Filed by Pyxis Oncology, Inc.
(Commission File No.: 001-40881)
Pursuant to Rule 425 of the Securities Act of 1933
Subject Company: Apexigen Inc.
(Commission File No.: 001-39488)
Date: May 24, 2023
Transcript of the webcast “Pyxis Oncology (Update)”, which was made
available by Pyxis Oncology on May 24, 2023 and can be accessed at
the Investors section of the Pyxis Oncology website at
https://pyxisoncology.com.
Pyxis Oncology (Update)
May 24, 2023
Corporate Speakers:
•
Lara Sullivan; Pyxis Oncology, Inc.; Chief Executive Officer,
President & Director
•
Pamela Connealy; Pyxis Oncology, Inc.; Chief Financial Officer
& Chief Operating Officer
•
Xiaodong Yang; Apexigen, Inc.; Founder & Chief Executive
Officer
Conference Call Participants:
•
Brandon Carney; B. Riley; Analyst
•
Andy Hsieh; William Blair; Analyst
•
Samuel Slutsky; LifeSci Capital, LLC; Senior Research
Analyst
•
Charles Butler; EF Hutton; Senior Managing Director
•
Aydin Huseynov; Ladenburg; Analyst
•
Eun Yang; Jefferies; Analyst
Operator
- Good day and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Pyxis
Oncology Corporate Update Conference Call. (Operator Instructions)
Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. I
would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today,
Lara Sullivan, CEO. Please go ahead.
Lara Sullivan
- Thank you. Good morning and thank you for joining us today. My
name is Lara Sullivan, and I'm the CEO of Pyxis Oncology. Thank you
for joining us to discuss Pyxis Oncology's acquisition of Apexigen
and the tremendous value we believe it can create for patients and
investors. Joining me on today's call is Dr. Xiaodong Yang, Founder
and CEO of Apexigen, and Pam Connealy, CFO and COO of Pyxis
Oncology.
Next slide, please. Please note that today's presentation includes
forward-looking statements. We encourage you to review these
statements, which are available on our website.
Moving to slide two. I'm pleased to tell you why we are excited
about our acquisition of Apexigen. This transaction is
complementary to Pyxis Oncology in three ways. First, we are
acquiring an antibody-discovery platform that can provide a
backbone to use with our internal stacked antibody drug conjugate
or ADC toolkit, which was licensed from Pfizer. This commercially
and clinically validated antibody creation engine, called APXiMAB,
can be used to accelerate our own internal ADC initiative. With the
addition of APXiMAB, Pyxis Oncology is uniquely positioned at the
forefront of ADC innovation with an unmatched end-to-end capability
for creating next-generation ADC candidates.
1
Second, this acquisition brings us a promising immuno-oncology
clinical asset in sotigalimab or Sotiga, which may have broad
potential utility across multiple oncology indications. Sotiga is,
in our view, a potentially best and first-in-class Phase II CD40
agonist that has demonstrated compelling efficacy and a favorable
tolerability profile. Clinical results presented to date show that
Sotiga drives rapid, deep and durable responses in patients with a
variety of difficult-to-treat solid tumors, including those
relapsed or refractory to other immunotherapies. We look forward to
seeing updated duration of response and progression-free survival
or PFS data in patients with dedifferentiated liposarcoma, or
DDLPS, a tumor with few viable treatment options, at the upcoming
ASCO this June.
Third, from a financial perspective, this is an excellent deal.
APXiMAB generates an annual royalty stream, which totaled
approximately $4 million in 2022 and has the potential to increase
as the assets advance through their own clinical and commercial
pathways. This acquisition is structured as an all-stock
transaction, which is, in our view, reasonably valued at
approximately $15 million. It leverages our team's decades of
oncology clinical development experience and the IO heritage upon
which Pyxis Oncology was originally founded - importantly, while
maintaining our cash runway into the first half of 2025 and keeping
our PYX-201 and 106 programs on track.
Let's turn to slide three. Pyxis Oncology's acquisition of Apexigen
is structured as an all-stock transaction, which is expected to
close in mid-2023. In total, Pyxis will issue approximately 4
million shares for a total valuation of approximately $15 million.
Pyxis shareholders will own 90% of the combined company upon
closing. The Pyxis Oncology executive team will lead the
organization and, as mentioned, we continue to expect our cash
balance to provide runway into the first half of 2025, while the
combined entity will continue to be eligible for royalty streams
and potential milestone payments from APXiMAB license agreements
previously arranged by Apexigen. Closing is subject to standard
regulatory approvals and customary conditions, including approval
by a majority of Apexigen outstanding common
shareholders.
