Cambridge Healthtech Institute’s 3rd Annual

Next-Generation Immunotherapies

New Modalities and Technologies for Tumour Targeting

13 November 2025 ALL TIMES WET (GMT/UTC)

Cambridge Healthtech Institute's Next-Generation Immunotherapies conference highlights new modalities that are continuing to revolutionize the treatment landscape, with advancements in CAR-Ts, immune checkpoints, immunocytokines and immunoconjugates, as well as cancer vaccines and neoantigens. This conference showcases the latest strategies in accelerating clinical translation and navigating resistance mechanisms for the next generation of immunotherapies.

Thursday, 13 November

07:30Registration and Morning Coffee

IMMUNE-CHECKPOINT INHIBITORS

08:25

Chairperson's Remarks

Katrin Mestermann, PhD, Scientific Project Manager, Fraunhofer Institute for Cell Therapy & Immunology IZI

08:30

Positive Allosteric Modulation of Immune-Checkpoint Complexes with Nanobodies as a New Mode of Therapeutic Intervention in Immunotherapy

Jan Steyaert, PhD, Professor, Vrije Universiteit Brussel (VUB); Director, VIB-VUB Center for Structural Biology, VIB

The meticulous balance of our immune system, which allows it to combat infections and cancer while preventing autoimmune reactions, is regulated by co-inhibitory and co-stimulatory immune checkpoint complexes (ICCs). These complexes have become significant drug targets, driving rapid advancements in cancer immunotherapy with antibodies that block inhibitory ICCs. Meanwhile, antibodies that block stimulatory ICCs are in clinical trials for treating autoimmune diseases. Surprisingly, but likely fueled by the current focus on IC inhibitors, the field has largely ignored that ICCs are genuine transmembrane receptors that transmit signals upon binding of an extracellular protein ligand. This oversight leaves unexplored therapeutic avenues that we are now addressing by validating Nanobodies (Nbs) as first-in-class allosteric modulators of inhibitory immune checkpoint complexes. By applying innovative immunization and bio-selection techniques, we have discovered and characterized the first-ever positive allosteric modulators (PAMs) of a clinically relevant inhibitory ICC that enhance receptor signaling with pathway-specific and spatio-temporal precision. These ICC PAMs open up novel therapeutic modes of intervention that ensure patient safety, even in cases of overdose, and may outperform current inhibitor-based immunotherapies, which often cause significant side effects.

09:00

Myeloid Checkpoint Blockade in Combination with IgA for Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia

Jeanette Leusen, PhD, Professor AntibodyTherapy, University Medical Center Utrecht

The study explores combining myeloid checkpoint blockade with IgA antibodies against CD19, CD20 or CD38 to enhance killing of acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). By recruiting macrophages and PMN and harnessing IgA's unique Fc receptor engagement, this strategy aims to improve tumor clearance. Preclinical results with anti-CD38 IgA2 and CD47 blockade show synergistic effects in vitro and in vivo, suggesting this combination may become a novel immunotherapeutic approach for more effective ALL treatment strategies.

09:30 Empowering Next-Gen Protein Design: A Multimodal Intelligence Platform for Advanced Immunotherapy

Christian Olsen, Vice President, Strategy - Protein Therapeutics, Biologics, Dotmatics Ltd.

Next-gen immunotherapies demand seamless integration of multimodal data—sequence, structure, assay, and biophysical insights. Traditional tools can’t keep pace. This talk introduces a new paradigm: a Multimodal Scientific Intelligence Platform built to unify antibody/protein workflows, enhance collaboration, and accelerate AI-ready discovery. Includes a case study from a major biopharma showing how multimodal workflows improve outcomes in multispecific antibody engineering.

10:00Coffee Break in the Exhibit Hall with Poster Viewing

VIRAL IMMUNOTHERAPIES AND CANCER VACCINES

10:45

KEYNOTE PRESENTATION: Reprogramming the Immune System by Multimodal Biological Immunotherapy for the Treatment of Solid Tumours

Paul Peter Tak, MD, PhD, FMedSci, President & CEO, Candel Therapeutics

Next-generation multimodal immunotherapies represent a new frontier in immuno-oncology and cutting-edge research in this field has recently come to fruition. Candel has established two off-the-shelf, clinical-stage investigational viral immunotherapies, designed to cause in situ immunisation against the unique antigens presented when tumour cells lyse. The patient and tumour-specific memory response after experimental treatment has been shown to produce a systemic and sustained anti-cancer effect across various solid tumours.

