Immutep — LAG-3 progress in-house and via partners

Immutep — LAG-3 progress in-house and via partners

Immutep has reported encouraging progress from its in-house and partnered programs over the past few months. Interim data from the TACTI-mel combo study included a 61% response rate from the start of the Keytruda monotherapy screening period among subjects who went on to receive eftilagimod alpha (efti or IMP321) combo therapy. Partners GSK and Novartis are progressing their in-licensed LAG-3 programs into Phase II or proof of concept studies, which increases the likelihood that these programs will return significant value to Immutep. Our valuation has increased to $387m or $12.80/ADR (from $333m or $10.41/ADR).

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Immutep

LAG-3 progress in-house and via partners

Partners proceed to Phase II

Pharma & biotech

30 August 2018

ADR research

Price

US$2.66

Market cap

US$81m

ADR/Ord conversion ratio 100/1

Gross cash ($m) at 30 June 2018

17.8

ADRs in issue

30.3m

ADR code

IMMP

ADR exchange

NASDAQ

Underlying exchange

ASX

Depository

BNY

ADR share price performance

52-week high/low

$2.95

$1.32

Business description

Immutep is an ASX-listed biotechnology company focused on cancer immunotherapy. Its pipeline is based on four products using an LAG-3 immune control system: IMP321 for cancer chemo-immunotherapy, partnered products IMP731 (GSK) and IMP701 (Novartis), and IMP761 (preclinical).

Next events

TACTI-mel data update including additional cohort

November

Initiate TACTI-002 Phase II

Q418

Fully recruit AIPAC breast cancer Phase II

Q418/Q119

Analysts

Dr Dennis Hulme

+61 (0)2 8249 8345

Maxim Jacobs

+1 646 653 7027

Immutep is a research client of Edison Investment Research Limited

Immutep has reported encouraging progress from its in-house and partnered programs over the past few months. Interim data from the TACTI-mel combo study included a 61% response rate from the start of the Keytruda monotherapy screening period among subjects who went on to receive eftilagimod alpha (efti or IMP321) combo therapy. Partners GSK and Novartis are progressing their in-licensed LAG-3 programs into Phase II or proof of concept studies, which increases the likelihood that these programs will return significant value to Immutep. Our valuation has increased to $387m or $12.80/ADR (from $333m or $10.41/ADR).

Year end

Revenue (US$m)

PTP
(US$m)

EPADR
($)

DPADR
($)

P/E
(x)

Gross yield
(%)

06/17

3.1

(6.4)

(0.28)

0.0

N/A

N/A

06/18

5.2

(8.3)

(0.40)

0.0

N/A

N/A

06/19e

8.3

(5.2)

(0.17)

0.0

N/A

N/A

06/20e

2.1

(11.3)

(0.37)

0.0

N/A

N/A

Note: Converted at A$1/US$0.76 for the table above and throughout the note.

Encouraging TACTI-mel data – update due November

Patients in the first three TACTI-mel cohorts showed a 33% response rate from the start of efti/Keytruda combo therapy and 61% from the start of the Keytruda monotherapy screening period. The six-patient additional cohort is fully recruited; treatment with efti started at the same time as Keytruda (vs 12 weeks after the start of Keytruda therapy in the first three cohorts). A data update is due in November.

IND clears the path to TACTI-002 combo study

The FDA approved an Investigational New Drug (IND) application for efti in July. This is an important step in preparation for theTACTI-002 study of efti/Keytruda combo therapy in up to 120 patients with head and neck or lung cancer, in collaboration with Merck. The trial will commence in Q418; first data due in 2019.

Out-licensed programs progress to Phase II

Novartis has commenced a Phase II study of LAG525 in breast cancer and plans to start a trial in melanoma in September, taking the total to four Phase I/II or Phase II trials of LAG525 combined with a checkpoint inhibitor. GSK has nominated ulcerative colitis as the lead indication for GSK’781 and anticipates proof of concept data in 2020. Both drugs are based on programs in-licensed from Immutep.

Steady progress with AIPAC recruitment

As of 7 August, 126 out of 226 (56%) subjects had been enrolled in the breast cancer Phase IIb study of efti plus chemo. Top-line PFS data are expected in 2019.

Valuation increased to $387m, $12.80 per ADR

Our valuation increases to $387m (from $333m). We have increased the probability for the programs partnered with Novartis and GSK, and have increased the forecast uptake of efti in lung cancer. Our valuation is equal to $12.80 per ADR on an undiluted basis (vs $10.41) or $9.08 after accounting for dilution from options, warrants and convertible notes (vs $7.61).

Investment summary

Company description: LAG-3 immunotherapy programs

Immutep is an ASX-listed immunotherapy company that is focused on developing products based on the lymphocyte activation gene 3 (LAG-3) pathway, following the acquisition of a private French immunotherapy company in December 2014. Its lead product, efti, is in Phase II in breast cancer and in Phase I in combination with the checkpoint inhibitor Keytruda, with a Phase II trial to start in Q418. Immutep retains all the product rights except for China (where it is partnered with Eddingpharm). IMP731 is progressing to a Phase II study with GSK for ulcerative colitis, while IMP701 is in Phase II studies for solid tumors and lymphoma in combination with a checkpoint inhibitor with Novartis. The company has facilities in Paris, France; Leipzig and Berlin, Germany; and its headquarters are in Sydney, Australia.

Valuation: DCF valuation of $387m, $12.80/ADR

Our DCF valuation is $387m or $12.80/ADR ($9.08/ADR fully diluted). The fully diluted value per share is based on potential dilution from the 1.3bn options, warrants and convertible notes that would be in the money at the undiluted valuation of $12.80/ADR, including an assumption that the $10.5m Ridgeback Capital convertible note is converted to 688m shares at 2c/share. There would be further upside if the LAG-3 products progress and if studies indicate broader potential in new indications. The next catalysts include efficacy data from the additional cohort of six patients in TACTI-mel, the initiation of the TACTI-002 Phase II study in collaboration with Merck, and top-line data from AIPAC in 2019. We also anticipate newsflow from the ongoing clinical trials of IMP701 with Novartis and IMP731 with GSK.

Financials: Cash position of $17.8m

Immutep reported a net loss of $9.7m in FY18, 36% higher than the $7.1m loss reported in FY17. Expenses associated with R&D projects rose by 33% to $7.6m, corporate and administrative expenses rose by 67% to $5.5m. While the expenses were broadly in line with our expectations, we have modestly increased our forecast expenditure for FY19. Immutep’s gross cash position at the end of June 2018 was $17.8m. Our forecasts assume that Immutep receives a risk-adjusted $6m milestone payment from GSK in FY19 under the IMP731/GSK2831781 license agreement, which would extend its cash reach to the end of FY20. If no milestone payments are received in the period, we estimate that an extra $5m will be needed to fund operations until end-FY20.

