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INmune Bio, Inc. Receives Regulatory Approval from UK MHRA to Initiate Phase I Trial of INKmune in Patients with High-risk MDS
Study will be the first-in man trial for INKmune – a novel therapy to prime the patient’s own NK cells to attack their cancer LA JOLLA, Calif., June 11, 2020

About this update from Inmune Bio Inc.
[{"type":"text","content":"Study will be the first-in man trial for INKmune – a novel therapy to prime the patient’s own NK cells to attack their cancer\n LA JOLLA, Calif., June 11, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- INmune Bio, Inc. (NASDAQ: INMB) (the “Company”), a clinical-stage immunology company focused on developing treatments that harness the patient’s innate immune system to fight disease, announced that the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA; the UK equivalent of the FDA) has given approval to initiate a Phase I clinical trial of INKmune, a novel therapy to prime the patient’s own NK cells to attack their cancer, in patients with high-risk Myelodysplastic Syndrome (MDS) (EUDRACT 2019-004820-40). This single center Phase I trial will be the first-in-man study using INKmune. Based on the current environment and timetable of its clinical site, INmune Bio is targeting the study initiation in the 2nd half of this year. “Patients with MDS are mostly elderly; in this population high-dose chemotherapy or bone marrow transplant are usually too toxic,” said Dr. Marion Wood, consultant hematologist and the medical director for this INKmune program. “With this clinical trial, we hope to show that INKmune will provide an effective and better tolerated therapeutic option for those patients who are poorly served by current therapies.” Patients with high-risk MDS will be enrolled to receive at least 3 doses of INKmune therapy via intravenous infusion, without the need for any type of conditioning therapy or pretreatment. The Phase I trial, called Laurel, will include at least 9 patients enrolled at a single center in the UK and has the capacity for an extension cohort. “Recent research has shown that MDS patients who survive beyond two years are those with good NK cell activity (Tsirogianni et al 2019). INKmune has been shown to boost the function of NK cells from MDS patients in laboratory experiments. We will target those patients whose NK cells demonstrate a response to INKmune in the laboratory. This is part of our precision approach to immunotherapy,” said Dr. Mark Lowdell, CSO of INmune Bio and discoverer of the science behind INKmune. “We are excited to be able to test it as a treatment in this group of patients facing an unmet therapeutic need.” “Professor Lowdell and his team in the UK have worked closely with the MHRA to get this trial thr...