NASDAQ:LTRN Lantern Pharma Q2 2024 Earnings Report $3.13 +0.26 (+9.06%) Closing price 05/29/2025 04:00 PM EasternExtended Trading$3.22 +0.09 (+2.72%) As of 05/29/2025 07:58 PM Eastern Extended trading is trading that happens on electronic markets outside of regular trading hours. This is a fair market value extended hours price provided by Polygon.io. Learn more. ProfileEarnings HistoryForecast Lantern Pharma EPS ResultsActual EPS-$0.46Consensus EPS -$0.55Beat/MissBeat by +$0.09One Year Ago EPS-$0.44Lantern Pharma Revenue ResultsActual RevenueN/AExpected RevenueN/ABeat/MissN/AYoY Revenue GrowthN/ALantern Pharma Announcement DetailsQuarterQ2 2024Date8/8/2024TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateThursday, August 8, 2024Conference Call Time4:30PM ETUpcoming EarningsLantern Pharma's Q2 2025 earnings is scheduled for Thursday, August 14, 2025, with a conference call scheduled on Thursday, August 7, 2025 at 4:30 PM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Conference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Lantern Pharma Q2 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrAugust 8, 2024 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 6 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good afternoon, and welcome to our Q2 2024 Earnings Call. As a reminder, this call is being recorded and all attendees are in a listen only mode. We will open the call for questions and answers after our management's presentation. A webcast replay of today's conference call will be available on our Web site at lanternpharma.com shortly after the call. We issued a press release after market closed today, summarizing our financial results and progress across the company for the Q2 ended June 30, 2024. Operator00:00:32A copy of this release is available through our website at lanternpharma. Com, where you will also find a link to the slides management will be referencing on today's call. We would like to remind everyone that remarks about future expectations, performance, estimates and prospects constitute forward looking statements for purposes of Safe Harbor provisions under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Lantern Pharma cautions that these forward looking statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results to differ materially from those anticipated. A number of factors could cause actual results to differ materially from those indicated by forward looking statements, including results of clinical trials and the impact of competition. Operator00:01:20Additional information concerning factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those in the forward looking statements can be found in our annual report on Form 10 ks for the year ended December 31, 2023, which is on file with the SEC and available on our website. Forward looking statements made on this conference call are as of today, August 8, 2024, and Lantern Pharma does not intend to update any of these forward looking statements to reflect events from circumstances that occur after today unless required by law. The webcast replay of the conference call and webinar will be available on Lantern's website. On today's webcast, we have Lantern Pharma CEO, Hana Sharma and members of management. Hana will start things off with introductions and an overview of Lantern's strategy and business model and highlight recent achievements in our operations, followed by discussions of our financial results and a discussion of the HARMONIC clinical trial results. Operator00:02:21I'd now like to turn the call over to Pana Sharma, President and CEO of Lantern Pharma. Pana, please go ahead. Speaker 100:02:30Good afternoon and thank you everyone for joining us to hear about our incredibly productive Q2 of 2024. Today on the call, I have our CFO, David Margrave and also our Head VP of Clinical Development, Doctor. Reggie Iwesudo. I'll begin the call by discussing generally the quarter and then hand it over to David to talk about the financials and then Reggie and I will discuss the progress with our LP300 clinical trial. As many of you have heard me say in the past, computational and AI driven approaches are increasing their presence and usage at both large and emerging pharma companies for all facets of drug discovery, chemistry, biology, even now manufacturing and patient selection. Speaker 100:03:19And at no time has this been more evident than today, where every facet of pharma development from molecular design to disease modeling is being rethought as a result of the widespread availability of computational capabilities, high quality data and improved automation. Our company's leadership in the innovative use of AI and machine learning to transform costs and timelines in the development of precision oncology therapies should yield significant returns for investors and patients as our industry matures and adopts an AI centric data first approach to drug development. Today, we have 3 active clinical trials with an additional ADC based preclinical program and a very active approach in identifying and validating combination approaches with our drugs. With our radar AI platform, which is at the forefront of cancer drug development, we expect more activity and opportunities where we can continue to use our AI as currency for collaborations, partnerships and co development opportunities. We also plan to continue driving the ongoing innovation in our portfolio of drug candidates and drug programs. Speaker 100:04:37This past quarter was a particularly busy one for Lantern and especially with our clinical operations team as we had a notable initial readout in our Phase 2 HARMONIC clinical trial where we saw preliminary, but interesting 86% clinical benefit rate in the lead in patient cohort. Our intellectual property also continues to grow globally and we were awarded a very important patent in Japan directed at our LP-two eighty four drug candidate, which is focused on the treatment of B cell cancers. So going back to our clinical trials, we have also dosed over 40 patients now in our LP-one hundred and eighty four and LP-two eighty four clinical trials. These are trials that are in Phase 1a and they have not yet seen any dose limiting toxicities or events, which we will discuss more in-depth later in the call. Our team has also achieved significant advancement towards a key milestone in the development of a molecular diagnostic for use with our drug candidate LP-one hundred Speaker 200:05:43and eighty Speaker 100:05:43four. We expect to potentially use this diagnostic to improve patient selection and stratification and the novel biomarker is PTGR1, one that we validated extensively both in the lab, but also in silico and was identified through a number of in silico AI driven screens. We also launched a very important strategic drug development collaboration using our AI platform Oregon Therapeutics to optimize the development of a 1st in class drug candidate XCE-eight fifty three, a potent inhibitor of cancer metabolism, which we believe can have impact across multiple cancers and has a unique mechanism of action involving proteotoxicity. With Starlight Therapeutics, our wholly owned subsidiary focused on CNS and brain cancers, we advanced towards initiating site selection and feasibility for a Phase Ib Phase II trial in recurrent GBM with drug candidate STAR-one. Our team also successfully launched Webinar Wednesdays, a webinar series focusing on the areas of artificial intelligence, oncology drug development and leveraging our relationships with leading physician scientists and our collaborators. Speaker 100:07:01We also closed the quarter with approximately $33,300,000 in cash, cash equivalents and marketable securities, which our CFO will talk about later in today's call. Many of the initial observations made with the help of Radar are now being witnessed in the clinic as many of you know. Radar has guided the rapid and efficient development of 3 AI guided drugs into clinical trials over the past several years at a pace and cost that has traditionally been unheard of in our industry. Let me walk you through some of the highlights from our AI powered pipeline, which is again currently in the clinic before I talk about other aspects of our business. Specifically, with LP-one hundred and eighty four, our team and many clinicians are particularly excited about and interested in these programs for 1st in human synthetically