Sensitivities: Relying on LAG-3

Immutep is exposed to the same clinical, regulatory and commercialization risks as all biotech companies. The key sensitivity is clinical progress of its pipeline of LAG-3 candidates, primarily the internally funded efti. While Immutep has funds to complete the efti Phase II study in metastatic breast cancer (mBC), it would require a partnership or alternative forms of funding to advance this indication further. Existing partnerships with big pharma reduce the financial and execution risk for IMP701 and IMP731; in addition, if the proof of concept study of IMP731 in ulcerative colitis reveals evidence of efficacy, it could lead GSK to extend the study to additional indications including rheumatoid arthritis, psoriasis and multiple sclerosis, which could increase the potential peak sales and therefore the value of the product.

Investment summary

Company description: LAG-3 immunotherapy programs

Immutep is an ASX-listed immunotherapy company that is focused on developing products based on the lymphocyte activation gene 3 (LAG-3) pathway, following the acquisition of a private French immunotherapy company in December 2014. Its lead product, efti, is in Phase II in breast cancer and in Phase I in combination with the checkpoint inhibitor Keytruda, with a Phase II trial to start in Q418. Immutep retains all the product rights except for China (where it is partnered with Eddingpharm). IMP731 is progressing to a Phase II study with GSK for ulcerative colitis, while IMP701 is in Phase II studies for solid tumors and lymphoma in combination with a checkpoint inhibitor with Novartis. The company has facilities in Paris, France; Leipzig and Berlin, Germany; and its headquarters are in Sydney, Australia.

Valuation: DCF valuation of $387m, $12.80/ADR

Our DCF valuation is $387m or $12.80/ADR ($9.08/ADR fully diluted). The fully diluted value per share is based on potential dilution from the 1.3bn options, warrants and convertible notes that would be in the money at the undiluted valuation of $12.80/ADR, including an assumption that the $10.5m Ridgeback Capital convertible note is converted to 688m shares at 2c/share. There would be further upside if the LAG-3 products progress and if studies indicate broader potential in new indications. The next catalysts include efficacy data from the additional cohort of six patients in TACTI-mel, the initiation of the TACTI-002 Phase II study in collaboration with Merck, and top-line data from AIPAC in 2019. We also anticipate newsflow from the ongoing clinical trials of IMP701 with Novartis and IMP731 with GSK.

Financials: Cash position of $17.8m

Immutep reported a net loss of $9.7m in FY18, 36% higher than the $7.1m loss reported in FY17. Expenses associated with R&D projects rose by 33% to $7.6m, corporate and administrative expenses rose by 67% to $5.5m. While the expenses were broadly in line with our expectations, we have modestly increased our forecast expenditure for FY19. Immutep’s gross cash position at the end of June 2018 was $17.8m. Our forecasts assume that Immutep receives a risk-adjusted $6m milestone payment from GSK in FY19 under the IMP731/GSK2831781 license agreement, which would extend its cash reach to the end of FY20. If no milestone payments are received in the period, we estimate that an extra $5m will be needed to fund operations until end-FY20.

Sensitivities: Relying on LAG-3

Immutep is exposed to the same clinical, regulatory and commercialization risks as all biotech companies. The key sensitivity is clinical progress of its pipeline of LAG-3 candidates, primarily the internally funded efti. While Immutep has funds to complete the efti Phase II study in metastatic breast cancer (mBC), it would require a partnership or alternative forms of funding to advance this indication further. Existing partnerships with big pharma reduce the financial and execution risk for IMP701 and IMP731; in addition, if the proof of concept study of IMP731 in ulcerative colitis reveals evidence of efficacy, it could lead GSK to extend the study to additional indications including rheumatoid arthritis, psoriasis and multiple sclerosis, which could increase the potential peak sales and therefore the value of the product.

Focused on LAG-3 immunotherapies

Immutep acquired its core LAG-3 technology through the acquisition of a French private immunotherapy company in December 2014. Immutep has a pipeline of four products, two of which are partnered, based on pathways in the LAG-3 immune control mechanism.

The acquisition brought established relationships with GSK, Novartis and Eddingpharm, together with potential milestones of over $100m plus royalties. The founder of the private immunotherapy company, Professor Frédéric Triebel, a leading expert on LAG-3, joined Immutep as CMO/CSO.

Exhibit 1: Immutep pipeline

Product /Partner

Indication

Status

Notes

efti/Eddingpharm, (China)/ Merck clinical trial collaboration

Metastatic breast cancer + chemotherapy;
melanoma + Keytruda;
lung cancer and head and neck cancer + Keytruda

Phase IIb/

Phase I
Phase II in preparation

Clinical trials underway as an antigen-presenting cell activator combined with chemotherapy or immune checkpoint inhibitor. Efti/Keytruda combo studies in lung cancer and head and neck cancer are being conducted in collaboration with Merck.

WuXi AppTec China produces efti under terms of partnership with Eddingpharm, to US European and Chinese GMP standards.

GSK2831781/IMP731/GSK (worldwide)

Autoimmune disease/ulcerative colitis

Phase I

Depleting anti-LAG-3 antibody, depletes activated T-cells.

Phase I trial in healthy subjects and patients with plaque psoriasis completed. Proof of concept Phase II in ulcerative colitis announced, proof of concept data due 2020. Potential milestone payments of up to $100m + royalties.

LAG525/IMP701/Novartis (worldwide)

Cancer and chronic infectious disease

Phase II

Antagonist anti-LAG-3 antibody, activates T-cell proliferation, immune checkpoint blocker. Three Phase I/II or Phase II trials are underway in solid tumors including breast cancer as well as lymphoma; a fourth Phase II to start in September.

IMP761

Autoimmune disease

Preclinical

First in class LAG-3 agonist antibody. Preclinical studies to investigate potential applications to help treat autoimmune disease by temporarily switching off activated LAG-3+ T-cells.

Source: Immutep, Edison Investment Research

Efti uses soluble LAG-3 to activate APCs

Immutep’s lead product, eftilagimod alpha (efti or IMP321), is a LAG-3 Ig fusion protein that is based on the soluble form of LAG-3 and can activate antigen presenting cells (APCs). These activated APCs process tumoral antigens, including those released from cells killed by chemotherapy, transport the antigens to lymph nodes and present the tumoral antigens to T lymphocytes, thus activating and amplifying the immune response.

Immutep is currently collaborating with Merck to investigate efti in combination with Keytruda in lung cancer and head and neck cancer.

