Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the Marker Therapeutics' conference call. [Operator Instructions]. As a reminder, this conference call is being recorded. I would now like to hand the call over to Mr. Tony Kim, Chief Financial Officer, at Marker. Please go ahead..
Thanks, and welcome, everyone. The press release reporting our financial results is available in the News section of our corporate website at markertherapeutics.com.
As a reminder, we will be making forward-looking statements regarding our financial outlook in addition to regulatory, product development and commercialization plans and research activities. These statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results to materially differ from those forecasted.
A description of these risks can be found in our most recent Form 10-Q and 10-K on file with the SEC. I would now like to turn the call over to Peter..
Thanks, Tony. Good afternoon, and thank you for joining us today. I hope everybody continues to be safe and healthy during this challenging time, surrounding the pandemic.
Given the external situation, particularly around COVID-19, in May, we made a decision to withdraw our prior guidance on the timing of our planned Phase II trial in patients with acute myeloid leukemia, or AML.
While certain factors still remain in flux, specifically around our clinical and supply chain partners, I'm extremely happy to report that this quarter, we were able to initiate our first Marker-sponsored trial in post-transplant AML, having enrolled the first patient in the safety lead-in portion of that trial.
I will note that we were able to achieve this milestone consistent with the guidance that we provided prior to May, despite the significant disruptions we saw throughout our clinical and supply chain landscape. We currently have several sites open and enrolling patients. Our Chief Medical Officer, Dr.
Mythili Koneru, will provide further details surrounding our AML trial in just a moment, and we look forward to taking your questions at the end of today's call.
In addition to initiating our Phase II trial, we're also making significant progress with the build out of our new manufacturing facility and are on track to complete its construction by year-end.
With that, we expect the facility located in Houston to be operational in early 2021, at which time, we will have the ability to independently manufacture product to support our Phase II AML trial and potential future trials.
In addition, we have been hard at work evaluating the [indiscernible] and have made several adjustments that we believe will maximize efficiencies and streamline our manufacturing process as a whole. Our Chief Development Officer, Dr. Juan Vera, has joined us today to provide details about these important process improvements.
Before I conclude, I want to acknowledge our research, process development, regulatory, clinical and quality teams for their hard work and commitment to advance our AML trial despite the challenging external situation. As a reminder, today, adult patients with post-transplant AML have a 25% chance of five-year survival.
The start of this trial is a significant milestone for our company and a critical first step towards potentially bringing a novel therapy to the thousands of patients who are running out of viable treatments. At this time, I'd like to hand over the call to Dr. Koneru.
Mythili?.
overall response rate; duration of response; progression-free survival; and overall survival. And with that, I'd like to hand the call over to Dr. Juan Vera, our Chief Development Officer..
technical and biological. Today, we have incorporated several technical improvements such as a 50% reduction in the manufacturing time, cutting the production to only 16 days, resulting in a decreased vein-to-vein time and increased throughput of the manufacturer.
Second, a decrease in the number of technical interventions by approximately 95%, simplifying dramatically the complexity of the manufacturer and potential risk of contamination.
A third technical improvement includes the increase of the consistency and reproducibility of the manufacturing process, which will reduce the potential of manufacturing failures.
Finally, despite the reduction in the manufacturing time, we're now able to produce significantly higher number of T cells, not only ensuring patients will be able to receive the required cell dose in the upcoming clinical study, but also providing us with an opportunity to potentially increase the cell dose in the future.
While those technical improvements will allow the manufacturer to be faster, simpler, more reproducible at a larger cell dose, they're particularly significant due to biological improvements that demonstrate the drug product, not only to be the same, but better.
Due to a favorable T cell phenotype, a more potent T cell product with a greater magnitude of antigen specificity and a more diverse targeted profile. The combination of this technical and biological improvements will be critical in the clinical performance of the upcoming study in AML, for which we're really excited.
With that, I would like to turn the call to Tony Kim, our Chief Financial Officer, for review on financials.
Tony?.
Thanks, Juan. We ended the third quarter with $27 million in cash and cash equivalents. We raised $2.2 million in Q3 through the $30 million common stock purchase agreement we previously entered into with Aspire Capital. Utilizing the remaining $27.8 million available to us from Aspire and with current cash available, funds our operations into Q1 2022.
Net loss for the quarter ended September 30, 2020 was $7.4 million compared to a net loss of $5.5 million for the quarter ended September 30, 2019. Research and development costs during the 3 months ended September 30, 2020 was $4.8 million compared to $3.1 million during the 3 months ended September 30, 2019.
The increase of $1.7 million was primarily attributable to an increase in research and development personnel as well as an increase in process development expenses. General and administrative expenses were $2.6 million during the 3 months ended September 30, 2020 compared to $2.5 million during the 3 months ended September 30, 2019.
Now before we open up for Q&A, I wanted to summarize the upcoming milestones for the company. We enrolled the first patient in our AML trial and expect to treat this patient with our MT-401 product by Q1 2021.
We received the alternate reagent for a manufacturing process and plan to submit the required data to FDA to lift the partial clinical hold in Q1 2021.