Turning now to Slide 4. The FACT platform we licensed from Pfizer
equips Pyxis to develop next-generation ADCs with improved plasma
stability, better potency and improved tumor permeability due to
optimized payloads, improved linker technology and site-specific
conjugation chemistries. Adding the APXiMAB platform to our toolkit
will enhance our ability to generate novel antibodies against the
library of targets with high affinity and unique binding epitopes.
With these two platforms, Pyxis Oncology is uniquely positioned
with an end-to-end system for creating novel next-generation
ADCs.
Moving now to slide five. We intend to leverage the APXiMAB
platform to generate antibodies to use as the backbone of our ADC
generation platform. With proprietary cell lines and humanization
technology, APXiMAB can create diverse rabbit-derived antibodies.
The advantages of this platform include a higher likelihood of
identifying a candidate for any given target, finding the best
antibody for a particular use, and creating antibodies with high
specificity and affinity.
Turning now to slide six. I'd like to share the story of a patient
who participated in the Phase II Melanoma study. This is a
54-year-old patient with melanoma who was initially treated with
surgery and radiation, followed by treatment with ipilimumab or ipi
and nivolumab or nivo. After three cycles of combination treatment,
the patient had to stop ipi due to poor tolerability. The patient
remained on nivo maintenance and after 10 months, developed rapid
progression of metastatic disease at multiple sites, including the
liver. The prognosis was poor, and this individual has limited
effective treatment options available. Discussions with the
patient's caregivers mentioned hospice as a possible next step.
This patient enrolled in the Phase II trial evaluating Sotiga in
combination with nivo.
Please turn to slide seven. Soon after beginning treatment, this
patient responded, just two months after starting therapy. The
patient was able to tolerate the combination of Sotiga plus nivo
even though the patient had previously not been able to tolerate
ipi. This individual completed 15 cycles of Sotiga plus nivo and
achieved a partial response, including resolution of all lesions.
The response lasted for 25-plus months on study following the
conclusion of treatment, and this response was maintained for
nearly an additional 2 years after study completion based on
investigator observation. Clearly, this patient had a rapid, deep
and durable response to Sotiga therapy. We believe this experience
illustrates the incredible potential for Sotiga, and we are excited
about the possibilities it may offer for patients.
2
Moving now to slide eight. Sotiga is a CD40 agonist antibody. CD40
is a cell surface receptor that plays an important role in the
control and regulation of the immune system's ability to mount
antitumor immune responses. Targeting the CD40 pathway is a
promising approach that may be able to efficiently initiate,
stimulate and reactivate T-cell responses. CD40 activation may
generate both innate and adaptive immune activity across dendritic
cells, macrophages, and T-cells, leading to broad and powerful
antitumor immune responses that may synergize with existing
approaches and potentially help to overcome checkpoint inhibitor
resistance.
Please turn to slide nine. Sotiga was rationally designed to be
differentiated and best-in-class with two key modifications to
increase potency and tolerability compared to other CD40 agonists.
First, Sotiga binds with high affinity to the native CD40 ligand
binding domain to closely mimic natural CD40 ligand signaling,
which may lead to higher potency. This enables Sotiga to uniquely
activate dendritic cells, which are the most important
antigen-presenting cells, and to stimulate robust production of the
cytokine IL-12, which activates naive T-cells more effectively than
other CD40 agonists. Second, the Fc region of the antibody was
designed to maximize activity through receptor clustering and
improve tolerability by reducing immune cell effector function.
Importantly, the goals of these design features are being
demonstrated by the emerging, differentiated clinical
profile.
Next slide, please. Phase II data demonstrate the activity and
prolonged responses of the combination of Sotiga plus nivo
generated in melanoma patients who are refractory to anti-PD-(L)1.
This study enrolled patients with relapsed or refractory metastatic
melanoma who had confirmed progressive disease on anti-PD-1
treatment. Approximately one quarter of these patients had also
received prior anti-CTLA-4 therapy. Results showed strong activity
in this difficult-to-treat group of patients with a 15.2% partial
response or PR rate, and a 30.3% stable disease or SD rate.
Importantly, responses were rapid, deep and durable and the
combination of Sotiga plus nivo was very well tolerated.