Encouraging TACTI-mel response rate

Immutep’s chief medical and scientific officer, Dr Frédéric Triebel, reported updated response data from the Phase I TACTI-mel trial at the Third Annual Advances in Immuno-oncology Congress in London on 25 May. This study tested three doses of efti (1, 6 and 30mg) in combination with the anti-PD-1 immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) Keytruda (pembrolizumab, Merck) in 18 patients with advanced melanoma who have had a suboptimal response to initial treatment with Keytruda.

The spider plot in Exhibit 2 shows that 6/18 (33%) of the patients who were treated with efti/Keytruda combo therapy in the three dose-finding cohorts experienced at least a 50% reduction in tumoral burden, including five partial responses and one complete response. Furthermore, 9/18 (50%) of patients had at least some tumoral shrinkage after efti/Keytruda combination therapy.

The 33% overall response rate (ORR) from the start of efti combo treatment in the 18 subjects in the three dose-finding cohorts, was consistent with the ORR (33%) reported for the first two cohorts last November.

Exhibit 2: Spider plots of tumoral responses from TACTI-mel cohorts 1 to 3

Source: Immutep presentation. Note: pembro= pembrolizumab (Keytruda)

Exhibit 3 shows that the subjects were assessed after they had undergone a pre-screening period of three cycles (nine weeks) of treatment with Keytruda. Patients with a suboptimal response (partial response, stable disease or progressive disease not requiring urgent intervention) were eligible to enroll in the trial and receive efti combo therapy, starting with the fifth Keytruda cycle at week 13.

Exhibit 3: TACTI-mel Phase I status and preliminary results

Source: Immutep presentation. Note: irRC= immune-related response criteria; PFS= progression free survival; FU= follow-up

The design of the TACTI-mel study is unique, as far as we are aware. Although starting the treatment with efti 12 weeks after commencing Keytruda allowed the impact of efti on patient safety and tolerability to be closely examined, it means that we are unable to directly compare the efficacy results of this study to any previous study. Immutep has gone some way towards addressing this by disclosing that the response rate from the start of Keytruda monotherapy for the 18 patients in the three dose-finding cohorts in the study was 61%, and that 66% of subjects were progression-free six months after starting Keytruda.

Complete response in a patient who progressed on Keytruda

One of the most impressive results in the TACTI-mel study was the patient with lung metastases who experienced a complete response (tumors disappeared altogether) after being treated with the lowest (1mg) dose of efti in combination with Keytruda, despite having experienced tumoral progression while receiving Keytruda monotherapy. Exhibit 4 shows the progressive shrinkage and then disappearance of the tumors, which was first reported in 2017.

While delayed responses are a well-recognized (though relatively uncommon) feature of ICI therapy, this complete response suggests that efti is having the desired effect of boosting immune responses and providing a clinical benefit over ICI monotherapy.

Exhibit 4: TACTI-mel first cohort (1mg/kg efti) complete responder

Source: Immutep presentation at SITC 2017 Annual Meeting, National Harbor, Maryland.

Exhibit 4: TACTI-mel first cohort (1mg/kg efti) complete responder

Source: Immutep presentation at SITC 2017 Annual Meeting, National Harbor, Maryland.

No serious adverse events related to efti or the combination of efti with Keytruda have been reported; the combination was considered to be safe and well tolerated in advanced metastatic melanoma patients.

Additional TACTI-mel cohort fully recruited

Immutep has completed recruitment of an additional cohort of six melanoma patients in the TACTI-mel study who are being treated at the highest dose (30mg) of efti in combination with Keytruda, with administration of efti starting at the same time as the first dose of Keytruda. Although the number of patients is quite small, the efficacy data for this cohort will, for the first time, be directly comparable to previous Keytruda monotherapy and combination therapy studies.

Immutep expects to report updated data from TACTI-mel in November.

IND approval clears the way for TACTI-002 trial in Q418

The company is making good progress as it prepares to initiate its TACTI-002 Phase II study in collaboration with Merck in Q418. TACTI-002 will evaluate efti plus Keytruda in two different cancers: squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck (second-line therapy in PD-1/L1 naïve patients) and non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC, first- and second-line therapy). The trial will recruit up to 110 patients in up to 15 study centers in the US, Europe and Australia. Treatment with efti (30mg by subcutaneous injection) will commence on the same day as Keytruda treatment in this study, just as in the additional cohort in the TACTI-mel study.

The focus of TACTI-002 has changed somewhat since the collaboration with Merck was originally announced in March, and it is no longer planned to include a third indication of ovarian cancer. Instead, it now includes separate cohorts for first-line PD-1/L1 naïve and for second-line PD-1/L1 refractory NSCLC patients. The primary endpoint will be ORR (as per irRECIST). First data from the study are expected in mid-2019.

Increase in monocytes further supports ICI combos

A recent study by Kreig et al1 reported that high levels of a type of white blood cell known as classical monocytes in blood samples were a strong predictor of response to treatment with anti-PD-1 antibodies in melanoma patients. Patients for whom classical monocytes made up at least 19.4% of peripheral blood mononuclear cells were more likely to respond to anti-PD-1 therapy and had higher overall survival (Exhibit 5).

  Kreig et al Nat Med. 2018 Feb;24(2):144-153. doi: 10.1038/nm.4466

Immutep has shown that classical monocytes increased in the 15 breast cancer patients in stage one of AIPAC following treatment with efti plus paclitaxel, with the majority above the 19.4% threshold identified by Krieg et al at both the three-month and six-month time points after the start of treatment. Based on the Krieg study, the increase in classical monocytes suggests that the combination treatment in the AIPAC study may increase the likelihood that the patients would respond to subsequent (or concurrent) anti-PD-1 therapy.

The biopsy data from AIPAC stage 1 further support the rationale of combining efti with ICI therapy, either as an efti/ICI combo as in TACT-002, or potentially as part of an efti/ICI/chemo triple combo.

Exhibit 5: Low monocyte numbers associated with poor outcomes of anti-PD-1 therapy

Exhibit 6: Efti increased monocyte numbers in AIPAC stage 1

Source: Immutep presentation

Exhibit 5: Low monocyte numbers associated with poor outcomes of anti-PD-1 therapy

Exhibit 6: Efti increased monocyte numbers in AIPAC stage 1

Source: Immutep presentation

Further evidence that activating APCs can increase ICI response rates

Immutep’s TACTI-mel study is investigating the use of efti (its LAG-3-based antigen presenting cell activator) to enhance efficacy in melanoma patients who have had a suboptimal initial response to the anti-PD-1 ICI Keytruda. Positive early data from other compounds with a similar mechanism of action presented at recent conferences provided additional support for the strategy of combining APC-activator and ICI drugs in melanoma patients.

