Cantech Letter interviews Brad Thompson President and CEO of Oncolytics Biotech

Calgary’s Oncolytics Biotech grew out of discoveries made in the 1990’s in the Department of Microbiology and Infectious Diseases at the University of Calgary. The Company’s Reolysin, a formulation of reovirus, a family of viruses that can affect the gastrointestinal system and have shown to have oncolytic, or cancer killing properties, is about to enter Phase 3 trials. Recently, Cantech Letter’s Nick Waddell talked to Dr. Brad Thompson, Oncolytics President and CEO.

Oncolytics Thompson: "The value of the head and neck cancer market is in the US$300 to US$500 million globally and we believe REOLYSIN® can address a significant portion of this market."

For our readers that are unfamiliar, what is reovirus and what are the possibilities for its use in cancer treatments?

Reovirus is a virus naturally found in mammalian respiratory and bowel systems. Most people have been exposed to reovirus by adulthood, but the infection does not typically produce symptoms. Reovirus was noted to be a potential cancer therapeutic when early studies suggested it reproduces well in certain cancer cell lines. It has since been shown to replicate specifically in cells that have an activated Ras pathway (a characteristic that may play a role in more than two thirds of all human cancers and in most metastatic disease), while leaving healthy cells that do not have active Ras pathways unharmed. This suggests that REOLYSIN®, a proprietary formulation of human reovirus, may be an effective therapeutic for many Ras-activated tumor types and potentially for some cell proliferative disorders.

Oncolytics’ technologies are based on discoveries made in the 1990s in the Department of Microbiology and Infectious Diseases at the University of Calgary. Do you feel the biotech work being done in Canadian Universities is important enough to support financially, even if there is no immediate financial benefit?

Absolutely. Pharmaceutical companies continue to look to biotech companies for novel technologies and products to help fill their pipelines and support long-term growth. A fair number of these projects originate in Canadian Universities. I believe that the long-term benefits that may come from such discoveries far outweigh the initial start up and funding challenges.

Can you tell us a bit about your partnership with the Gynecologic Oncology Group?

The Gynecologic Oncology Group (GOG) intends to conduct a randomized Phase II trial of weekly paclitaxel versus weekly paclitaxel with REOLYSIN® in patients with persistent or recurrent, ovarian, fallopian tube or primary peritoneal cancer. The study will be Oncolytics’ second randomized study and will be sponsored by the Cancer Therapy Evaluation Program, Division of Cancer Treatment and Diagnosis, U.S. National Cancer Institute (NCI), under its Clinical Trials Agreement with Oncolytics. Partnerships like these allow us to cost-effectively expand our clinical program allowing us to look at indications we might not have the resources to be able to address on our own. We have partnerships with a number of groups including the GOG, NCI and the Cancer Therapy & Research Center at the University of Texas Health Science Center.

Oncolytics was formed in 1998 and you are currently conducting a phase III trial for head and neck cancer. If all goes to plan, how long before we see REOLYSIN® on the market?

The Phase III trial for head and neck cancers is designed to enroll 80 patients in the first stage of the trial. The second stage is adaptive, and is designed to enroll between 100 and 400 patients, depending on what we see in the first stage. The range in the number of patients that will be enrolled in the second stage will affect the time to trial completion. Taking this into consideration, along with the time required for regulatory submission and review, we anticipate REOLYSIN® is still at least a couple of years from the market.

Needless to say, curing cancer is the Holy Grail for any biotech company, but just how big is the immediately addressable market for REOLYSIN®?

The value of the head and neck cancer market is in the US$300 to US$500 million globally and we believe REOLYSIN® can address a significant portion of this market. That said, REOLYSIN® is involved in multiple Phase I and II studies in other cancer indications, many with billion dollar plus markets, so there is the potential to substantially expand the total addressable market for the product.

You just announced a CDN $25 million bought deal financing. Where does this level of funding take you?

On closing we ended up raising gross proceeds of $28.77 million as the underwriters elected to fully exercise their overallotment option. The capital we raised in the financing will fully fund the Phase III combination REOLYSIN® and paclitaxel/carboplatin clinical trial for patients with platinum-failed head and neck cancers. This trial is significant because it is the first pivotal study we are conducting and, if successful, will form the basis for our submission to regulatory authorities in multiple jurisdictions. The remainder of the funds will be put towards other REOLYSIN® clinical development programs, which could ultimately help expand our addressable market, and for the manufacture of clinical REOLYSIN® supply.

We Hate Paywalls Too!

At Cantech Letter we prize independent journalism like you do. And we don't care for paywalls and popups and all that noise That's why we need your support. If you value getting your daily information from the experts, won't you help us? No donation is too small.

Make a one-time or recurring donation

Tagged with: onc
Nick Waddell

Cantech Letter founder and editor Nick Waddell has lived in five Canadian provinces and is proud of his country's often overlooked contributions to the world of science and technology. Waddell takes a regular shift on the Canadian media circuit, making appearances on CTV, CBC and BNN, and contributing to publications such as Canadian Business and Business Insider.

View Comments

Recent Posts

PI cuts price target on TSXV:TINY

PI Financial analyst Jason Zandberg is still bullish on TINY (TINY Stock Quote, Chart, News, Analysts, Financials TSXV:TINY), just a… [Read More]

1 hour ago

Is TSX:FOOD a buy right now?

Good not great. That's the assessment of Goodfood Market (Good Food Market Stock Quote, Chart, News, Analysts, Financials TSX:GOOD) from… [Read More]

12 hours ago

Is First Solar stock still a buy?

The stock has been on a good run, but Roth MKM analyst Philip Shen thinks there is still upside to… [Read More]

1 day ago

Is Ontrak stock a buy?

Following the company's fourth quarter results, Roth MKM analyst Jonathan Aschoff has maintained his "Buy" rating on Ontrak (Ontrak Stock… [Read More]

1 day ago

Is TSX:PRL still a buy? (April, 2024)

Its stock has been on an absolute heater since last fall, but Eight Capital analyst Adhir Kadve thinks there is… [Read More]

2 days ago

Is PIF stock a buy?

National Bank Financial analyst Rupert Merer thinks there is money to be made on Polaris Infrastructure (Polaris Infrastructure Stock Quote,… [Read More]

2 days ago