lethal drug candidates that are acylfullbenes, LP-one hundred and eighty four and LP-two eighty four. Speaker 100:08:00So far, 7 cohorts of patients comprised of dose levels 1 through 7 have been enrolled in escalating doses in the ongoing Phase 1a clinical trial for LP-one hundred and eighty four. This is a first in human Phase 1 trial across multiple solid tumor indications that are advanced and refractory to the existing standard of care. Very exciting for us is there have been no observed dose limiting toxicities to date. Now we're at the point now in the trial where we expect to reach a dosage level in the coming cohorts where therapeutic concentrations of the drug should be attainable based on our pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic analysis. It's a mouthful, but all that means is we should start potentially seeing benefit in patients at these cohorts going forward. Speaker 100:08:49The trial is actively enrolling patients across multiple U. S. Centers. These patients are relapsed, they're refractory to all existing standard of care typically and they have advanced solid tumors such as pancreatic cancer, glioblastoma, triple negative breast cancer and also now increasingly with solid tumor types focused on DNA damage response deficiencies. The company believes that enrollment should be complete this year and on track for an initial readout of safety and molecular correlation data by the close of the year. Speaker 100:09:23The dosage and safety data obtained in the Phase 1a trial for LP-one hundred and eighty four are expected to be used to advance the central nervous system indications for the Phase Ib and Phase II trial to be sponsored by Lantern's wholly owned subsidiary Starlight as well as other later phase trials in select tumors that have shown superior responsiveness to 184 and also meet our genomically guided criteria. AI and preclinical studies are also ongoing to further refine drug combination studies. Many of you saw the press release from yesterday and this press release supports at least tend to support the improvement to durability and response with other FDA approved drugs. Specifically, we published on PARP inhibitors earlier this quarter and yesterday in immune checkpoint inhibitors. These are 2 very exciting areas with the combination of our drug with these some of the existing approved agents, many of which are multibillion dollar drugs, actually we feel can benefit patients in certain solid tumors like triple negative breast cancer or others that have DNA repair deficiency. Speaker 100:10:29Globally, the aggregate annual market potential for LP-one hundred and eighty four's target indications, we believe is in excess of $10,000,000,000 to $12,000,000,000 consisting about $4,000,000,000 to $5,000,000,000 in CNS cancers and $7,000,000,000 to $8,000,000,000 for other solid tumors. For LP-two eighty four, the 3rd cohort of patients are being dosed and no dose limiting toxicities have been observed in this Phase 1a trial and we expect to open additional sites throughout the quarter with the potential to advance to Phase 1b and Phase 2 by the close of this year or early 2025. LP284 has shown nanomolar potency across multiple published in vitro and in vivo studies, including mantle cell, double hit and other non Hodgkin's lymphomas and especially those with DNA damage response deficiency. We published in cancers that had compromised functioning of ATM due to mutations or deletions. Now nearly all MCL double hits high grade B cell lymphoma patients relapse from the current standard of care agents and there's this urgent and unmet need for novel improved therapeutics for these patients. Speaker 100:11:42We believe the annual market potential in this group is in excess of $3,000,000,000 We've also begun a review of some notable mechanism of action that we've observed in LP284 and we think we can actually leverage those in other diseases and conditions. Lantern expects to review those preclinical studies and findings later this quarter. Our current enrollment efforts are focused on cancer patients with tumors that have what's called DNA damage repair deficiency. They've been observed to have higher sensitivity to 184 and even in some cases 284. So DDR genomic alterations are of interest for these trials and we may consider other genomic alterations based on other emerging data. Speaker 100:12:29We also continue to make significant progress in the launch of our clinical stage CNS and brain cancer focused subsidiary, Starlight Therapeutics. This is a company that has been largely developed as a result of big data because the billions of data points that we had in our system, we used AI methods to look at specific indications, validated those computationally, optimize our understanding and then took them into studies, wet lab studies with animals and mice and PDX models. And now we're actually at a point where we can start taking these indications into the clinic. Notably, we've also actually started site selection for the upcoming Phase Ib and Phase II trials, especially in recurrent IDH wild type high grade gliomas like GBM. This is very different than the most recent approval, which was an IDH mutant. Speaker 100:13:22So if you've not reviewed our webinar Wednesday on Starlight with Doctor. Mark Chamberlain, I would definitely urge you all to listen to the webinars where we provide a detailed timing and focus of the trials that we anticipate launching with Starlight. Now the golden age of AI in medicine is just beginning as witnessed even today by a discussion of today's merger among 2 big AI companies, Recursion in the U. S. And Exscientia in the U. Speaker 100:13:49K. And there's a need to really use large scale highly available computing power, massive data storage and the tremendous high def biology that's available today. And that is what we're at the forefront of. But we're also at Lantern's Way, we're harnessing those capabilities in a way we believe is much more efficient. We want to harness these capabilities in this emerging tech bio industry and be a long term leader, not only where we create massive value for patients and also continue to drive innovation, but we're also thoughtful about the economics of cancer drug development. Speaker 100:14:26It's one of the first reasons many of us joined this company is we wanted to not only make drugs faster, but we also wanted to make them smarter and cheaper. And Lantern is among the leaders in this transformation of the pace, the risk and the cost of oncology drug discovery and development. This transformation has a promise not only to make medicines faster, cheaper and with increased precision for patients, but also to help change the direction of R and D productivity and output in cancer in the cancer biopharma industry. Now let's turn to our focus to our financial updates and highlights. So David, I'll now turn the call over to our CFO, David Margrave, who'll provide an overview of our quarter's financial results. Speaker 100:15:07David? Speaker 300:15:08Thank you, Pana, and good afternoon, everyone. I'll now share some financial highlights from our Q2 ended June 30, 2024. We recorded a net loss of approximately $4,960,000 for the Q2 of 2024 or $0.46 per share compared to a net loss of approximately $4,750,000 or $0.44 per share for the Q2 of 2023. For the Q2 of 2024, our R and D expenses were approximately $3,900,000 up from approximately $3,600,000 for the Q2 of 2023. This increase was largely driven by an increase in clinical trial activity. Speaker 300:16:01Our general and administrative expenses for the Q2 of 2024 were approximately $1,500,000 down slightly from approximately $1,600,000 for the Q2 of 2023. The decrease was primarily attributable to decreases in payroll and compensation expense and decreases in insurance expenses. Our R and D expenses continue to exceed our G and A expenses by a strong margin, reflecting our focus on advancing our product candidates and pipeline. Our loss from operations in the Q2 of 2024 was partially offset by interest income and other income net totaling approximately $449,000 as compared to interest income and other income net totaling approximately $444,000 for the Q2 of 2023. Our cash position, which includes cash equivalents and marketable securities, was approximately $33,300,000 as of June 30, 2024. Speaker 300:17:13We anticipate this balance will provide us with a cash runway into