Firstly, in a poster presented at ASCO in June 2018, Dynavax reported high response rates in melanoma patients who received intralesional injections of SD-101 in combination with Keytruda. SD-101 activates dendritic cells to mature into antigen presenting cells by engaging Toll-like receptor 9 (TLR9). In patients who received intralesional injections of up to 2mg of SD-101 every week for four weeks and then every three weeks after that, the ORR (excluding patients who had not yet reached first scan) was 70% (21/30). The six-month progression-free survival (PFS) was 76%. In the 8mg dose cohort the BORR was 38% (15/39). There was no evidence of an increase in the incidence or severity of adverse events over monotherapy.

Secondly, Checkmate Pharmaceuticals reported positive results from intratumoral injection of its TLR9 agonist2 drug CMP-001 combined with iv Keytruda therapy in melanoma patients who were resistant to prior ICI therapy, at AACR in April 2018. The ORR was 22% (15/69) versus the company’s estimate of 7% expected for Keytruda monotherapy.

  A TLR9 agonist activates TLR9 receptor signalling

One big advantage that efti has over these TLR9 agonists is that it is administered by subcutaneous injection. This is far more convenient for the majority of cancers which, unlike melanoma, do not have tumors that are close to the surface of the skin and therefore readily accessible for intratumoral injection. Although intratumoral injection of deep tumors is technically feasible with image guidance (eg ultrasound) it would be much less convenient that subcutaneous injection for diseases such as lung cancer.

Incyte IDO1 Phase III failure underlines the importance of confirmatory studies

Incyte’s IDO1 inhibitor, epacadostat, failed to show any benefit when combined with Keytruda in a Phase III study in first-line melanoma patients. There was no significant difference in PFS, overall survival (OS) or ORR between the combo and Keytruda monotherapy groups.3 The ORR was 34.2% for combo vs 31.5% for Keytruda alone, while the OS was numerically slightly worse for the combo group (HR=1.13).

The Phase III failure came despite the fact that an earlier Phase I/II dose escalation study of epacadostat plus Keytruda had reported a very encouraging ORR of 55% (12/22) in advanced melanoma patients;4 responses were also seen in 5/12 NSCLC and 3/11 kidney cancer patients.

  Gangadhar et al Annals of Oncology 27 (Supplement 6): vi379–vi400, 2016

It is important to note that epacadostat is not an APC activator and has quite a different mechanism of action to efti. It is an oral inhibitor of IDO1, an enzyme that induces immune tolerance by T-cell suppression.

The failure of the epacadostat Phase III study is a reminder that response rates and other efficacy estimates from small studies should be treated with caution, as the outcomes can be quite different when the drug is investigated in a larger number of patients.

Novartis: Four LAG525 combo studies in 2018

IMP701, which is partnered with Novartis, is an antagonist mAb, which blocks the LAG-3-mediated inhibitory signal given to tumoral-infiltrating T-cells and thus activates T-cell proliferation and enhances the anti-tumoral activity of anti-PD-1 ICI drugs. LAG525 is Novartis’s humanized version of IMP701, which it has taken into clinical development.

Novartis has three Phase I/II or Phase II studies of LAG525 underway, and plans to initiate a fourth study (in melanoma) in September. In each of these studies, LAG525 is combined with Novartis’s in-development anti-PD-1 antibody spartalizumab (also known as PDR001).

The original Phase I/II study of LAG525 as a single agent and in combination with PDR001 that commenced in June 2015, is ongoing (Clinical trials.gov: NCT02460224; Novartis protocol LAG525X2101C). Preliminary data from the Phase I component of the study were presented at ASCO in June and are discussed below. The Phase II component of the study comprises cohorts with NSCLC, melanoma, renal cancer, mesothelioma and triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) who are being treated with LAG525 plus PDR001. In total, 515 patients are expected to be enrolled in the study, which is scheduled to complete in August 2019.

A second Phase II study of LAG525 plus PDR001 commenced in January 2018 (NCT03365791; Novartis protocol CPDR001XUS01). This adaptive, open label Phase II study will enroll up to 210 patients with solid or hematological cancers including small cell lung cancer, gastric/esophageal, prostate, ovarian cancers or diffuse large B-cell lymphoma. The primary endpoint is clinical benefit rate at 24 weeks, with clinical benefit referring to patients achieving either a complete response, partial response or stable disease. Study completion is expected in January 2020.

Novartis has also initiated a randomized Phase II study in TNBC patients in which LAG525 will be combined with either PDR001 or carboplatin chemotherapy, or with both PDR001 and carboplatin (NCT03499899). The trial, which commenced on 2 July, will recruit 96 patients. Top-line ORR data are expected in December 2019.

Lastly, Novartis has disclosed that LAG525 will be one of three drugs randomly assigned for use in combination with PDR001 in 135 patients with advanced melanoma in the PLATforM Phase II study (NCT03484923). The study is scheduled to commence in September, with top-line data expected in early 2021.

Phase II supported by efficacy signals in combo Phase I/II

At ASCO in June, Novartis reported5 encouraging signs of efficacy from the LAG525 in combination with PDR001 from the Phase I component of its ongoing Phase I/II study (NCT02460224). Among 121 patients with solid tumors treated with LAG525 plus PDR001 at a wide range of doses there were 13 durable responses, including 3/86 mesothelioma patients and 2/5 TNBC patients. In TNBC tumoral biopsies, there was a trend to conversion from immune-cold to immune-activated biomarker profiles.

  3/8 includes an additional partial response after the data cut-off date for the conference abstract.

No responses were observed in 134 patients treated with LAG525 alone.

Encouraged by the preliminary anti-tumoral activity observed with the LAG525 plus PDR001, Novartis has established a comprehensive Phase II program to investigate the combination in a range of cancers, as described above.

BMS’s LAG-3 success likely encouraging Novartis

Last year, BMS reported encouraging results from a Phase I study of its anti-LAG-3 antibody relatlimab (BMS-986016) in melanoma patients who had not responded to or had become resistant to ICI therapies. In that study, 18% of LAG-3-positive patients responded to combination therapy with relatlimab plus Opdivo, versus only a 5% response rate in patients with low tumoral LAG-3 expression.7

BMS is currently undertaking a Phase III study of relatlimab plus Opdivo versus Opdivo alone in 700 patients with untreated advanced melanoma. Top-line results are expected in July 2020.

According to clinicaltrials.gov, there are a further 15 Phase I or Phase II trials of relatlimab combinations in a range of tumoral types either underway or in preparation.

We expect Novartis to continue to aggressively pursue its LAG525 clinical trial program as it seeks to ensure that it does not allow BMS to gain a dominant position in the anti-LAG-3 antibody space.