Now turning to slide 11. Tolerability is important and can be very
differentiating, particularly for therapeutics that are part of a
combination regimen and for more fragile treatment experienced
patients who often struggle to remain on therapy. The safety
profile of Sotiga in combination with nivo in patients with
melanoma was in line with expectations for each drug independently.
Reported grade three or greater related treatment-emergent adverse
events consisted of increases of alanine aminotransferase in two
patients, an increase of aspartate amino transferase also in two
patients. In this and other previously reported studies in which
Sotiga was administered in combination with an anti-PD-1 or
chemotherapy in patients with melanoma or esophageal / GEJ cancers,
no additive or synergistic toxicities were observed.
3
Next on slide 12. Although immune checkpoint inhibitors are among
the most recently approved options for patients with melanoma,
unfortunately, the majority of patients - 60% to 70% - do not
respond to treatment. For those who do respond, 20% to 30% will
eventually relapse. The result of these dynamics is a growing
population of second-line and later patients who are immune
checkpoint inhibitor refractory or resistant. This group, for whom
no other good treatment options exist, numbers approximately 9,000
plus today in the U.S. There is no approved standard of care for
melanoma patients who have failed both anti-PD-1 and anti-CTLA-4
therapy. Based on the emerging clinical data, we believe Sotiga has
the potential to change the treatment paradigm for metastatic
melanoma.
Please turn now to slide 13. The Results from an ongoing
investigator-initiated Phase II trial of Sotiga plus doxorubicin
showed meaningful clinical benefit with robust durable responses
and a high rate of durable disease control across multiple
liposarcoma subtype. These results suggest that Sotiga may have
value in this setting, particularly in certain subtypes of
liposarcoma. In a subset of 10 DDLPS patients, the interim medium
PFS was 12.45 months. This initial result is more than double the
historical median PFS of less than five months for these patients.
The 10 DDLPS patients enrolled in this cohort were heavily
pretreated, in some cases with other IO therapies. We are
encouraged by these results and look forward to seeing updated
duration in PFS data from the 10 DDLPS patient cohort at this
year's upcoming ASCO Annual Meeting in June.
Now moving to slide 14. Liposarcomas are a rare tumor type,
affecting approximately 3,000 patients per year in the United
States. There have been a few new treatment options introduced for
these patients in recent years, and the current standard of care is
doxorubicin chemotherapy. DDLPS is an aggressive subtype of
liposarcoma with an incidence of about 300 patients per year with
high levels of recurrence and metastasis. It is often radiation and
chemotherapy insensitive and responses to first-line doxorubicin
chemotherapy are typically less than 15% with a median PFS of just
two to five months. Patients are limited in the number of
doxorubicin cycles they can receive due to cumulative
cardiotoxicity. Clearly, there is a significant need for new
treatment options in this setting and importantly, Sotiga has
received orphan drug designation in soft tissue sarcoma, which may
enable a fast-to-patient development approach.
Please turn to slide 15. In summary, Sotiga may be a best and
first-in-class CD40 agonist, and we are excited about the potential
it offers for patients. Emerging clinical data show that Sotiga
drive rapid, deep, and durable responses in patients with a variety
of difficult-to-treat solid tumors, including those relapsed or
refractory to other immunotherapies. We believe this strong
activity, combined with a favorable tolerability profile may
position Sotiga to be the backbone of many combination therapy
regimens. We look forward to quickly advancing this innovative
candidate for patients who currently have limited treatment options
and believe we may have an opportunity to implement a
faster-to-patient approach with Sotiga, particularly in the DDLPS
setting. Beyond melanoma and liposarcoma, we believe Sotiga may
have applicability across a variety of tumor types, given its
powerful mechanism of action, potential for synergy with other
therapies and favorable tolerability profile. We may look for
opportunities to work with partners to drive development of Sotiga
in additional tumor types.
4
Moving now to slide 16. Following this transaction close, Pyxis
Oncology will have a pipeline focused on ADC and IO-based
approaches to solid tumors that is balanced across modalities,
stages of development and risk. Two of our pipeline candidates have
received orphan drug designation. For Sotiga and second-line
melanoma, we plan to begin a Phase II dose finding study in 2024.
In DDLPS, we look forward to seeing more data at ASCO, and we plan
to expand the ongoing study to add an additional cohort of 10
patients to inform next steps in this indication.
Our Phase I trial of PYX-201, our ADC targeting EDB fibronectin is
off to a great start. PYX-201 is a novel ADC license from Pfizer
that targets extra Domain B or EDB of fibronectin. We continue to
expect to see preliminary data from this study, including biomarker
results and potential early signs of clinical activity in early
2024.