at least Q3 of 2025. Importantly, we believe our solid financial position will fuel continued growth and evolution of our radar AI platform and continue the advancement of our portfolio of targeted oncology drug candidates. As of June 30, 2024, we had 10,758,805 shares of common outstanding, so about 10,750,000 shares of common stock outstanding. We had outstanding warrants to purchase 81,496 shares of common stock and outstanding options to purchase 1,063,548 shares of common stock. These warrants and options combined with our outstanding shares of common stock, give us a total fully diluted shares outstanding of approximately 11,900,000 shares as of June 30, 2024. Speaker 300:18:19Our team continues to be very productive under a hybrid operating model. We currently have approximately 22 employees and 4 FTE consultants focused primarily on leading and advancing our research and drug development efforts. We see this number expanding slightly in coming quarters as we add additional experienced and talented individuals to help advance our mission. I'll now turn the call over to Reggie for a review of initial Phase II patient results and future directions for our HARMONIC trial. Reggie? Speaker 200:18:55Thank you, David. I will start up by reviewing the study design for the HARMONY trial. There are 2 stages in the HARMONIC trial. The stage 1 is the safety leading and then the randomization and expansion stage of the study. It is worth noting at this point though that investigators are completely satisfied and aligned with this strategy because it aligns very well with current dosing intervals for the standard of care regimen as well as the disease evaluation intervals. Speaker 200:19:38I will spend the remaining of my time really going over the data. The safety lead in is now completed with a total of 7 patients enrolled and the preliminary data is the subject of my presentation in most of the subsequent slides. The study started with geographically dispersed sites in the United States with Doctor. Treat at Fox Chase as the global lead investigator. The number of sites have now been extended to the Asia Pacific region and includes renowned investigators like Doctor. Speaker 200:20:14Godo at the National Cancer Center Hospital in Tokyo as well as other experienced and reputable investigators both in Japan and Taiwan. The obvious need for this expansion of sites should be pretty obvious. This is due to the fact that relatively high prevalence of the patient population in that part of the world. So let me now present the clinical data as it relates to safety when LP300 is combined with the standard of care chemotherapy doublets. To summarize, the safety profile is in keeping with what is expected for the standard of care regimen. Speaker 200:20:59Overall, the events observed were primarily Grade 1 or 2 adverse events. Now most of these events seen in this presentation were attributable to a single patient who entered the study with multiple comorbidities. Of note, however, having completed at this stage of the program, there were no dose limiting toxicities, severe adverse events, or more importantly, new unexpected toxicities reported. And no patient has discontinued any of the treatment due to toxicity. Now this is key to a new regimen because it speaks to the tolerability of the triplet regimen. Speaker 200:21:46I will now hand over the presentation to Panhard, the CEO to review the key takeaways from the clinical data and I will join him as part of that presentation. Speaker 100:21:57Thanks, Rajiv. I want to review for everyone the key patient characteristics and our studies endpoints. And obviously, these will remain the same as we go now from the lead in to the expansion phase. The patients are all never smokers that have histopathological evidence of Stage 3 or 4 primary lung adenocarcinoma. They have to have TKI molecular alterations such as EGFR, MET exon 14, ROS1, BRAF, ALK and TRAC fusions and they have to have relapsed after 1 or more lines of therapy with those TKIs. Speaker 100:22:35So obviously these are identified TKIs, which we believe are in a small family of all the potential TKI mutations that can possibly occur. That's of important note because our drug we believe has effects on the TKI receptors. The study endpoints are progression free survival and overall survival and we'll give you a little discussion of what we've seen as benchmarks for those toward the end. And the secondary endpoints, which we have some of which today are objective response rate, duration of response and clinical benefit rate. And again, it's very surprising oftentimes that those who stop responding to those TKIs that are never smokers actually have very poor duration of response and after they go to chemo doublets, in fact, usually well under 5 6 months. Speaker 100:23:33So there is a very urgent need for targeting this population. Reg, do you want to talk a little bit about some of the patient highlights so far? Speaker 200:23:42Yes, absolutely. Maybe if we go on to the next slide. As required, one of what we do in clinical trials is to look at the data from different angles. The first thing we did here was to look at the spider plot, which goes over the preliminary data, but with the intent to really understand the attributes of the regimen. What you see on this slide or presentation is the onset of the clinical benefit. Speaker 200:24:15This is rapid and it will appear durable. Now this is key, so what we're expecting is from the regimen if a patient is treated within the first three cycles, if they're going to derive clinical benefit, that should be sustainable. And that's what we're beginning to observe. So we'll go on to the next slide. We'll look at the data from another perspective, which is the waterfall plant. Speaker 200:24:41Now it gives us the magnitude of the clinical benefit. And as you can see on this presentation, is quite impressive. The response is just after 3 cycles and this has been seen virtually for all the patients in this cohort. The emerging durability of the clinical benefit, however, is presented on the next slide, which is the SWIMR's plot. So again, you begin to get a sense from this presentation that the 86% disease control rate in this patient population with a 43% objective response rate, which includes 1 patient maintaining a 50% reduction in tumor size over 14 months. Speaker 200:25:25Clearly we are encouraged by these preliminary results. We shared the results with investigators. They all with that exception are very encouraged with what we're seeing here with this regimen. So I'll now go on to the next slide which talks about really the demographics of these patients and we want to pay particular attention to where we think we're seeing this benefit in the patients. We are closely monitoring the patients, but it is very clear from this that a couple of encouraging observations while accessing the demographics and specifics. Speaker 200:26:001, the patient population is relatively more heterogeneous that will be the case with typical studies in this space, which tend to be restricted to 1 driver mutation populations. To the tyrosine kinase receptor genomic alterations at baseline is other than EGFR or EGFR alone. So, there are 1 or 2 patients we co mutation at baseline. We know those patients don't tend to do well with EGFR than targeted therapies. But you will also notice that after 3 cycles, the tumor response is remarkably exaggerated at metabolic lesion sites, leading to complete disappearance or resolution to normalcy in size in the case of lymph nodes. Speaker 200:26:50Patients with low intermediate tumor mutational burden are driving clinical benefit, which is very exciting for us because we believe this will pave the way for a more acceptable and adaptable biomarker selection strategy, since this assessment is already part of routine clinical practice. My next slide relates to the prior lines of cancer treatment and the response we're observing so far. Looking at this data, the median number of prior lines of therapy is 2 with a range of 1 to 4. Notwithstanding, the preliminary efficacy data suggests that regardless of the number of prior lines of treatment or type of prior tyrosine kinase inhibitor treatment, LP300 when used in combination with standard of care regimen is likely to provide clinical benefit. Now it's important to point out that one of the patients in this cohort had already been exposed to caboplatin chemo doublet, but still derive remarkable and durable response. Speaker 200:27:56We strongly believe that based on the mechanism of action of LP300, what we are seeing here is what we've always come to know about the drug, which is that the drug is known to resensitize tumor cells to the effect of chemotherapy through a mechanism where it resets the results cycle. So this is very encouraging set of data for us. And again, all the investigators including Doctor. Treats that we share the data with are very excited and we look at this as being very promising. Next slide. Speaker 200:28:32So I will just review the top part of this slide and I will invite the CEO, Doctor. Panara to review the latter part of this slide. So to summarize, we have 7 patients that have been enrolled in the Stage 1 or the safety leading phase of the study. 