GSK progressing IMP731 to Phase II

GSK disclosed in a recent results presentation that it has selected ulcerative colitis as the lead indication for GSK’781 (IMP731). It expects a proof of concept study in ulcerative colitis to report data in 2020. There is currently no entry for the study on clinicaltrials.gov, so we presume that the study has not yet begun.

The GSK results presentation included data showing that LAG-3 levels increase as the severity of ulcerative colitis increases. It also showed that the number of LAG-3-positive cells reduces in responders but not in non-responders to established biologics. These results suggest that targeting LAG-3-positive cells using GSK’781 could be a way to reduce inflammation in ulcerative colitis patients.

GSK completed a Phase I study of GSK’781 in psoriasis patients in March 2018. To the best of our knowledge, it has not yet disclosed the results of the study. It seems likely to us that the Phase I study was conducted in psoriasis patients because it is easy to assess responses to treatment in psoriasis skin lesions, and because it would be convenient to collect tissue biopsy samples from the skin lesions in order to assess the impact of the treatment on inflammatory markers in the tissue.

At this stage, we do not know whether the choice of ulcerative colitis as the lead indication for GSK’781 was driven by the size of the commercial opportunity, by a belief that the mechanism of action of GSK’781 was more likely to be effective in that condition, the pathway to regulatory approval, or by other factors.

Ulcerative colitis is a type of inflammatory bowel disease. Ulcerative colitis and Crohn’s disease are the most common types of inflammatory bowel diseases. The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that the prevalence of ulcerative colitis is 0.24% of the population, which is equivalent to 780,000 patients in the US.

The key drugs for ulcerative colitis are Humira (adalimumab), Entyvio (vedolizumab), Remicade (infliximab) and Simponi (golimumab). Allied Market Research estimated the global ulcerative colitis market at $4.8bn in 2016 and forecast it to grow to $7.5bn by 2023.

INSIGHT study of intratumoral efti

INSIGHT is an investigator-sponsored trial by IKF in Frankfurt, Germany that is investigating the safety and feasibility of intratumoral or intraperitoneal injection of efti in patients with accessible solid tumors or peritoneal carcinomatosis, respectively (clinicaltrials.gov: NCT03252938). As of July, 10 patients had been recruited. Immutep expects its partner to report interim data later in H218.

Given the high response rates seen with intratumoral injection of TLR9 agonists, in future studies it may be of interest to compare intratumoral or intraperitoneal injection of efti to the current preferred route of administration via subcutaneous injection.

AIPAC breast cancer Phase II study over 50% recruited

The AIPAC Phase IIb breast cancer study is over 50% recruited, with enrolment passing the halfway mark (113/226) in June and reaching 126 (56%) as of 7 August. The trial is testing the efti soluble LAG-3 fusion protein combined with paclitaxel in women with hormone receptor positive mBC who have not previously received chemotherapy for metastatic disease.

Immutep dosed the first patient in the randomized Phase IIb component of AIPAC in January 2017. The randomized double-blind phase will enroll 226 patients, with half receiving standard paclitaxel chemotherapy plus 30mg of efti, while the other half will receive paclitaxel plus placebo. Recruitment is ongoing at 32 clinical sites in Belgium, France, the Netherlands, the UK, Poland, Germany and Hungary.

AIPAC had originally been expected to be fully recruited in H118, but the company believes that the approval of the CDK4/6 inhibitor Ibrance (palbociclib) led to a temporary slowdown in recruitment in the study. Ibrance is taken alongside hormone therapy as first-line treatment to delay the progression of hormone receptor positive, HER2 negative mBC, prior to the initiation of chemotherapy with paclitaxel. In a pivotal clinical trial, adding Ibrance to hormone therapy increased median PFS from 10.2 months to 20.8 months.

The introduction of Ibrance to treatment protocols led to a temporary reduction in the number of women with progressive mBC who were candidates for paclitaxel therapy at the participating trial sites. Now that women who have been treated with Ibrance are experiencing disease progression and are being treated with paclitaxel, recruitment in the AIPAC study has increased.

The analysis of the PFS primary endpoint of AIPAC will be conducted after a pre-specified number of subjects have experienced disease progression (event-driven analysis). As a number of women have been on the study for a lengthy period, the number of PFS events could potentially be reached soon after patient recruitment is completed. The record for AIPAC on clinicaltrials.gov (NCT02614833) indicates that collection of data for the PFS primary endpoint is expected to be completed in June 2019.

The randomized stage of AIPAC was preceded by a safety run-in phase in which 15 women were treated with either 6mg or 30mg of efti in combination with weekly paclitaxel chemotherapy (80mg/m2 in three weeks out of every four). Both doses of efti were found to be safe and well tolerated when used in combination with paclitaxel, with no dose-limiting toxicities reported. The ORR for the 15 patients was 47% and the disease control rate (tumoral response or stable disease) was 87%. The 47% ORR compares favorably with response rates of 23–41% reported in historical studies.8,9

  Gray et al, J Clin Oncol. 2009 Oct 20;27(30):4966-72.

  Martin et al, Lancet Oncol 2011; 12: 369–76

IMP761 LAG-3 agonist in preclinical development

Immutep has completed a preclinical study of IMP761 in cynomolgus monkeys, with data expected to be reported later this year. IMP761 is a novel mAb that acts as an agonist to stimulate the activity of the LAG-3 receptor. One of the goals of the ongoing preclinical development program is to better understand the potential applications of IMP761.

IMP761 is the first known therapeutic antibody with agonist properties that enable it to activate the LAG-3 receptor on the surface of activated T-cells, and thereby down-regulate T-cell activation and proliferation. In contrast, LAG525 and the other known anti-cancer LAG-3 antibodies are antagonist antibodies that block LAG-3 signaling and thereby prevent the down-regulation of T-cell immune responses.

The mechanism of action of IMP731 is also different to the company’s partnered IMP731/GSK2831781 cytotoxic mAb, which aims to treat autoimmune disease by killing LAG-3-positive T-cells. IMP761 offers the opportunity to fine-tune immune responses, which could benefit sufferers of autoimmune diseases by temporarily switching off activated LAG-3-positive T-cells that are damaging tissue or causing inflammation.

Intellectual property portfolio continues to build

Immutep has further strengthened its intellectual property portfolio over the past year, adding four new patents across major geographical markets. The four new patents were a Japanese patent and a European patent relating to efti, a Japanese patent for IMP731 and a US patent for LAG525 (IMP701).