PYX-106 is a fully human immunotherapy antibody candidate that
blocks activity of siglec-15, an immune suppressor expressed across
a broad range of tumors. Our clinical trial incorporates the
biomarker analysis that will provide meaningful insights into
potential patient populations that may benefit from PYX-106 and lay
the foundation for future studies. We remain on track to see
preliminary data from this Phase I trial, including biomarker
results and potential early signs of clinical activity in the
late-2023 timeframe.
Finally, we can use the commercially and clinically validated
APXiMAB platform, which will enable production of novel antibodies
in combination with our proprietary FACT ADC platform from Pfizer
to generate a steady stream of development candidates going
forward.
Please turn to slide 17. The Pyxis Oncology executive team is
extremely experienced across both pharma and biotech. Each of our
executives is passionate about building companies and creating
value for patients and shareholders. We have the experience to
execute across all corporate functions and understand the processes
necessary for success in business development, portfolio management
and company and product acquisitions. I'm pleased that Xiaodong
Yang, Founder and CEO of Apexigen will join Pyxis Oncology to
support the R&D transition activities. This team is well
positioned to lead the combined organization and deliver our
programs for patients.
Now moving to slide 18. Our organization is comprised of highly
experienced drug developers, and we have deliberately assembled a
team across all levels with extensive backgrounds in oncology. We
believe that putting great science into the hands of an experienced
team is the fastest route to value creation for both shareholders
and patients. We know what successful drug development looks like
having participated in more than 150 drug approvals and launches
over the course of our careers across both pharma and biotech
before joining Pyxis. The breadth and depth of our team's oncology
experience and the pharma trained biotech seasoned approach we've
employed to build our organization, both uniquely differentiate
Pyxis from its biotech peers.
Please turn now to slide 19. At Pyxis Oncology, our goal is to
liberate science to improve and extend the lives of patients with
cancer. We employ a multi-modality approach to innovation across
immuno-oncology, ADCs and adjacent approaches and are interested in
the best science regardless of whether it is sourced internally or
externally. Our programs have multiple potential clinical and data
catalysts over the next 12 to 18 months. Our team is uniquely
experienced to deliver on our pipeline, and we have a strong
balance sheet that will provide runway into the first half of 2025.
We will be at the Jefferies Conference in New York City in early
June and hope to see many of you there. Thank you for joining us
today. We are excited about the transformative potential of this
transaction for Pyxis Oncology, and we appreciate your
interest.
5
Operator
- (Operator Instructions) Our first question comes on the line of
Brandon Carney from B. Riley.
Brandon Carney -
This is Brandon Carney on for Yuan Zhi. Congratulations on the
acquisition. I guess, first of all, for FTS for the SOTIGA data,
I'm just wondering - the data compares to the data being generated
by next-gen CTLA based regimens, which was highlighted at the
recent CTOS conference and may also be showcased at the upcoming
ASCO alongside SOTIGA data set?
Lara Sullivan
- Yes. Thank you very much for your interest and for the question.
I'll ask Xiaodong to respond to that, please.
Xiaodong Yang
- I'm sorry, I missed the first part of the question. Can you
repeat - a comparison with which in our data?
Brandon Carney
- Yes, just the next-gen CTLA for like (inaudible) data that was
highlighted at CTOS and I believe we have other CTLA data coming up
at ASCO that should be presented alongside the SOTIGA data
set.
Xiaodong Yang
- From which indications I'm not too familiar with the new
generation CTLA-4 data. Which indication?
Brandon Carney -
Yes. They presented sarcoma data at CTOS, I think we saw a 46%
response rate, 69% DCR. Just wondering if you've had a chance to
maybe look at that and then how SOTIGA might compare to that data
set?
Xiaodong Yang
- Yes. So currently, we will review the data more carefully about
the new CTLA-4 antibody in sarcoma. I think in our case, we have a
very well-defined mechanism of action for combining SOTIGA with
doxorubicin.
As you know very well, doxorubicin is a well-known immunogenic
chemotherapy. So the idea - the rationale for combining SOTIGA with
doxorubicin is that doxorubicin can generate immunogenic tumor
death and tumor antigen release. Then you come with SOTIGA which
can act with APC to lead to T-cell activation eventually leading to
a more effective antitumor response.