6 out of 7 patients have derived clinical benefit. 3 of those are partial responders, which are really significant in magnitude of response, including very remarkable reduction in metastatic lesion sites with an average tumor size reduction of about 51%. Speaker 200:29:07There are 3 noticeable stabilities which have resulted in an average of about 13% tumor size reduction. But overall, with a clinical benefit rate of 86% and an overall response rate of 43% from this initial cohort, we believe that this is very promising. Notably from a safety perspective, there are no DLTs, no serious adverse events in excess of what we would expect from standard of care chemotherapy regimen, but more importantly, no new added toxicity to the doublet regimen, which tells us very clearly that after 3 cycles, this is a regimen that is very tolerable and most welcome in this space. I'll hand over to Panay to review the last part of the slide. Speaker 100:29:56Yes, thanks, Reggie. So obviously the key ongoing consideration is really the measuring for the durability of response going forward and that's going to be very important for us. We are considering we believe to file for a breakthrough therapy designation if we continue to see the types of trends that we're seeing, which again isn't just the clinical benefit rate, but also as Rejji pointed to that there's no increase in toxicity or adverse events, which is very important because oftentimes in this patient group, again, you're looking at some serious adverse events. And so far, we've been fortunate not to have that, but more importantly, we're not seeing any that are above the normal standard of care, which is critical. So we believe the types of clinical benefit coupled with the safety profile that we've observed to date, make us very excited to look at if these statistics continue to hold over the next few cycles to apply for breakthrough therapy designation. Speaker 100:31:06We've also observed, which is very important to note, this has been hypothesized early on and we're beginning to see some good data, is that tumor mutation burden or TMB levels that are measured as either low or intermediate are responsive to this therapy, triplet. And these are typically patients that are not responsive immunotherapies or checkpoint inhibitors. Usually high TNB or high PD L1 is associated with an improved response to PD L and PD L1. So all signs point to that we really need to accelerate the enrollment in this trial and we've begun sharing the observations to date with the sites and with our Asian colleagues and that we believe we'll be able to get to some significant enrollment over the next several months as the trial now goes into the expansion phase. Let's go to the next slide please. Speaker 200:32:05So let me conclude my part of the presentation. And to put the HARMONY trial in context, I think there are several studies you see on this slide pertaining to the impact or lack thereof of immunotherapy in the do not respond well to immunotherapy either when used alone or in combination with the standard of care of a Black Nouveau. However, the preliminary profile and activity we're seeing in this study will seem to suggest that this subgroup of patients who tend to have low or intermediate tumor mutational burden will potentially benefit from this Harmonic trial regimen. The study is currently enrolling in the randomization and expansion phase and as Panal pointed out, more data in the near future will further define and or validate the clinical activity that we've observed so far. Could we go on to the next slide, please? Speaker 200:33:15This just summarizes at a very high level the key highlights about LP300. There were previous studies, this laid down the scientific rationale for the current design where we saw very impressive improvement in clinical benefit in terms of survival, when we looked at never smokers versus smokers. So that's the scientific basis for using LP300 in combination with the current doublet standard of care. The mechanism of action are reflected on this slide, but one thing that is very fundamental in terms of the regimen which we are beginning to observe is that well over a 1,000 patients have been dosed with this drug either alone even in healthy volunteers or in combination with different chemotherapy regimens. So the safety profile is well established, no surprise from this study that we have currently and is welcomed by all the investigators as we have looked at the first cohort of patients from a safety and tolerability perspective. Speaker 200:34:17I just thought I should share with you all the comparative data, the historical benchmark for what we are talking about. The next phase of this study obviously is combining LP300 plus the permitrexate carboplatin doublet versus carboplatin permitrexate doublet. Now this is the benchmark when you look at overall response rate in these studies they're going anywhere from about 26% to probably on the very high end recently with the Mariposa II study about 36%. Right now with the data that we have sharing with this is the opinion of the investigators, we are clearly above what the historical data is and I think we can attest to that. But more importantly, as the data matures, we are keen on understanding the median duration of response as well as the PFS, which obviously is the primary endpoint of this study, co primary endpoint with survival. Speaker 200:35:15But all these studies either with IO agents or bispecifics as you look at this particular set of the standard of care regimen, right now, preliminary data obviously is looking better than what has been known in this space. So I will conclude by saying that the data that we have, the clinical data from a safety perspective is spot on, is on the standard of care regimen as expected and safety profile. And in terms of the preliminary and emerging clinical efficacy profile, I think we're encouraged by what we're seeing. So thank you. Speaker 100:35:56Well, Reggie, thank you. And thank you to our clinical colleagues and of course, patients for the 1st phase. Moving back to other aspects of our portfolio and people are very excited about Starlight. We've seen some really good movement this year in brain cancers, obviously initially in pediatric brain cancers with the results from day 1 pharmaceutical and now more recently with the result in IDH mutant gliomas. And so it's an exciting time. Speaker 100:36:29And I think as we've stated before, we want to further monetize Starlight, because Starlight is pointed at some very important and significant indications. We've now started site selection for the upcoming Phase 1b and 2 trials. We'll make several announcements in the coming months and the progress in those fronts and also on additional talent and leadership that we plan on leveraging at Starlight. For those who have not listened in on the backdrop of Starlight or on the details of the trials, we have some webinars that we invite you to listen to. Additionally, a major part of our business obviously is to inform, educate and share with the general public and investors and the oncology community, the details of our programs and our efforts. Speaker 100:37:14So last Wednesday of every month, we'll focus on our trials, our publications, our collaborations and on our AI developments. Our next webinar will be the end of this month, August 28, on Wednesday, where Reggie will dive deeper into some of the data and clinical readouts and that will be followed up with additional data from our AI platform in September and some