Valuation

Our valuation of Immutep has increased to $387m (previously $333m) or $12.80 per ADR (undiluted) (vs 10.41 per ADR). On a fully diluted basis, our valuation is $9.08 per ADR (vs $7.61 per ADR previously), after taking into account the options, warrants and convertible notes on issue. Exhibit 7 summarizes the constituent parts of our valuation, which is based on a discount rate of 12.5%.

We have rolled our risk-adjusted NPV model forward in time and have updated our financial forecast to account for the FY18 financial results and the share purchase plan in April raising $4.8m (before costs), rather than the maximum of $7.6m that we had previously modelled. The total number of shares on issue is now 3,026m.

We have increased assumed market penetration for efti in combination with Keytruda in NSCLC from 10% to 12.5%, due to the inclusion of both first-line and second-line indications for this disease in the upcoming TACTI-002 study. We retain the ovarian cancer indication in our model, despite the fact that this indication will no longer be included in TACTI-002, as a modest recognition of the potential for efti to be used in a wide range of cancers, if it is safe and effective in pivotal studies. We do, however, delay forecast launch in ovarian cancer by two years to 2027.

We have increased the likelihood of success for both IMP701/LAG525 and IMP731/GSK’781 to 20% (from 15%), as they are both now in Phase II studies. The choice of ulcerative colitis as the lead indication does not affect our peak sales estimate for this product, which is based on the broader autoimmune disease market.

The gross cash balance at end FY18 was $17.8m. For valuation purposes we deduct the $10.5m face value of the Ridgeback Capital convertible note in calculating end-FY18 net cash of $7.4m as shown in Exhibit 7. We note that this is different to the accounting treatment of the convertible note, which includes only the $5.0m estimated fair value of the convertible note as a non-current liability with the remainder treated as equity, resulting in a balance sheet net cash figure of $12.8m as shown in Exhibit 9.

Our other model assumptions are unchanged, including the launch of efti for breast cancer in Europe in the second half of 2021.

Exhibit 7: DCF valuation of Immutep

Value driver

Launch date

Likelihood of success

Peak sales ($m)

Royalty

Value
($m)

Value per ADR
($)

efti-mBC*

2021 (EU),
2024 (US)

35%

971

17.5%

163.6

5.41

efti+anti-PD1 ICI-melanoma

2025

15%

480

17.5%

25.3

0.84

efti+Keytruda NSCLC

2025

15%

2,300

17.5%

153.5

5.07

efti+Keytruda ovarian

2027

15%

500

17.5%

18.2

0.60

efti+head and neck

2025

15%

470

17.5%

24.8

0.82

efti milestones - assume partnered post PII in MBC

$225m estimated risk-adjusted milestones from out-licensing North American and European rights.

42.3

1.40

IMP731-autoimmune disease

2023

20%

1,079

8%

49.3

1.63

Potential IMP731 milestones from GSK

$90m of total $100m in risk-adjusted milestones from GSK

18.2

0.60

IMP701-solid tumors (lung cancer)

2025

20%

2,440

5%

51.0

1.69

Potential IMP701 milestones from Novartis

$20m in risk-adjusted milestones from Novartis

2.6

0.08

Grants

2.2

0.07

R&D expenses

(16.8)

(0.55)

Admin expenses

(13.0)

(0.43)

Capex

(0.0)

(0.00)

Tax

(141.1)

(4.66)

Net cash

End FY18 net cash (including $10.5m convertible note at face value)

7.3

0.00

Total

387.3

12.80

Source: Edison Investment Research. Note: *mBC = metastatic breast cancer.

Exhibit 8 shows that in addition to the 3,026m Immutep shares on issue, there are a further 1,546m potential shares that could be issued on the exercise of options, warrants, performance rights and convertible notes, all of which would be in the money at our $12.80 per ADR undiluted valuation. Exhibit 8 shows that after taking into account these potential shares, our diluted valuation is $9.08 per ADR. Depending on trial progress and the timing of milestone payments from partners, Immutep may require additional funding to complete the efti clinical trials; our diluted valuation of $9.08 per ADR does not take into account potential dilution from any future capital raising.

Exhibit 8: Potential further dilution and value per share

Average exercise price per ADR equivalent ($)

m

Current number of shares

30.3

Ridgeback convertible note potential shares

1.52

6.9

Ridgeback warrants

1.80

3.8

Unlisted warrants

2.51

2.0

Unlisted options

3.83

1.5

Performance rights*

0.00

1.3

Total in-the-money potential shares

15.5

Total potential diluted number of shares

45.7

Net cash raised from options and CN exercise

28

Valuation (above plus additional cash)

415

Diluted value per share

9.08

Source: Edison Investment Research. Note: *Both vested and unvested performance rights have been included.

We include risk-adjusted milestones payable by current partners GSK for IMP731 and Novartis for IMP701, plus milestones from prospective deals for efti. The breadth of the LAG-3 pipeline means there could be further upside if Immutep or its partners launch additional products into the clinic or broaden the indications being studied.

Financials

Immutep reported a net loss of $9.7m in FY18, 36% higher than the $7.1m loss reported in FY17. Expenses associated with R&D projects rose by 33% to $7.6m, corporate and administrative expenses rose by 67% to $5.5m. While the expenses were broadly in line with our expectations, we have modestly increased our forecast expenditure for FY19. These changes see our forecast FY19 EBITDA loss increase to $5.7m (vs $5.4m). We forecast an $11.7m EBITDA loss in FY20, with lower milestone revenue anticipated in that year. Operating cash outflow was $6.0m in FY18 compared to $6.5m in FY17, with the higher after-tax loss in FY18 mainly due to non-cash expenses.

Immutep’s gross cash position at the end of June 2018 was $17.8m. Our forecasts assume that Immutep receives a risk-adjusted $6m milestone payment from GSK in FY19 under the IMP731/GSK2831781 license agreement, which would extend its cash reach to the end of FY20.

Sensitivities

Immutep is exposed to the same clinical, regulatory and commercialization risks as all biotech companies. The key sensitivity is clinical progress of its pipeline of LAG-3 candidates, primarily the internally funded efti. While Immutep has funds to complete the efti Phase II study in mBC, it would require a partnership or alternative forms of funding to advance this indication further. Existing partnerships with big pharma reduce the financial and execution risk for IMP701 and IMP731; in addition, if the proof of concept study of IMP731 in ulcerative colitis reveals evidence of efficacy, it could lead GSK to extend the study to additional indications including rheumatoid arthritis, psoriasis and multiple sclerosis, which could increase the potential peak sales and therefore the value of the product..