11:15

TROCEPT: A Novel Immuno-Virotherapy Platform for Tumour-Localised Expression of Potent Drugs via Intravenous Delivery

David Cole, Head of Research, Accession Therapeutics Inc.; Honorary Professor, Cardiff University

We have developed a novel tumour-selective immuno-virotherapy, TROCEPT, based on adenovirus serotype 5 (Ad5). TROCEPT has been engineered not to enter normal human tissues by disabling (de-targeting) all three of the major capsid proteins (fiber knob, hexon and penton). The removal of normal tissue tropisms addresses the main limitations of other intravenously delivered viral therapies, which are rapidly sequestered in the liver and other healthy tissues. TROCEPT has been further engineered to specifically bind to αvβ6 integrin (re-targeting), a tumour marker expressed at high frequency on most carcinomas. The TROCEPT platform can be armed with transgenes encoding potent protein-based therapeutic drugs for in-tumour expression.

11:45

XCR1+ Dendritic Cell (DC) Role in Anti-Tumoural Response to Anti PD-L1 Antibody: Data from the Phase Ib/II Trial of DC Vaccination in Small-Cell Lung-Cancer Patients

Maria Gonzalez Cao, PhD, Chair, Melanoma Medical Oncology Unit, Oncology Institute Dr. Rosell, Dexeus University Hospital

We report findings from the VENEZOLUNG trial, assessing autologous dendritic cell (DC) vaccination plus atezolizumab in ES-SCLC. Expansion of circulating XCR1+ DCs and CXCR5+PD-1+ CD8+ T cells correlated with improved survival, while reductions in Tpex and DC subsets predicted poorer outcomes. These results highlight the relevance of XCR1+ DCs in enhancing immunotherapy efficacy in SCLC. Final data will be presented at the meeting.

12:15 LUNCHEON PRESENTATION: Redesigning Antibody Discovery: How Modular DNA Synthesis Unlocks Smarter, Faster Engineering Workflows

David Weiss, Senior Director, Marketing & Product, Telesis Bio

Antibody engineering has evolved, but the DNA synthesis methods supporting it have not - until now. Gibson SOLA introduces a modular, enzymatic DNA synthesis platform that fundamentally shifts how researchers approach screening, optimization, and affinity maturation. This presentation will demonstrate how antibody engineers can improve productivity and reduce cost. By enabling rapid, on-demand synthesis of hundreds of antibody variants, Gibson SOLA eliminates the bottlenecks of outsourcing and empowers real-time iteration within your lab.

12:45Luncheon in the Exhibit Hall with Last Chance for Poster Viewing

CAR T ENGINEERING

13:55

Chairperson's Remarks

David Cole, Head of Research, Accession Therapeutics Inc.; Honorary Professor, Cardiff University

14:00

Blended Immunotherapies of CAR T Plus CAR Macrophages to Treat Cancer and Infection

Katrin Mestermann, PhD, Scientific Project Manager, Fraunhofer Institute for Cell Therapy & Immunology IZI

Both CAR-T and CAR-M have a great potential to eradicate malignant cells, however, convincing evidence in solid tumours is missing. Macrophages have an intrinsic potential to migrate into solid tumours, and, if kept in an anti-tumoural state, can re-shape the tumour micro-environment, enabling CAR-T to persist and remain active within a solid tumour. By combining the different properties of CAR-M and CAR-T, we thus hope to overcome the hurdles of conventional mono-immune therapy and make CAR immunotherapy effective in solid cancers.

14:30

From Design to Impact: A Comprehensive Comparison of VHH and scFv-based CAR Therapies

Reyisa Bughda, PhD, Senior Scientist I, Autolus Therapeutics

Single-domain antibodies (sdAb, VHH) offer advantages over single-chain variable fragments (scFv) in biophysical properties such as stability and aggregation propensity, making them a favoured antibody format for antigen recognition for chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells. We compared 10 affinity-matched VHH and scFv-CAR pairs targeting CD123, assessing differences in performance in vitro and in vivo. The VHH-CARs had an improved biophysical profile and sensitivity to low antigen density targets, with enhanced cytokine secretion compared to scFv-CARs. Following these findings, we propose a triple VHH-CAR strategy simultaneously targeting CD123, CLL-1, and CD33, addressing critical challenges in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) treatment.