insights about our efforts in immuno oncology with 184 in September. So all very, very relevant. We've also had additional publications highlighting the clinical value of our radar work. We had a great publication that showed the potential for LP-one hundred and eighty four to be synergistic with PARP inhibitors in a wide range of solid tumors. Speaker 100:38:03This was published at AACR Journals Cancer Research Communications. And again, this is in a wide range of solid tumors that are what's called HRD, homologous repair deficient. And this is a very under addressed large category that's generating billions in drug sales annually. The preclinical findings in the paper illustrate the potential of LP-one hundred and eighty four to be a pan HRD cancer therapeutic, which could be the 1st drug of this type in this class. So it's a really great observation and we believe help us establish a combination trial in this group of patients once we've established the MTD in the Phase Ia for LP-one hundred and eighty four. Speaker 100:38:45Also as we communicated yesterday, we have new data and scientific findings conducted in conjunction with doctors. Jiang Du and Phoebe Lin at MD Anderson and these were presented at the immuno oncology summit just yesterday by our colleague. And these findings showcase what Lantron believes to be the role of LP-one hundred and eighty four to be combined with checkpoint inhibitors to provide greater response in triple negative breast cancer due to the synergy, but also we believe because of a mechanism where LP-one hundred and eighty four can transform triple negative breast cancer tumors that are unresponsive or what's called cold to responsive or hot to checkpoint inhibitors. And we believe that it reshapes tumor microenvironment both through heightened T cell aggregation and also by decreasing M2 macrophages, both are really, really critical in heightening the potential for IO therapies to work. The poster can be found on our website under our poster section. Speaker 100:39:50Now 2024 has emerged to be a year of progress for us where we've accelerated ideas and AI driven insights now to the clinic. And these insights are now, not just good publications and great theory, but they're impacting patients in their journey to fight cancer and also influencing and develop the development decisions of other people in the cancer category. I think our collective efforts and dedication have fostered a transformational shift, not only for our company, but actually for groups of our industry and that's setting us in a very exciting trajectory where we can not only improve the lives of cancer patients, but also do it in ways that is more effective and more scalable. We believe that our business model will drive affordable, more personalized treatment options in cancer. Now with that, I'd like to now open the call to any questions or clarifications. Speaker 100:40:43If you'd like to ask a question, you can do so in 2 ways. One, you can raise your hand under the participant category. I think there's a hand raised already. And or you can also type it in and we can look at questions that way. So before we get into questions, I'd like to take a moment to personally thank our team for helping to prepare us for these calls and to gather all this. Speaker 100:41:09It takes a lot of work. So thank you for our team for taking time out of their normal day to day to help make this happen. So let's take some questions from our audience. I think our first question is from Keith at Chardan. Keith, please go ahead. Speaker 100:41:24I think you're muted, Keith. Okay, let's go on. Let's take a question from John. Speaker 400:41:31Hello. Am I coming through? Speaker 100:41:33Yes. Speaker 400:41:35Great. I thought I'd start with a question on just what kind of threshold you're looking for that shows LP300 merits a breakthrough candidacy status? Speaker 100:41:48I think if we see the current trajectory in the next, let's say, 12 to 20 patients plus we get some durability data, I think that would give us comfort level. But we'd have to see the totality of the data. 7 patients is a good start, but it's preliminary. We'd love to see 21 patients. If we had 14 patients out of 21, that would give us a lot get us pretty excited, 16 patients. Speaker 100:42:14I mean, but the overall clinical benefit rate of 86% is largely unheard of in this group. So we want to make sure that's durable. And so more patients drive the end number and then some durability of response, which I'm sure the FDA will want to look at for the for breakthrough. Speaker 400:42:32Okay. So about a 2 thirds clinical benefit rate is Speaker 300:42:36kind of what you'd be looking for? Speaker 100:42:38That's probably yes, that's kind of the guide. We'd have to take a look at the totality of the data. But yes, I mean metastatic lesion improvement, no safety issues, those all skew us towards some positive as well, right? Speaker 400:42:50And then looking at the safety profile that you've seen from the first 7 Harmonic patients and comparing it to some of the other NSCLC populations that were using EGFR TKIs and checkpoint inhibitors, kind of how does that safety profile compare to some of those other molecules out there or biologics out there? Speaker 100:43:15Well, I'll let our safety expert, Reggie, take that question on. Speaker 400:43:19Hi, Reggie. Speaker 200:43:20Hi, John. That's a very great question. I would just tell you off the bat, what is unheard of in this space is for patients to go on to about 9 weeks or 9 to 10 weeks of treatment with any kind of dosing interruption or discontinuation of the regimen. I mean, that is very common with the TKS in combination. You can look at the current the Mariposa II trial, example, which is the most recent with the bispecific combination with the TKI by the way for patients in the same population versus the same standard of care. Speaker 200:43:57It shouldn't surprise anybody in this field to know that certainly up to 80% of the patients discontinue treatment for one reason or the other because of toxicities and they had to interrupt treatment and a third or more of those patients literally discontinue treatments. So this again presenting this preliminary safety data with no new toxicity to these investigators was really exciting because for this length of time none of the patients have required those discontinuation for any of the certainly not LPD-three hundred. Okay, great. Speaker 400:44:32And just one more question on your collaborations. When you look at the Oregon Therapeutics and also Actuate and TTC, how will you determine if this is a success? I mean, what kind of milestones are you looking for kind of internally to show that these are kind of working and they're valuable? Speaker 100:44:50Yes. Each one is a little bit different. I'll take that question, Unique. I mean, Actuate has filed an S-one on and I think that the work our team did was definitely helpful for them in terms of understanding their patient population and developing some specific insights related to people who are refractory to PD-one therapy that would have potential to benefit from their drug orulagulisib? Yes. Speaker 100:45:20LRagulisib? It's a little hard to say. Yes, hard to say. But so we think it's we think that's on track to be successful because we've helped the company. And if they do go public and are able to raise additional capital, we definitely think it's because of the focus around understanding the patient profile. Speaker 100:45:40With regards to TTC, that's they came after. So that one, we're still working. We do have some very good ideas. TTC is out raising capital or looking for grant money for the next phase and but that one is not as well capitalized as Actuate has been, so they're slower. Oregon is the newest one and I already am pretty excited about what we're doing for Oregon and it's not it's barely 2 months old, so it's very early. Speaker 100:46:11But we have some very clear milestones in terms of developing some collaborative IP together that we can monetize, specifically helping them define combinations and define indications that they haven't thought of. So and I think we'll be able to accomplish that. Eventually, the IP has to be monetized for it to be success for everyone, but you got to have good strong valid ideas and do them inexpensively, which is part of the magic of AI. Speaker 300:46:38Yes. And just adding