As you probably know very well for sarcoma, the approval endpoint
is the PFS and overall survival. And we will provide more updates
on the liposarcoma and also on the efficacy data on all three
subtypes of soft tissue sarcoma in the ASCO meeting, I think, in
early June. So you will see the data, we can compare our updated
data with the other new CTLA-4 antibody data. So we can see where
we are the differences, what may be the different line of therapies
or different combinations.
Brandon Carney -
Okay. Maybe also just wanted to ask on potential
registration-enabling study. Do you think it will be in melanoma or
STS or is it too soon to tell right now? And in that kind of study,
how would you manage liver enzyme signals?
Lara Sullivan
- Yes. So thank you for that question. We are actually going to be
sort of working together with Xiaodong and his team to define the
next steps on the path forward on the asset. So at this juncture
today, we're not commenting on what the regulatory strategy will
be, but we do commit to come back to the Street to the analyst
investors on that later this summer following the transaction
close.
Brandon Carney -
Sure, understandable. Thanks for taking our questions.
Lara Sullivan -
Thank you.
Operator
- (Operator Instructions) Our next question comes from the line of
Andy Hsieh from William Blair.
6
Andy Hsieh -
Great. Thanks for taking our questions. So regarding the CD40
agonist program, I'm just curious if there are any plans for
biomarkers or any investigational biomarkers that could help you
identify patients who otherwise might benefit the most, just to
enrich the signal there a little bit?
And my second question has to do with potential synergy with your
ADCs and antibodies in-house. Are there any scientific rationale to
look at combinations there? I know Xiaodong basically talked about
immunogenic cell death, which is kind of a hot topic for the ADC
field these days. Just curious about your thoughts
there.
Lara Sullivan
- Sure. So in terms of the first question with respect to biomarker
strategy, we do have a strong translational capability within Pyxis
already. We see kind of the integration of our capabilities and the
capabilities that Xiaodong has built to be very complementary. So
again, we're going to be really putting heads together over the
next few weeks or months to best define the optimal path forward
for all elements of the development approach for the asset. So
Andy, we'll come back to you further on the biomarker strategy as
we do that work together.
Secondly, in terms of the synergy with the ADC, the FACT platform
that we had licensed in from Pfizer, as you know Xiaodong, has been
quite successful in building this antibody platform within Apexigen
as well as antibody work that he's done in past lives.
And we're particularly enthusiastic now about the ability to have
antibody creation owned within the combined entity that fits in
quite nicely with the conjugation chemistry, the linkers, the
payloads that we brought over from Pfizer. Xiaodong, I don't know
if you want to comment any further about kind of your enthusiasm
around the integration of the two platforms?
Xiaodong Yang
- Sure. I think, Lara, you illustrated the potential and also the
rationale for a potential combination of ADC approach we saw CD40
adding. I think, quite honestly, one of the rationale and
motivation for the business combination is the combination of the
ADC platform that Pyxis has developed and the first candidate is
PYX-201. I think that's a perfect combination with SOTIGA because
the potential release of tumor antigens after the ADC, killing
tumor cells or tumor stroma’s.
I think we have a huge potential to explore that on PYX-201
finished Phase I, we can immediately start the combination of
SOTIGA with 201, that's kind of my thinking about. Of course, we
will discuss together with Lara and her team to make sure that
these - we can actually implement a combination trial in the
future.
Andy Hsieh -
That’s very helpful. Thank you.
Operator
- (Operator Instructions) Our next question comes from the line of
Sam Slutsky from LifeSci Capital.
Samuel Slutsky
- Hey good morning everyone. Thanks for taking the questions.
Couple for me. I guess, in terms of making new ADCs via Apexigen’s
antibody platform and then your ADC tech, what might those time
lines look like in terms of when we might see new targets coming to
the pipeline if your about them, et cetera?
Lara Sullivan
- Yes. Thanks, Sam. It's always great to connect with you. We are
pretty enthusiastic given the advanced nature of the antibody
platform that Xiaodong is bringing over that we'll be able to
impact us in a positive way the time lines for us to create new
ADCs. Right now, we don't want to give specific guidance yet on the
time lines around kind of the next wave of the pipeline. But as we
come back post the transaction close, we'll make sure to provide
guidance around our thoughts on the ADC creation engine as well as
SOTIGA.
Samuel Slutsky
- Okay. And then for the royalty streams on the out-licensed
assets, the partnered ones. Can you just remind me what those terms
look like across the pipeline?
7
Lara Sullivan
- Sure. Pam or Xiaodong, do you want to comment on that?