ANTIBODY-FUSION PROTEIN

15:00

Local Substrate and Response to InC01, Compartment-Locked IL-12 in Glioma

Johannes vom Berg, PhD, CSO, InCephalo Therapeutics AG; Group Leader Immunotherapy, Lab Animal Science, University of Zurich

InCephalo’s compartment lock (C-Lock) toolbox allows to confine the activity of antibodies or antibody Fc-fragment fusion proteins to the brain. InC01 is a C-Locked IL-12-based biologic which InCephalo develops for local treatment of brain cancer. Preclinical data on the development and proof of concept in murine and human ex vivo models will be presented with a focus on local, intratumoural effector cells and a locally sustained anti-glioma immune response.

INTERACTIVE DISCUSSIONS

15:30Find Your Table and Meet Your Discussion Moderator

Interactive Breakout Discussions are informal, moderated discussions, allowing participants to exchange ideas and experiences and develop future collaborations around a focused topic. Each discussion will be led by a facilitator who keeps the discussion on track and the group engaged. To get the most out of this format, please come prepared to share examples from your work, be a part of a collective, problem-solving session, and participate in active idea sharing. Please visit the Interactive Breakout Discussions page on the conference website for a complete listing of topics and descriptions.

TABLE 5:

Dissecting Current Immunotherapy Approaches - Their Successes, Failures and Limitations in Solid Tumours

David Cole, Head of Research, Accession Therapeutics Inc.; Honorary Professor, Cardiff University

  • Tumor heterogeneity
  • Different resistance mechanisms
  • Immunosuppressive cell types, immunosuppressive factors
  • Immunosuppressive ligands
  • Large impenetrable tumor mass
  • Lack of nutrients, exclusion of immune cells
  • Hard to tip the equilibrium balance to immune control by overcoming tumour immune suppression
TABLE 6:

From Tumours to Tissues: Expanding the Scope of ADCs to Non-Oncology Indications

Obinna C. Ubah, PhD, Principal Scientist & Future Leaders Fellow (UKRI), Autoimmune Inflammatory Diseases Drug (Biologics) Discovery & Development, Elasmogen Ltd.

  • Innovative payloads and linker strategies for non-cytotoxic applications.
  • Target selection challenges (membrane-bound vs. soluble targets).
  • Efficacy, safety, and biodistribution outside the oncology paradigm.
  • Regulatory and translational considerations in non-oncology ADCs.

IMMUNOCYTOKINES AND IMMUNOCONJUGATES

16:05

Chairperson's Remarks

Johannes vom Berg, PhD, CSO, InCephalo Therapeutics AG; Group Leader Immunotherapy, Lab Animal Science, University of Zurich

16:10

Next-Generation of PD1-Based Immunoconjugates: Platform to Patients

Vijaya Pattabiraman, PhD, Co-Founder & CTO, Bright Peak Therapeutics

The talk would give an overview of Bright Peak PD1 based immunoconjugates pipeline with specific focus on the clinical program of PD1-IL18. We will share unique insights from technology used to construct PD1-IL18 based immunocytokines to preclinical characterisation of 'first-in-class' molecules and an overview of the clinical plans.

16:40

Preclinical Pharmacology and Translational Aspects of a Cis-Acting PD-1/IL-15 Mutein-Based Immunocytokine SOT201

Anna Jirovec, PhD, Scientist, SOTIO Biotech a.s.

SOT201 is a novel cis-acting immunocytokine consisting against PD-1 antibody fused to RLI-15 complex consisting of an attenuated human IL-15 mutein and the high-affinity binding site of the IL-15Ralpha, the sushi+ domain. SOT201 targets PD-1+ TILs with a balanced cytokine potency to revive exhausted T cells in tumours in comparison to PD1-IL-2v. SOT201 is currently being evaluated in Phase I clinical study VICTORIA-01 (NCT06163391) in metastatic advanced cancer patients.

17:10

Engineering Cell-Type Selective Immunotherapies via Cis-Targeting to Enhance Anti-Tumour Activity

Ivana Djuretic, PhD, Founder & CSO, Asher Biotherapeutics

Although cytokines activate many cell types, only a subset drives anti-tumor activity, while others may reduce efficacy or cause toxicity. This talk will present preclinical data showing that restricting IL-2 and IL-21 signaling to CD8+ T cells via cis-targeting can decouple anti-tumor effects from toxicity, expanding the therapeutic window. Clinical evidence of highly effective cis-targeting will also be discussed, including findings with etakafusp, a CD8-targeted IL-2 therapy.

17:40Close of Summit





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