Exhibit 9: Financial summary

 

US$000s

2016

2017

2018

2019e

2020e

Year end 30 June

IFRS

IFRS

IFRS

IFRS

IFRS

PROFIT & LOSS

Revenue

 

 

1,481

3,129

5,209

8,283

2,111

Cost of Sales

(5,365)

(5,720)

(7,592)

(8,352)

(7,935)

Gross Profit

(5,307)

(3,304)

(5,504)

(5,669)

(5,839)

EBITDA

 

 

(9,191)

(5,895)

(8,691)

(5,739)

(11,662)

Operating Profit (before GW and except.)

 

(9,329)

(5,905)

(8,699)

(5,741)

(11,666)

Intangible Amortization

(1,515)

(1,283)

(1,367)

(1,254)

(1,141)

Exceptionals

(36,076)

0

0

0

0

Operating Profit

(46,920)

(7,188)

(10,065)

(6,995)

(12,807)

Other

(1,304)

(571)

245

0

0

Net Interest

194

79

135

535

379

Profit Before Tax (norm)

 

 

(10,439)

(6,397)

(8,319)

(5,206)

(11,287)

Profit Before Tax (IFRS)

 

 

(48,029)

(7,680)

(9,686)

(6,460)

(12,428)

Tax

898

560

(1)

0

0

Profit After Tax (norm)

(9,541)

(5,837)

(8,320)

(5,206)

(11,287)

Profit After Tax (IFRS)

(47,132)

(7,119)

(9,687)

(6,460)

(12,428)

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

Average Number of Shares Outstanding (m)

2,016.6

2,072.5

2,079.7

3,026.1

3,026.1

Average Number of ADRs Outstanding (m)

20.2

20.7

20.8

30.3

30.3

EPS - normalized (c)

 

 

(0.5)

(0.3)

(0.4)

(0.2)

(0.4)

EPS - IFRS (c)

 

 

(2.3)

(0.3)

(0.5)

(0.2)

(0.4)

Dividend per share (c)

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

Earnings per ADR - normalized (c)

(47.3)

(28.2)

(40.0)

(17.2)

(37.3)

Earnings per ADR - IFRS (c)

(233.7)

(34.4)

(46.6)

(21.3)

(41.1)

Dividend per ADR (c)

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

Gross Margin (%)

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

EBITDA Margin (%)

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

Operating Margin (before GW and except.) (%)

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

BALANCE SHEET

Fixed Assets

 

 

15,871

14,474

13,950

12,704

11,569

Intangible Assets

15,847

14,455

13,930

12,676

11,536

Tangible Assets

24

18

20

27

34

Other

0

0

0

0

0

Current Assets

 

 

16,470

12,099

21,769

16,556

5,262

Stocks

0

0

0

0

0

Debtors

128

1,667

2,608

2,608

2,608

Cash

15,868

9,300

17,841

12,628

1,335

Other

473

1,131

1,319

1,319

1,319

Current Liabilities

 

 

(1,119)

(2,001)

(2,929)

(2,929)

(2,929)

Creditors

(1,098)

(1,967)

(2,785)

(2,785)

(2,785)

Short term borrowings

(0)

(0)

0

0

0

Short term leases

0

0

0

0

0

Other

(21)

(33)

(144)

(144)

(144)

Long Term Liabilities

 

 

(4,381)

(4,408)

(7,314)

(7,314)

(7,314)

Long term borrowings incl. conv. note

(3,821)

(4,392)

(5,051)

(5,051)

(5,051)

Long term leases

0

0

0

0

0

Other long term liabilities

(560)

(16)

(2,263)

(2,263)

(2,263)

Net Assets

 

 

26,841

20,164

25,477

19,017

6,589

CASH FLOW

Operating Cash Flow

 

 

(8,811)

(6,544)

(6,045)

(5,739)

(11,662)

Net Interest

216

79

135

535

379

Tax

0

0

0

0

0

Capex

(21)

(5)

(9)

(9)

(10)

Acquisitions/disposals

99

0

0

0

0

Financing

20,694

(6)

14,363

0

0

Dividends

0

0

0

0

0

Other

0

0

(375)

0

0

Net Cash Flow

12,176

(6,477)

8,068

(5,213)

(11,294)

Opening net debt/(cash)

 

 

(3,991)

(12,047)

(4,908)

(12,791)

(7,578)

HP finance leases initiated

0

0

0

0

0

Other

(4,120)

(663)

(185)

0

0

Closing net debt/(cash)

 

 

(12,047)

(4,908)

(12,791)

(7,578)

3,716

Source: Immutep accounts, Edison Investment Research. Note: Solely for the convenience of the reader the financial summary table has been converted to US$ at a rate of US$0.76 to A$1. Immutep reports statutory accounts in Australian dollars. These translations should not be considered representations that any such amounts have been or could be converted into US dollars at the assumed conversion rate.

Contact details

Revenue by geography

Level 12, 95 Pitt Street,
Sydney,
NSW 2000
+61 (0)2 8315 7003
www.immutep.com.au

N/A

Contact details

Level 12, 95 Pitt Street,
Sydney,
NSW 2000
+61 (0)2 8315 7003
www.immutep.com.au

Revenue by geography

N/A

Management team

Chairman: Dr Russell Howard

CEO and MD: Marc Voigt

Dr Russell Howard is an Australian scientist, executive manager and entrepreneur. He has held positions at several research laboratories, including the National Institutes of Health in the US, where he gained tenure. In industry, Dr Howard worked at Schering-Plough’s DNAX Research Institute in Palo Alto, CA; was the president and scientific director of Affymax and co-founder and CEO of Maxygen.

Appointed in October 2011, having joined as GM of European operations. Previously CFO/CBO at Revotar Biopharmaceuticals and Medical Enzymes, and an investment manager for a German biotech venture fund. Holds an MBA from Free University of Berlin. Based in Berlin, where Immutep’s European operations are located. Mr Voigt was appointed CEO in July 2014.

CSO/CMO: Dr FrédéricTriebel, MD PhD

General Counsel and Company Secretary: Deanne Miller

A founder and medical and scientific director at Immutep, Dr Triebel discovered the LAG-3 gene while working at the Institut Gustave Roissy Paris, where he was involved in running Phase I/II immunology studies and headed up a research group. Previously, from 1991 to 1996, Dr Triebel was a director of an INSERM unit.

Ms Miller has broad commercial experience having held legal, investment banking, regulatory compliance and tax advisory positions. She joined Immutep as General Counsel and Company Secretary in October 2012. She has a Combined Bachelor of Laws (Honours) and Bachelor of Commerce from the University of Sydney.

Management team

Chairman: Dr Russell Howard

Dr Russell Howard is an Australian scientist, executive manager and entrepreneur. He has held positions at several research laboratories, including the National Institutes of Health in the US, where he gained tenure. In industry, Dr Howard worked at Schering-Plough’s DNAX Research Institute in Palo Alto, CA; was the president and scientific director of Affymax and co-founder and CEO of Maxygen.