Xiaodong Yang
- Pam, do you want to?
Pamela Connealy
- Yes, I'm happy to take it. Good morning, Sam. So the company
today received royalties from Novartis for their BEOVU that was
commercialized back in 2019. Today, they get about 1% royalty on
worldwide net sales, and it goes into perpetuity. So right now,
between 2020 and 2022, they've averaged about $2 million a year for
a total of $6.2 million.
The other license agreements have kind of 3% on the Sincere
collaboration, annual sales below CNY 100 million and then four for
anything above. So again, just kind of your typical royalty streams
coming out of the other three opportunities there. But that is part
of, as Lara mentioned in the call, that is really the third leg of
the stool of why this was a meaningful acquisition for us is to be
able to get these royalty streams in as well along with the
platform and the CD40 asset.
Samuel Slutsky
- Okay. And then just last question for me. For the 10 patients
with dedifferentiated liposarcoma that are presented on. Were those
patients naive to prior doxorubicin or what was their private
treatment status?
Lara Sullivan
- Xiaodong, do you want to comment on that?
Xiaodong Yang
- Yes. It's a mix, I think, formally half-half. Half of them are
treatment-naive patients, half of them receive multiple line of
price therapy up to 6-round prior therapy.
Samuel Slutsky
- Got it. Thank you.
Operator
- (Operator Instructions) Our next question comes from the line of
Charles ("Tony") Butler from EF Hutton Group.
Charles Butler
- Thanks very much. So Lara, and maybe Xiaodong this question,
maybe a tad unfair except that I want to focus on the DDLPS patient
group with SOTIGA. The additional extension of 10 patients will
occur - I guess I'm asking maybe how rapidly post-close that you
may be able to enroll those patients?
And I say this because the PFS was extraordinarily positive on
certainly the first 10 especially given the competitive landscape.
And as you know, the milademetan trial failed most recently. So
certainly, not only given the PFS, but certainly seeing an
additional 10 patients would I guess, lead to a perfectly rational
registrational trial post that. So I don't know if you wanted to
expand a little bit on that time.
Lara Sullivan
- Yes. Thanks, Tony. I appreciate the question. So we, at Pyxis,
have built a fully skilled and capable clinical organization as we
progressed into the clinic now having dosed our first patient in
201 and the imminent dosing with 106. So our team is ready to go as
we absorb SOTIGA and the assets from - from Apexigen.
To your point, I think the patient interest and the unmet need is
there. The infrastructure is there on our side, the relationships
with the KOLs and the PIs are in place from the Apexigen side. So
really, all the elements are in place, and we are sort of going
forward as appropriate within kind of SEC guidelines of how we're
able to work together during this interim period prior to the
close. So we don't intend to have anything slow down, but we are
very careful about continuing to operate as independent entities
until the close.
So I think we'll be providing, again, further guidance on the
specifics around the time lines after the close. That being said, I
just want to provide reassurance that all the elements that are in
place that enable sort of swift execution are there on both
sides.
8
Charles Butler
- Thank you Lara.
Operator
- (Operator Instructions) Our next question comes from the line of
Aydin Huseynov from Ladenburg.
Aydin Huseynov -
Good morning, everyone. Congratulations with the deal, and thank
you for taking - so what I have is regarding the agent activity of
SOTIGA, provide any comments any thoughts about potential signals
from single-agent activity or in any cancer type or maybe you could
comment on single agent activity of the other CD40 agents that you
may cite as an example?
Lara Sullivan
- Yes. Xiaodong, would you like to take that?
Xiaodong Yang
- Sure. And yes, so for sotigalimab, we have ongoing Phase II trial
evaluating sotigalimab as a monotherapy in immunotherapy-naive
patients - naive melanoma patients. So far, we have seen two
patients had a complete response over one year and we are about to
finish this study and we'll present data in the near
future.
Regarding other CD40 agonist antibody, because the change of
standard of care for different indications, it has been very
challenging to do a single agent activity trials, but it has been
reported the Roche antibody when it was developed by Pfizer had a
show 27% response rate, again, in immunotherapy naive melanoma
patients that was reported a few years ago.
And I don't recall, I have seen any other CD40 agonist antibody
have shown they have some single-agent activity, but it's not a
trial that many of these cases actually is data that's in the dose
escalation Phase I trial.
Aydin Huseynov -
Understood, thank you. And generally speaking, do you think CD40
agents would first come to the market as a single agent drug or
that would be a combination - a combination trial? I'm just
thinking of general regulatory path for all CD40 agents, not
necessarily just yours.
