti-cancer treatment (TTNT). Exploratory analysis within the sub-group of patients with intermediate-risk prostate cancer (85% of the study population) suggested that treatment with aglatimagene plus radiotherapy resulted in a statistically significant 90% reduction in time to metastasis (TTM) versus placebo plus standard-of-care radiotherapy, along with a lower metastasis rate, supporting the potential of aglatimagene to control both local and systemic disease recurrence. Among the 745 patients enrolled in the randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial, the aglatimagene arm exhibited a 39% improvement in prostate cancer-specific disease-free survival (PCa-specific DFS) compared to placebo (hazard ratio [HR] 0.61; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.44, 0.85; p=0.0031) after a median follow-up of 58 months (data as of March 15, 2026). Two prostate cancer-specific deaths occurred (1 in each arm) after median follow-up of less than 10 years. Consistently favorable trends in the ITT population across all secondary and exploratory endpoints, including time to biochemical failure (TTBF; HR 0.72, CI 0.40,1.31), time to metastasis (TTM; HR 0.58, CI 0.21, 1.59), rate of metastasis [(1.6% (8/496) vs. 2.8% (7/249)], and time to salvage anti-cancer therapy (time to new treatment (TTNT) HR 0.72, CI 0.39, 1.31), when comparing the aglatimagene arm with placebo on top of standard-of-care radiotherapy. Within the intermediate-risk subgroup (635 patients, 85% of the ITT population), the aglatimagene arm demonstrated 41% improvement in PCa-specific DFS (HR 0.59, 95% CI 0.41, 0.84, p=0.0034) relative to placebo. Descriptive analyses showed 52% improvement in TTBF (HR 0.48, CI 0.22, 1.03), 90% improvement in TTM (HR 0.1, CI 0.01, 0.85), lower rate of metastatic disease [0.24% (1/422) vs. 2.35% (5/213)], and 49% improvement in TTNT (HR 0.51, CI 0.24, 1.1), when comparing the aglatimagene arm with the placebo arm. In December 2024, aglatimagene significantly improved the rate of pathological complete response in 2-year biopsies compared with placebo, suggesting the cancer had been eradicated at a microscopic level. Previously published work has shown that histologic changes precede clinical evidence of recurrence and that prostate biopsies, positive for cancer cells = 2 years after radiotherapy, are predictive of subsequent clinically meaningful outcomes, including biochemical failure and development of metastases. While the number of events for biochemical failure and development of metastases presented at AUA is, as expected, still too small to achieve statistical significance for most outcomes, the observed trends are consistent and in line with this published literature, supporting the potentially long-term clinical benefit of aglatimagene. Current standard-of-care radiation therapy for intermediate- to-high-risk localized prostate cancer has remained largely unchanged, with a significant unmet medical need, as approximately 30% of patients experience disease recurrence within 10 years. If approved, aglatimagene immunotherapy could represent the first new therapy for men with localized prostate cancer in over 20 years. Candel continues to plan to submit a Biologics License Application (BLA) to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in the fourth quarter of 2026. Aglatimagene, Candel’s most advanced multimodal biological immunotherapy candidate, is an investigational, off-the-shelf, replication-defective adenovirus designed to deliver the herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase (HSV-tk) gene to a patient’s tumor. After intratumoral administration, HSV-tk enzyme activity results in conversion of prodrug (valacyclovir) into deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA)-incorporating nucleotide analogs, leading to immunogenic cell death in cells exhibiting DNA damage and proliferating cells, with subsequent release of a variety of tumor (neo)antigens in the tumor microenvironment. At the same time, the adenoviral serotype 5 capsid proteins promote inflammation through the induction of expression of pro-inflammatory cytokines, chemokines, and adhesion molecules. Together, this regimen is designed to induce an individualized and specific CD8+ T cell-mediated response against the injected tumor and un injected distant metastases for broad anti-tumor activity, based on in situ immunization against a variety of tumor antigens. Aglatimagene has the potential to treat a broad range of solid tumors. Encouraging monotherapy activity as well as combination activity with standard of care radiotherapy, surgery, chemotherapy, and immune checkpoint inhibitors have previously been shown in several preclinical and clinical settings. More than 1,000 patients have been dosed with aglatimagene in clinical trials with a favorable tolerability profile to date, supporting the potential for use with standard of care, when indicated. Aglatimagene is currently not approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration or any other regulatory authority for any use.