We've entered the final stages of construction of our cGMP manufacturing facility and expect to complete the construction in Q4 and begin treatment of the first patient under the new facility in the first half of 2021. At this time, we'd like to open the call up to questions.
Operator?.
[Operator Instructions]. Our first question today is coming from Matt Biegler from Oppenheimer..
Congrats on this really, really nice forward progress.
Peter, could you just walk us through the logistics of enrolling these lead-in patients, specifically how you're sourcing the grafts, and then the turnaround time you're expecting from signing the consent to actual treating? And just to be clear, are you using the new manufacturing process for these lead-in patients?.
Matt, thanks for the question. That's a great question. We are using the new improved manufacturing process for all of the patients that will be treated in our Phase II clinical trial. But with respect to your question, let me turn it over to Mythili Koneru, to talk about the patient intake process and the donor procurement process..
Thank you, Matt, for your question. So regarding the safety lead-in, as we mentioned, we have enrolled the first patient. So the process involves the investigator or oncologist submitting an enrollment form.
Once that's been submitted and sent to us, we review the information regarding the patient, determine if the donor was a matched-related donor, a matched-unrelated donor or haploidentical, all 3 of which are options in the study.
Then we need to identify where -- if the donor is a matched-related donor, we need to schedule the donor with the institution or the site. However, if the patient of the donor is a matched-unrelated donor, we need to use -- be the match to consent the donor and schedule the donor for apheresis. So the timing of which can differ.
As you can imagine, if it involves a family member of the patient, the scheduling is a bit faster. However, if we have to go through -- beat the match, it can take a little bit longer to identify -- reidentify the donor, and reconsent them and schedule them for apheresis.
In terms of the manufacturing process for the safety lead-in, we will be manufacturing at Baylor College of Medicine. However, moving forward, we will offer the Phase II portion of the study, will be manufacturing at our in-house facility. But Juan could talk further about those details.
Juan?.
Sure, yes. I think one of the questions that you mentioned was related to the incorporation of the new CMC updates. And just to confirm, as Peter mentioned, these patients that will be treated in the safety lead-in will be generated using the new manufacturing process that now are in file with the FDA.
And as My mentioned, the safety lead-in portion of the study will be manufacturing drug product out of our collaborators at Baylor College of Medicine, and we anticipate that our manufacturing facility will be operational. For the manufacturer of the second portion will be the -- they're starting the next part of next year..
Got it. Awesome. Maybe just one more question for me. I wanted to ask about dosing for the Phase II. As I understand, Baylor is now exploring a high dose. I think it's like 100 million cells per meter squared.
Do you have any update on that cohort? And also, do you have any intention to explore that dose in your Phase II AML trial? Or are you pretty set on the dose that you have right now?.
My?.
Thanks for that question, Matt. So that is correct. Baylor College of Medicine is -- still has their Phase I study that is open, and they are currently exploring higher doses. Dose level 4, exploring 50 million cells per meter squared. And dose level 5, exploring 100 million cells per meter squared.
We currently have the dose that would have since -- that has been completed and transferred it to a flat dosing of 50 million cells. However, we are closely in touch with Dr. Premal Lulla, who's the investigator of the Phase I AML study at Baylor College of Medicine.
And we're following that study closely to determine when dose level 4 and 5 are completed and at which point we can integrate some of that information into our Phase II study prior to -- well, incorporate that information into the safety lead-in prior to starting the Phase II study.
As Juan has discussed multiple, different improvements in the manufacturing process, we can -- we feel comfortable that we could manufacture more comfortably or more easily at these higher doses.
So I guess the bottom line is that we are interested in potentially exploring higher doses, ultimately, depending on how the remaining portion of the Phase I Baylor study is completed..
[Operator Instructions]. Our next question today is coming from Tony Butler from ROTH Capital Partners..
This is [indiscernible] Stefan on for Tony. I was wondering if you could give us some updates on when we may expect some additional updates on the pancreatic cancer data following what you presented at ASCO..
Thanks very much.
My, would you like to take that?.
Sure. Thank you for your question. So regarding the pancreatic Phase I study that was done at Baylor, currently, we don't have any additional updates on that study. Baylor provided their latest update of their study during the virtual ASCO back in June of this year.
The study has completely enrolled the patient numbers, particularly on a -- 13 patients have been enrolled and no further patients will be enrolled in that portion of the study. The only potentially additional information that would be of interest is a little more longitudinal endpoints and particularly overall survival.
And we're currently in discussion with Baylor to determine when the appropriate time to collect and release that information will be..
[Operator Instructions]. Ladies and gentlemen, we reached the end of our question-and-answer session. I'd like to turn the floor back over to management for any further or closing comments..
Thank you very much, and thank you once again to everyone for joining the call today. We appreciate your time and hope that you and your families are remaining safe and healthy during this pandemic. Stay well, everyone, and please reach out to us for any additional questions..
Thank you. That does conclude today's teleconference. You may disconnect your line at this time, and have a wonderful day. We thank you for your participation today..