CEO and MD: Marc Voigt

Appointed in October 2011, having joined as GM of European operations. Previously CFO/CBO at Revotar Biopharmaceuticals and Medical Enzymes, and an investment manager for a German biotech venture fund. Holds an MBA from Free University of Berlin. Based in Berlin, where Immutep’s European operations are located. Mr Voigt was appointed CEO in July 2014.

CSO/CMO: Dr FrédéricTriebel, MD PhD

A founder and medical and scientific director at Immutep, Dr Triebel discovered the LAG-3 gene while working at the Institut Gustave Roissy Paris, where he was involved in running Phase I/II immunology studies and headed up a research group. Previously, from 1991 to 1996, Dr Triebel was a director of an INSERM unit.

General Counsel and Company Secretary: Deanne Miller

Ms Miller has broad commercial experience having held legal, investment banking, regulatory compliance and tax advisory positions. She joined Immutep as General Counsel and Company Secretary in October 2012. She has a Combined Bachelor of Laws (Honours) and Bachelor of Commerce from the University of Sydney.

Principal shareholders

(%)

Australian Ethical Investment

6.7%

Companies named in this report

BMS, Eddingpharm, GSK, Merck, Novartis, WuXi AppTec, Neopharm

Edison is an investment research and advisory company, with offices in North America, Europe, the Middle East and AsiaPac. The heart of Edison is our world-renowned equity research platform and deep multi-sector expertise. At Edison Investment Research, our research is widely read by international investors, advisers and stakeholders. Edison Advisors leverages our core research platform to provide differentiated services including investor relations and strategic consulting. Edison is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority. Edison Investment Research (NZ) Limited (Edison NZ) is the New Zealand subsidiary of Edison. Edison NZ is registered on the New Zealand Financial Service Providers Register (FSP number 247505) and is registered to provide wholesale and/or generic financial adviser services only. Edison Investment Research Inc (Edison US) is the US subsidiary of Edison and is regulated by the Securities and Exchange Commission. Edison Investment Research Pty Limited (Edison Aus) [46085869] is the Australian subsidiary of Edison. Edison Germany is a branch entity of Edison Investment Research Limited [4794244]. www.edisongroup.com

DISCLAIMER
Copyright 2018 Edison Investment Research Limited. All rights reserved. This report has been commissioned by Immutep and prepared and issued by Edison for publication globally. All information used in the publication of this report has been compiled from publicly available sources that are believed to be reliable, however we do not guarantee the accuracy or completeness of this report. Opinions contained in this report represent those of the research department of Edison at the time of publication. The securities described in the Investment Research may not be eligible for sale in all jurisdictions or to certain categories of investors. This research is issued in Australia by Edison Investment Research Pty Ltd (Corporate Authorised Representative (1252501) of Myonlineadvisers Pty Ltd (AFSL: 427484)) and any access to it, is intended only for "wholesale clients" within the meaning of the Corporations Act 2001 of Australia The Investment Research is distributed in the United States by Edison US to major US institutional investors only. Edison US is registered as an investment adviser with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Edison US relies upon the "publishers' exclusion" from the definition of investment adviser under Section 202(a)(11) of the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 and corresponding state securities laws. As such, Edison does not offer or provide personalised advice. We publish information about companies in which we believe our readers may be interested and this information reflects our sincere opinions. The information that we provide or that is derived from our website is not intended to be, and should not be construed in any manner whatsoever as, personalised advice. Also, our website and the information provided by us should not be construed by any subscriber or prospective subscriber as Edison’s solicitation to effect, or attempt to effect, any transaction in a security. The research in this document is intended for New Zealand resident professional financial advisers or brokers (for use in their roles as financial advisers or brokers) and habitual investors who are “wholesale clients” for the purpose of the Financial Advisers Act 2008 (FAA) (as described in sections 5(c) (1)(a), (b) and (c) of the FAA). This is not a solicitation or inducement to buy, sell, subscribe, or underwrite any securities mentioned or in the topic of this document. This document is provided for information purposes only and should not be construed as an offer or solicitation for investment in any securities mentioned or in the topic of this document. A marketing communication under FCA Rules, this document has not been prepared in accordance with the legal requirements designed to promote the independence of investment research and is not subject to any prohibition on dealing ahead of the dissemination of investment research.
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Frankfurt +49 (0)69 78 8076 960

Schumannstrasse 34b

60325 Frankfurt

Germany

London +44 (0)20 3077 5700

280 High Holborn

London, WC1V 7EE

United Kingdom

New York +1 646 653 7026

245 Park Avenue, 39th Floor

10167, New York

US

Sydney +61 (0)2 8249 8342

Level 12, Office 1205

95 Pitt Street, Sydney

NSW 2000, Australia

Frankfurt +49 (0)69 78 8076 960

Schumannstrasse 34b

60325 Frankfurt

Germany

London +44 (0)20 3077 5700

280 High Holborn

London, WC1V 7EE

United Kingdom

New York +1 646 653 7026

245 Park Avenue, 39th Floor

10167, New York

US

Sydney +61 (0)2 8249 8342

Level 12, Office 1205

95 Pitt Street, Sydney

NSW 2000, Australia

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Frankfurt +49 (0)69 78 8076 960

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60325 Frankfurt

Germany

London +44 (0)20 3077 5700

280 High Holborn

London, WC1V 7EE

United Kingdom

New York +1 646 653 7026

245 Park Avenue, 39th Floor

10167, New York

US

Sydney +61 (0)2 8249 8342

Level 12, Office 1205

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Frankfurt +49 (0)69 78 8076 960

Schumannstrasse 34b

60325 Frankfurt

Germany

London +44 (0)20 3077 5700

280 High Holborn

London, WC1V 7EE

United Kingdom

New York +1 646 653 7026

245 Park Avenue, 39th Floor

10167, New York

US

Sydney +61 (0)2 8249 8342

Level 12, Office 1205

95 Pitt Street, Sydney

NSW 2000, Australia

Immutep — LAG-3 progress in-house and via partners

Immutep has reported encouraging progress from its in-house and partnered programmes over the past few months. Interim data from the TACTI-mel combo study included a 61% response rate from the start of the Keytruda monotherapy screening period among subjects who went on to receive eftilagimod alpha (efti or IMP321) combo therapy. Partners GSK and Novartis are progressing their in-licensed LAG-3 programmes into Phase II or proof of concept studies, which increases the likelihood that these programmes will return significant value to Immutep. Our valuation has increased to A$510m or A$0.17/share (from A$439m or A$0.14/share).

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