Xiaodong Yang
- Lara, do you want me to take? Or you want me to start?
Lara Sullivan
- Yes. I think why don't you go ahead?
Xiaodong Yang
- Yes. I think based on the change of landscape of standard of care
for almost all solid tumor indications, it's going to be very
challenging to do a single agent Phase III trials. I think it has
to be a combination. Even in the first line or even the last line.
I mean in last line, you can do a single agent trial, but I think -
my thinking is that for most of the CD40 agonists, probably the
most productive Phase III development strategy is going to be a
combination with the standard of care.
Aydin Huseynov -
Okay. Okay. Understood. All right. One on liposarcoma data, so you
have a pretty encouraging data at PFS 12.5 months. Could you remind
us what was the 95% confidence interval in prior doxorubicin, which
is standard of care trial? So what's - just to try to sort of see
how it compares to the combination.
Xiaodong Yang
- Yes, I do have the number. Maybe I'll give you later on. It's on
top of mind, but I'll find information provided to you
later.
Aydin Huseynov -
Okay. No problem. And one last on monetization - sorry, on
royalties. So the question is, have you thought about monetization,
the royalties for BEOVU for which indication? And - and if you do
think about it, how much would you value that potential
monetization deal?
9
Lara Sullivan
- Yes. So we are certainly open to considering all forms of
business development transactions as well as ways to increase the
cash balance of the company. So royalty monetization is something
we do think about, At the macro level across the pipeline, not just
for this asset. But obviously, these royalty streams are in place
right now. So it's something we're continuing to evaluate to
monitor. I think that it's premature for us to provide any sort of
guidance or speculation around what the value of that could be but
having that optionality with respect to receiving the royalties as
well as potentially monetizing them is certainly helpful from our
cash management and financing strategy.
Aydin Huseynov -
Okay. This is very helpful. Congratulations with the deal. And
thanks for taking the questions.
Operator
- (Operator Instructions) Our next question comes from the line of
Eun Yang from Jefferies.
Eun Yang -
This is Eun Yang from Jefferies. Thank you very much for taking our
question. I was wondering if you could please provide some guidance
on how we should think about up on how OpEx is expected to increase
from the deal?
Lara Sullivan -
I'm sorry, I missed the middle part of the question. How - what is
expected to increase?
Eun Yang -
On how OpEx is expected to increase from the deal?
Lara Sullivan
- Okay. Pam, do you want to comment on that?
Pamela Connealy
- I'm sorry, I still couldn't hear.
Lara Sullivan
- The question was to comment on how OpEx may increase as a result
of the deal.
Pamela Connealy
- Yes. Great. Thanks for the question, and good to see you on the
call. We don't expect operating expenses to increase in any
significant way. We have a very scalable infrastructure both on the
G&A side as well as within R&D to be able to support this
anti-CD40 asset coming in. So we don't expect any real appreciable
increase in operating expenses.
The Apexigen team has done a great job of already getting clinical
materials ready for even Phase III. So that expense has already
been undertaken. So we feel very confident in our ability to absorb
this asset and with the current team in place.
Eun Yang -
Thank you
Operator
- (Operator Instructions) Thank you. At this time, I would now like
to turn the conference back over to Lara Sullivan for closing
remarks.
Lara Sullivan
- Perfect. Thank you. Thanks to all who participated in the
conference today and for your questions. We very much appreciate
your interest in the combined company going forward. We're excited
about the potential to support patients, both with the current
clinical pipeline that we have. And the potential future pipeline
that we'll be building by bringing our capabilities
together.
So thank you. And we're also happy to take any one-to-one follow-up
meetings as interest dictate. So we look forward to continuing to
share the story with you, and I hope you have a great rest of your
day.
Operator
- (Operator Instructions) This concludes today's conference call.
Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.
10
***
Additional Information and Where to Find It
This communication is not a proxy statement or solicitation of a
proxy, consent or authorization with respect to any securities or
in respect of the proposed business combination and shall not
constitute an offer to sell or a solicitation of an offer to buy
any securities nor shall there be any sale of securities in any
state or jurisdiction in which such offer, solicitation, or sale
would be unlawful prior to registration or qualification under the
securities laws of any such state or jurisdiction. No offer of
securities shall be made except by means of a prospectus meeting
the requirements of Section 10 of the Securities Act. Pyxis
Oncology, Inc. (“Pyxis Oncology”) plans to file with the U.S.
Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”) a Registration
Statement on Form S-4 in connection with the transactions and
Apexigen, Inc. (“Apexigen”) plans to file with the SEC and mail to
Apexigen stockholders a proxy statement/prospectus in connection
with the transactions. INVESTORS AND SECURITY HOLDERS ARE URGED TO
READ THE REGISTRATION STATEMENT, PROXY STATEMENT/PROSPECTUS AND ANY
OTHER RELEVANT DOCUMENTS THAT MAY BE FILED WITH THE SEC, AS WELL AS
ANY AMENDMENTS OR SUPPLEMENTS TO THESE DOCUMENTS, CAREFULLY AND IN
THEIR ENTIRETY IF AND WHEN THEY BECOME AVAILABLE BECAUSE THEY
CONTAIN OR WILL CONTAIN IMPORTANT INFORMATION ABOUT THE PROPOSED
TRANSACTION. Investors and security holders will be able to obtain
free copies of the registration statement and the proxy
statement/prospectus and other documents filed with the SEC by
Pyxis Oncology and Apexigen through the web site maintained by the
SEC at
www.sec.gov.
In addition, investors and security holders will be able to obtain
free copies of the registration statement and the proxy
statement/prospectus from Pyxis Oncology by contacting
ir@pyxisoncology.com
or from Apexigen by contacting
ir@apexigen.com.
Participants in the Solicitation
Pyxis Oncology and Apexigen, and their respective directors and
executive officers, may be deemed to be participants in the
solicitation of proxies in respect of the proposed transaction.
Information regarding Pyxis Oncology’s directors and executive
officers is contained in Pyxis Oncology’s proxy statement, filed
with the SEC on April 28, 2023. Information regarding Apexigen’s
directors and executive officers is contained in Apexigen’s Annual
Report on Form 10-K, filed with the SEC on February 22, 2023.
Additional information regarding the persons who may be deemed
participants in the proxy solicitation and a description of their
direct and indirect interests in the proposed business combination
will be available in the registration statement and the proxy
statement/prospectus.
11
Forward Looking Statements
This communication contains forward-looking statements for the
purposes of the safe harbor provisions under The Private Securities
Litigation Reform Act of 1995 and other federal securities laws.
These statements are often identified by the use of words such as
“anticipate,” “believe,” “can,” “continue,” “could,” “estimate,”
“expect,” “intend,” “likely,” “may,” “might,” “objective,”
“ongoing,” “plan,” “potential,” “predict,” “project,” “should,” “to
be,” “will,” “would,” or the negative or plural of these words, or
similar expressions or variations, although not all forward-looking
statements contain these words. We cannot assure you that the
events and circumstances reflected in the forward-looking
statements will be achieved or occur and actual results could
differ materially from those expressed or implied by these
forward-looking statements. Factors that could cause or contribute
to such differences include, but are not limited to, those
identified herein, and those discussed in the section titled “Risk
Factors” set forth in Pyxis Oncology’s Annual Report on Form 10-K
for the year ended December 31, 2022, Pyxis Oncology’s Quarterly
Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended March 31, 2023,
Apexigen’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December
31, 2022, and Apexigen’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the
quarter ended March 31, 2023, each of which is on file with the
SEC. Among other things, there can be no guarantee that the
proposed business combination will be completed in the anticipated
timeframe or at all, that the conditions required to complete the
proposed business combination will be met, that the combined
company will realize the expected benefits of the proposed business
combination, if any, that the clinical stage assets will progress
on anticipated timelines or at all, or that the combined company
will be successful in progressing its pipeline through development
and the regulatory approval process. These risks are not
exhaustive. New risk factors emerge from time to time, and it is
not possible for our management to predict all risk factors, nor
can we assess the impact of all factors on our business or the
extent to which any factor, or combination of factors, may cause
actual results to differ materially from those contained in any
forward-looking statements. In addition, statements that “we
believe” and similar statements reflect our beliefs and opinions on
the relevant subject. These statements are based upon information
available to us as of the date hereof and while we believe such
information forms a reasonable basis for such statements, such
information may be limited or incomplete, and our statements should
not be read to indicate that we have conducted an exhaustive
inquiry into, or review of, all potentially available relevant
information. These statements are inherently uncertain, and
investors are cautioned not to unduly rely upon these statements.
Except as required by law, we undertake no obligation to update any
forward-looking statements to reflect events or circumstances after
the date of such statements.
12
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