- Randomized sub-trial 1 of a global adaptive platform trial of COM701 maintenance therapy in patients with relapsed platinum sensitive ovarian cancer
- Trial supported by strong biological rationale and clinical data from patients with advanced ovarian cancer
- Interim analysis planned for the second half of 2026
Compugen Ltd. (Nasdaq: CGEN) (TASE: CGEN), a clinical-stage cancer immunotherapy company and a pioneer in predictive computational target discovery powered by AI/ML, today announced that the first patient was dosed in the global randomized sub-trial 1 of adaptive platform trial, MAIA-ovarian (which stands for MAintenance Immunotherapy with an Anti-PVRIG antibody), evaluating maintenance therapy with single agent COM701, a potential first-in-class anti-PVRIG antibody in patients with relapsed platinum sensitive ovarian cancer.
“We are delighted to advance the development of COM701 as a maintenance therapy for patients with relapsed platinum sensitive ovarian cancer, potentially addressing a significant unmet medical need,” said Anat Cohen-Dayag, Ph.D., President, and CEO of Compugen. “This global trial is underpinned by a strong biological rationale, with high PVRIG pathway expression levels observed in ovarian cancer. In addition, clinical data showed that COM701 in triple combination with PD-1 and TIGIT blockade achieved durable responses and was well tolerated in patients with heavily pre-treated platinum resistant ovarian cancer typically not responding to immunotherapy. A response of greater than 18 months was also achieved in a patient treated with COM701 as a single agent.”
Dr. Cohen-Dayag continued, “Based on historical data, we anticipate the benchmark for progression-free survival to be around six months and consider a three-month improvement over placebo to be clinically meaningful for these patients. An interim analysis of sub-trial 1 of MAIA-ovarian is planned to take place in the second half of 2026. We believe positive data could inform a registration path for COM701 monotherapy and an opportunity to combine COM701 with other agents, broadening COM701’s opportunities within the ovarian cancer population.”
Ruth Peres, M.D., Ph.D., Medical Oncologist in the Division of Oncology, Head of Women’s Cancers Research Lab and Head of Phase 1 Clinical Trials in the Clinical Research Institute at Rambam Healthcare Campus, Haifa, Israel, added, “There is a need for drugs that provide durable responses and a favorable safety profile as maintenance therapy in patients with platinum sensitive ovarian cancer who respond to chemotherapy, but who are not candidates for bevacizumab or PARP inhibitors. We are delighted to be the first site to dose a patient in this sub-trial designed to evaluate if COM701 as a single agent can delay disease progression in these patients.”