very quickly to that, John. In simple terms, I think it's a question of are we able to allow them to see things and do things that they wouldn't be able to do otherwise. And this goes beyond our collaborations in terms of radar and AI. And we're seeing just more and more evidence in these collaborations in other ways that's showing insights that wouldn't have arisen without that additional insight. Speaker 100:47:08Great. Speaker 400:47:08Thank you, guys. Appreciate it. Speaker 100:47:09Thank you. We will try Key again. I don't know if he's back on the line. Speaker 500:47:15You hear me now? Speaker 100:47:16Yes, we can hear you, Kee. Speaker 500:47:17Yes, it's Kee, it's Chardon. Appreciate all the detailed patient data. I guess the first question is, again with a huge caveat, this is small numbers, but the patient with the RET mutations had a nice response, not sure if they were retouchable suppuratamim or not, but was that a surprise to you based on your preclinical? Speaker 200:47:42Maybe I'll take that one. It wasn't really a surprise because again, if you maybe one of the highlights for LP300 and what we understand of the mechanism of action, one of the set of data we've been able to generate preclinically is understanding that the drug really binds to cysteine residues and of different Tyrosine Kinase Receptors, including RET. So seeing this kind of clinical data is very exciting to us. And that's why in the presentation I made sure to emphasize that it's not just a driver mutation of interest as you've seen other clinical trials in this space, but rather the protocol is designed to really capture any driver mutations for those patients that come in as far as they are never smokers. So this is very encouraging for us. Speaker 200:48:38It didn't come as a surprise. Speaker 500:48:40And then with respect to patient 1,000,000,002 who had progressive disease, Anything about their baseline that maybe might have predicted a less than favorable response there? Speaker 200:48:56This was the 1st patient enrolled in the trial. A lot of things going on with the protocol at that time, but this patient really accounted for most of the toxicities you've seen because of comorbidities. So the patient, one would say, wasn't an ideal patient for a clinical trial. Speaker 100:49:13Okay, great. Thanks. We have a question in the chat window that I'm going to go ahead and answer. I'll read it out for everyone. Can you please go deeper into checkpoint inhibitors and the market they currently garner specifically KEYTRUDA and why LP-one hundred and eighty four may be a great and synergistic partner? Speaker 100:49:36Good question. Now I'm not a KEYTRUDA rep or I'm not a Merck rep, but having done a lot of work for Merck in my prior career, I can tell you that the 57 patient trial that they had that got them on the map had remarkable results. The market today for checkpoint inhibitors, including KEYTRUDA is somewhere close to 40 $2,000,000,000 to $48,000,000,000 So it's a significant market. Now we all know that KEYTRUDA has some of these early stage PD L1s are coming off market and there's some new PD L1s already out or PD-1s. Coherus has one of those already out, I believe, that's a biosimilar. Speaker 100:50:25Pricing isn't great, but I've heard that the efficacy is very good. It's a clean biosimilar. So the market, I think, will remain fairly robust. Analysts project it will grow about 15% to 17% because there's a whole new wave of new checkpoint inhibitors. So it's a good market. Speaker 100:50:47Now we're not going after that whole market. What we're going after is we believe that there's even a larger group of patients that don't respond to checkpoint inhibitors that could benefit from them. And there's a whole group of people whose lives have been wonderfully prolonged, but their cancer is not cured. So they stop responding to checkpoint inhibitors and the tumor microenvironment reshapes itself. So that's where LP-one hundred and eighty four we believe can be a great and synergistic partner. Speaker 100:51:18The first one of course, we have some data on that we're excited about is in triple negative breast cancer. And triple negative breast cancer can be rapidly evolving in terms of its clonal evolution. So it's also part of the reason why it'd be good to go after. And so we think that TNBC would be a great initial target to get early an early win and then potentially go after other places where checkpoint inhibitors can be improved, which will be many of those tumors where you have complex tumor micro environments and you have rapid clonal evolution. And so that to me can be multiple, multiple 1,000,000,000 of dollars of potential over time. Speaker 100:52:03But the key is to pick 1 where we know that we could have a good effect and potential win and TNBC looks like one where we've seen synergy, we've demonstrated clinical evidence, we see 2 of the most important hallmarks. 1 is we're bringing and recruiting the right kind of T cell environment and we're also decreasing the number of M2 macrophages, both which have been very, very correlated with reducing response to immunotherapies. Thank you for that question, John. Take another question in the chat window that just popped up. Michael, is that right? Speaker 100:52:42Yes. Michael's question I'll read is, are you open to small pharma partnership opportunities? Well, Michael being a small pharma ourselves, yes, absolutely. Yes, we're a small biopharma that acts like a big pharma, but we are a small pharma. I mean, we're very so we're always looking for partnership opportunities and welcome me to send myself or members that you know in the company and an email and we'll get back to you quickly. Speaker 100:53:09I have time for one more question. I don't know if there's any more questions. There's one more question. So I'll go ahead and take this one. The question is given the market cap of the company, do you think Lantern is still relevant to be a major player in the industry? Speaker 100:53:29That's a great it's a good fundamental question as an investor, I think. So thank you for being involved. I think there's room for big companies and small and I always like to urge everyone that with the exception of a few handful of companies, every big company started small, except LabCorp, which started because of Roche and U. S. Labs, but very I mean, even Regeneron and Biogen. Speaker 100:53:53Now is that what we're going to be in the future? Who knows? But I do think that very likely that our approach and our drugs will be partnered, licensed and sold. That's what we're doing or we'll spin out the assets. So I think that we are very relevant to the industry and I've seen a lot of companies try to copycat our approach. Speaker 100:54:11A lot of companies are very interested. So I think we will be very relevant and I think you will see ups and downs in this industry just like every other industry. I like to remind people that even Amazon before it became the huge behemoth, not that we're going to become Amazon, saw 80% 90% reductions in stock price about 4 or 5 times during on their way up. So stock prices and everything, I think it's a huge indicator of how much of your cost of capital will be. But I think we're probably the cheapest company with a Phase 2 drug and 2 Phase 1 drugs that are 1st in class. Speaker 100:54:45So that does give me at times concerned and frustrated. But and we're not spending $60,000,000 to $80,000,000 a quarter like some other companies who are in the them differently. You can't say you're going to use You can't say you're going to use AI and then spend like Eli Lilly or Roche. So I think we can do things differently with AI, pick the right kind of very select focused bets and opportunities and try to develop those with a tremendous amount of operational efficiency. And so I think that will pay a lot of dividends to our investors, but also will allow us to be very relevant in the industry. Speaker 100:55:28And just adding to that very quickly, we are beginning to see some great momentum on multiple fronts. Speaker 300:55:35We talked a lot today about Harmonic, but there are some very exciting things going on with our other candidates as well and then radar in addition to that. So we're building some great momentum that we think will be value driving in multiple ways. Speaker 100:55:50Thank you. So in closing, I want to express my thanks and gratitude to our team, our