June should be national cancer month.
Each year around this time, oncology groups and Wall Street brokerages hold a rash of conferences where researchers reveal the latest, greatest potential cancer cures.
This year has been no exception. Above all, we learned about remarkable advances in two exciting cancer therapies — and three great companies that will benefit.
Here’s more detail. (I’ve kept the technical language to a minimum.)
Cancer weapon
Tumors are smart. They know how to trick the immune system into missing them. But scientists are wising up to their tricks. In one evasive strategy, tumors release an enzyme that renders them invisible. If you block the enzyme, your immune system can find tumors and destroy them — with the help from cancer drugs. This is the key to an early-stage cancer weapon you should invest in, known as “IDO inhibitors.”
IDO stands for “Indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase,” an enzyme released by tumors to blind the body’s immune system. “IDO is a strange drug target, because IDO inhibition by itself has no noticeable anti-cancer effect,” says Tanguy Seiwert, a cancer-therapy researcher and medical doctor who teaches at the University of Chicago. Suppressing IDO, however, makes tumors vulnerable.
The best “pure play” in IDO inhibitors is a company whose shares I own, and have suggested since December 2011 in my stock newsletter, Brush Up on Stocks. We’re up 750% in this company since 2011 ($14 to $120). But I think this stock is still a “hold” because there are bigger gains ahead.
Incyte Corp. INCY, +3.58% just released excellent data on its IDO inhibitor, called epacadostat, at the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) conference. In combination with cancer therapies from Merck & Co. MRK, +1.13% and Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. BMY, +1.40% it showed excellent results against several kinds of cancer.
“It looks really good. I think this was a coming-out party for IDO inhibitors,” says Seiwert. Besides effectiveness, one of the main positives is that epacadostat is safe. This means it can be readily used to assist many other cancer drugs. “You can add it to a ton of things because the cost is low, in terms of toxicity.”
Incyte is an ideal biotech company for investors because it is self-funding. It has a very profitable drug called Jakafi, for a rare blood disorder, which supports research on new drugs like the IDO inhibitor. So investors dodge dilutive financings.
Fake news
So why hasn’t Incyte’s stock shot up? Investors have three main worries. But they look like false fears.
One bit of “fake news” circulating is that Incyte showed success, in part, only because it omitted patients from some results, which drove up the percentage of success stories. But this is a dubious critique for two reasons. Even if you included the three patients left out, it would only lower the success rate by a few percentage points, notes J.P. Morgan analyst Cory Kasimov. Second, Incyte offered several separate data sets showing success in many types of cancer, but the omission only affected one subgroup, says Seiwert. “I think this was way overblown.”
The next fear: Competitor NewLink Genetics Corp. NLNK, +3.27% recently announced Roche AG RHHBY, +0.21% handed back development rights to its IDO, following lousy results in a Roche study. Some investors take this as a sign that IDO is malarkey. But William Blair analyst Katherine Xu thinks this is bullish for Incyte, since it signals a competitor may be gone. NewLink’s IDO may have fared poorly because it works differently than Incyte’s IDO, or because Roche used an extremely sick patient population. Neither scenario reflects poorly on Incyte.
The third knock on Incyte is the one to watch. While Seiwert is impressed with Incyte’s IDO results, he points out the Phase II results are early-stage, and longer-term studies are needed to learn more about patient survival. Those studies are in the works. Incyte has nine Phase III studies planned with Merck and Bristol-Myers Squibb, says Xu. The outcomes here are key, since about $50 worth of the current $120 Incyte stock price is linked to IDO.
Turbo for the immune system
In another key advance in cancer therapy in the past two years, doctors have learned how to extract a patient’s blood and genetically tweak white blood cells so they override evasive tactics used by tumors.
Then the cells are reproduced in a lab to expand the supply, and put back in the patient’s body so they can move in for the kill. Hopefully, the cells then continue to proliferate and thrive and stay on hand to fight any more cancer that comes along.
Known as chimeric antigen receptor T-cell therapy (CAR-T), this approach has produced remarkable results against blood cancers in patients who otherwise had almost no hope of survival. CAR-T works by unblocking cancer cell receptors normally sought out by the immune system.
“This is one of the most exciting therapies in immunotherapy,” said Jae Park, a Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center cancer researcher and medical doctor, at the Jefferies 2017 Global Healthcare Conference in early June.
Probably the best pure play here is Kite Pharma Inc. KITE, +1.64% At the Jefferies conference, Kite CEO Arie Belldegrun showed images of a patient’s body riddled with tumors, which disappeared about a month after treatment began. The patient showed no sign of the disease a year later.
Kite has a product coming on the market by the end of this year, and probably many more on the way, says Brad Loncar, the cancer research expert behind the Loncar Cancer Immunotherapy CNCR, +2.93% exchange traded fund. This is pretty good progress for a therapy that was considered “science fiction” two years ago.
I suggested Kite in my stock letter at around $71 on May 17, and I think it’s still a “hold” even though it has already risen to $87, because this promises to be a blockbuster therapy. At the time, insiders were big buyers as the stock sold off on news of the death of a patient in one of its studies.
That unfortunate death highlights one of the key risks here. CAR-T patients have died because the therapy can cause brain swelling. Doctors are getting better at staving off adverse side effects, says Park. But they still don’t fully understand what causes them, which should raise a yellow flag for investors.
‘Impressive’ bluebird
Kite also faces competition from other companies developing CAR-T, including power players like Novartis AG NVS, +0.75% Pfizer Inc. PFE, +0.76% Johnson & Johnson JNJ, -0.21% and GlaxoSmithKline PLC GSK, -0.09% as well as Juno Therapeutics Inc. JUNO, +3.91% Cellectis SA CLLS, +0.00% Adaptimmune Therapeutics PLC ADAP, -0.44% and two privately held companies called Poseida Therapeutics and Nanjing Legend Biotech.
Any of these efforts may pan out nicely, but my pick as a third CAR-T play is bluebird bio BLUE, +3.59% which is partnering with Celgene Corp. CELG, +2.29% Bluebird just announced really impressive results for its CAR-T candidate called bb2121. In early studies, just released at ASCO, this therapy produced an overall response rate of 90% to 100% among “hospice-type” patients whose cancer was so bad that seven different attempts to cure them, on average, had failed.
“To generate efficacy data on this level with an overall very tolerable safety profile is highly impressive,” says Kasimov, at J.P. Morgan. “With more key updates to come in 2017, we would continue to add to positions in bluebird bio.”
At the time of publication, Michael Brush held INCY. Brush has suggested INCY and KITE in his stock newsletter Brush Up on Stocks. Brush is a Manhattan-based financial writer who has covered business for the New York Times and The Economist group, and he attended Columbia Business School in the Knight-Bagehot program.
[“Source-ndtv”]