partners, our stakeholders and those who are following the company for their support and interest. Together, I think we are really lighting the way toward a brighter future in oncology and solving real world problems for patients with proprietary AI solutions and insight. And we think we're going to radically alter the potential to change the cost structure and timelines in drug discovery. So thank you everyone for your time this afternoon. Speaker 100:56:23With that, I'd like to adjourn the call today. Thanks a lot. Thank you.Read morePowered by Key Takeaways Lantern’s AI-driven RADAR platform has advanced three clinical trials (LP-184, LP-284, LP-300) with over 40 patients dosed and no dose-limiting toxicities observed to date. In the Phase II HARMONIC trial of LP-300 plus chemotherapy, the lead-in cohort achieved an 86% clinical benefit rate and a 43% objective response rate with no new safety signals. Preclinical and early clinical data support combining LP-184 with PARP and checkpoint inhibitors to convert “cold” tumors into “hot” and enhance immunotherapy responses in solid tumors. Lantern ended Q2 with $33.3M in cash, funding R&D and providing a runway into at least Q3 2025 while maintaining a net loss of ~$5M driven by increased clinical activity. Strategic collaborations and spin-outs, including Oregon Therapeutics and Starlight Therapeutics for CNS indications, leverage Lantern’s AI insights to optimize drug development and partnerships. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallLantern Pharma Q2 202400:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2x Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) Lantern Pharma Earnings HeadlinesLantern Pharma Inc. (LTRN)’s LP-184 Shows 345% Survival Gain in Rare Pediatric Brain Tumor ModelsMay 30 at 12:17 AM | insidermonkey.comLantern Pharma's LP-184 Shows Promising In Vivo Activity in Atypical Teratoid Rhabdoid Tumors (ATRT) at SNO Pediatric Conference, Further Validating Rare Pediatric Disease Designation and Pathway to Clinical TrialsMay 29 at 8:30 AM | businesswire.comTrump wipes out trillions overnight…Is there anybody more powerful than Donald Trump right now? In a single tariff announcement, he wiped out nearly $5 trillion in wealth from the S&P 500 and $6.4 trillion from the Dow Jones… Not to mention the countless trillions of dollars lost in every market around the world… leaving the major political powers scrambling in fear of Trump’s next move.May 30, 2025 | Porter & Company (Ad)Brokers Set Expectations for Lantern Pharma FY2025 EarningsMay 24, 2025 | americanbankingnews.comZacks Small Cap Comments on Lantern Pharma Q2 EarningsMay 23, 2025 | americanbankingnews.comLTRN: First Quarter 2025 Financial ResultsMay 20, 2025 | finance.yahoo.comSee More Lantern Pharma Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Lantern Pharma? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Lantern Pharma and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Lantern PharmaLantern Pharma (NASDAQ:LTRN), a clinical stage biotechnology company, focuses on artificial intelligence, machine learning, and genomic data to streamline the drug development process. Its product pipeline comprises LP-300, which is in phase 2 clinical trial in combination therapy for never-smokers with non-small cell lung cancer adenocarcinoma; LP-184, which is in phase 1 clinical trial for the treatment of solid tumor, such as pancreatic, breast, bladder, and lung cancers, and glioblastoma and other central nervous system cancers; and LP-284, which is in phase 1 clinical trial for the treatment of non-Hodgkin's lymphomas, including mantle cell lymphoma and double hit lymphoma. The company develops STAR-001, which is in preclinical development for the treatment of glioblastoma, brain metastases, atypical teratoid rhabdoid tumors, and pediatric rare disease designation. In addition, it provides ADC program, an antibody drug conjugate therapeutic approach for cancer treatment. Further, the company's artificial intelligence platform RADR uses big data analytics and machine learning for combining molecular data. Lantern Pharma Inc. has a strategic AI-driven collaboration with Oregon Therapeutics to optimize the development of its first-in-class protein disulfide isomerase inhibitor drug candidate XCE853 in novel and targeted cancer indications. The company was incorporated in 2013 and is headquartered in Dallas, Texas.View Lantern Pharma ProfileRead more More Earnings Resources from MarketBeat Earnings Tools Today's Earnings Tomorrow's Earnings Next Week's Earnings Upcoming Earnings Calls Earnings Newsletter Earnings Call Transcripts Earnings Beats & Misses Corporate Guidance Earnings Screener Earnings By Country U.S. Earnings Reports Canadian Earnings Reports U.K. Earnings Reports Latest Articles CrowdStrike Stock Slips: Analyst Downgrades Before Earnings Bullish NVIDIA Market Set to Surge 50% Ahead of Q1 EarningsAdvance Auto Parts: Did Earnings Defuse Tariff Concerns?Booz Allen Hamilton Earnings: 3 Bullish Signals for BAH StockAdvance Auto Parts Jumps on Surprise Earnings BeatAlibaba's Earnings Just Changed Everything for the StockCisco Stock Eyes New Highs in 2025 on AI, Earnings, Upgrades Upcoming Earnings CrowdStrike (6/3/2025)Haleon (6/4/2025)Broadcom (6/5/2025)Oracle (6/10/2025)Adobe (6/12/2025)Accenture (6/20/2025)FedEx (6/24/2025)Micron Technology (6/25/2025)Paychex (6/25/2025)NIKE (6/26/2025) Get 30 Days of MarketBeat All Access for Free Sign up for MarketBeat All Access to gain access to MarketBeat's full suite of research tools. Start Your 30-Day Trial MarketBeat All Access Features Best-in-Class Portfolio Monitoring Get personalized stock ideas. Compare portfolio to indices. Check stock news, ratings, SEC filings, and more. Stock Ideas and Recommendations See daily stock ideas from top analysts. Receive short-term trading ideas from MarketBeat. Identify trending stocks on social media. Advanced Stock Screeners and Research Tools Use our seven stock screeners to find suitable stocks. Stay informed with MarketBeat's real-time news. Export data to Excel for personal analysis. Sign in to your free account to enjoy these benefits In-depth profiles and analysis for 20,000 public companies. Real-time analyst ratings, insider transactions, earnings data, and more. Our daily ratings and market update email newsletter. Sign in to your free account to enjoy all that MarketBeat has to offer. Sign In Create Account Your Email Address: Email Address Required Your Password: Password Required Log In or Sign in with Facebook Sign in with Google Forgot your password? Your Email Address: Please enter your email address. Please enter a valid email address Choose a Password: Please enter your password. Your password must be at least 8 characters long and contain at least 1 number, 1 letter, and 1 special character. Create My Account (Free) or Sign in with Facebook Sign in with Google By creating a free account, you agree to our terms of service. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
There are 6 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good afternoon, and welcome to our Q2 2024 Earnings Call. As a reminder, this call is being recorded and all attendees are in a listen only mode. We will open the call for questions and answers after our management's presentation. A webcast replay of today's conference call will be available on our Web site at lanternpharma.com shortly after the call. We issued a press release after market closed today, summarizing our financial results and progress across the company for the Q2 ended June 30, 2024. Operator00:00:32A copy of this release is available through our website at lanternpharma. Com, where you will also find a link to the slides management will be referencing on today's call. We would like to remind everyone that remarks about future expectations, performance, estimates and prospects constitute forward looking statements for purposes of Safe Harbor provisions under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Lantern Pharma cautions that these forward looking statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results to differ materially from those anticipated. A number of factors could cause actual results to differ materially from those indicated by forward looking statements, including results of clinical trials and the impact of competition. Operator00:01:20Additional information concerning factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those in the forward looking statements can be found in our annual report on Form 10 ks for the year ended December 31, 2023, which is on file with the SEC and available on our website. Forward looking statements made on this conference call are as of today, August 8, 2024, and Lantern Pharma does not intend to update any of these forward looking statements to reflect events from circumstances that occur after today unless required by law. The webcast replay of the conference call and webinar will be available on Lantern's website. On today's webcast, we have Lantern Pharma CEO, Hana Sharma and members of management. Hana will start things off with introductions and an overview of Lantern's strategy and business model and highlight recent achievements in our operations, followed by discussions of our financial results and a discussion of the HARMONIC clinical trial results. Operator00:02:21I'd now like to turn the call over to Pana Sharma, President and CEO of Lantern Pharma. Pana, please go ahead. Speaker 100:02:30Good afternoon and thank you everyone for joining us to hear about our incredibly productive Q2 of 2024. Today on the call, I have our CFO, David Margrave and also our Head VP of Clinical Development, Doctor. Reggie Iwesudo. I'll begin the call by discussing generally the quarter and then hand it over to David to talk about the financials and then Reggie and I will discuss the progress with our LP300 clinical trial. As many of you have heard me say in the past, computational and AI driven approaches are increasing their presence and usage at both large and emerging pharma companies for all facets of drug discovery, chemistry, biology, even now manufacturing and patient selection. Speaker 100:03:19And at no time has this been more evident than today, where every facet of pharma development from molecular design to disease modeling is being rethought as a result of the widespread availability of computational capabilities, high quality data and improved automation. Our company's leadership in the innovative use of AI and machine learning to transform costs and timelines in the development of precision oncology therapies should yield significant returns for investors and patients as our industry matures and adopts an AI centric data first approach to drug development. Today, we have 3 active clinical trials with an additional ADC based preclinical program and a very active approach in identifying and validating combination approaches with our drugs. With our radar AI platform, which is at the forefront of cancer drug development, we expect more activity and opportunities where we can continue to use our AI as currency for collaborations, partnerships and co development opportunities. We also plan to continue driving the ongoing innovation in our portfolio of drug candidates and drug programs. Speaker 100:04:37This past quarter was a particularly busy one for Lantern and especially with our clinical operations team as we had a notable initial readout in our Phase 2 HARMONIC clinical trial where we saw preliminary, but interesting 86% clinical benefit rate in the lead in patient cohort. Our intellectual property also continues to grow globally and we were awarded a very important patent in Japan directed at our LP-two eighty four drug candidate, which is focused on the treatment of B cell cancers. So going back to our clinical trials, we have also dosed over 40 patients now in our LP-one hundred and eighty four and LP-two eighty four clinical trials. These are trials that are in Phase 1a and they have not yet seen any dose limiting toxicities or events, which we will discuss more in-depth later in the call. Our team has also achieved significant advancement towards a key milestone in the development of a molecular diagnostic for use with our drug candidate LP-one hundred Speaker 200:05:43and eighty Speaker 100:05:43four. We expect to potentially use this diagnostic to improve patient selection and stratification and the novel biomarker is PTGR1, one that we validated extensively both in the lab, but also in silico and was identified through a number of in silico AI driven screens. We also launched a very important strategic drug development collaboration using our AI platform Oregon Therapeutics to optimize the development of a 1st in class drug candidate XCE-eight fifty three, a potent inhibitor of cancer metabolism, which we believe can have impact across multiple cancers and has a unique mechanism of action involving proteotoxicity. With Starlight Therapeutics, our wholly owned subsidiary focused on CNS and brain cancers, we advanced towards initiating site selection and feasibility for a Phase Ib Phase II trial in recurrent GBM with drug candidate STAR-one. Our team also successfully launched Webinar Wednesdays, a webinar series focusing on the areas of artificial intelligence, oncology drug development and leveraging our relationships with leading physician scientists and our collaborators. Speaker 100:07:01We also closed the quarter with approximately $33,300,000 in cash, cash equivalents and marketable securities, which our CFO will talk about later in today's call. Many of the initial observations made with the help of Radar are now being witnessed in the clinic as many of you know. Radar has guided the rapid and efficient development of 3 AI guided drugs into clinical trials over the past several years at a pace and cost that has traditionally been unheard of in our industry. Let me walk you through some of the highlights from our AI powered pipeline, which is again currently in the clinic before I talk about other aspects of our business. Specifically, with LP-one hundred and eighty four, our team and many clinicians are particularly excited about and interested in these programs for 1st in human synthetically lethal drug candidates that are acylfullbenes, LP-one hundred and eighty four and LP-two eighty four. Speaker 100:08:00So far, 7 cohorts of patients comprised of dose levels 1 through 7 have been enrolled in escalating doses in the ongoing Phase 1a clinical trial for LP-one hundred and eighty four. This is a first in human Phase 1 trial across multiple solid tumor indications that are advanced and refractory to the existing standard of care. Very exciting for us is there have been no observed dose limiting toxicities to date. Now we're at the point now in the trial where we expect to reach a dosage level in the coming cohorts where therapeutic concentrations of the drug should be attainable based on our pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic analysis. It's a mouthful, but all that means is we should start potentially seeing benefit in patients at these cohorts going forward. Speaker 100:08:49The trial is actively enrolling patients across multiple U. S. Centers. These patients are relapsed, they're refractory to all existing standard of care typically and they have advanced solid tumors such as pancreatic cancer, glioblastoma, triple negative breast cancer and also now increasingly with solid tumor types focused on DNA damage response deficiencies. The company believes that enrollment should be complete this year and on track for an initial readout of safety and molecular correlation data by the close of the year. Speaker 100:09:23The dosage and safety data obtained in the Phase 1a trial for LP-one hundred and eighty four are expected to be used to advance the central nervous system indications for the Phase Ib and Phase II trial to be sponsored by Lantern's wholly owned subsidiary Starlight as well as other later phase trials in select tumors that have shown superior responsiveness to 184 and also meet our genomically guided criteria. AI and preclinical studies are also ongoing to further refine drug combination studies. Many of you saw the press release from yesterday and this press release supports at least tend to support the improvement to durability and response with other FDA approved drugs. Specifically, we published on PARP inhibitors earlier this quarter and yesterday in immune checkpoint inhibitors. These are 2 very exciting areas with the combination of our drug with these some of the existing approved agents, many of which are multibillion dollar drugs, actually we feel can benefit patients in certain solid tumors like triple negative breast cancer or others that have DNA repair deficiency. Speaker 100:10:29Globally, the aggregate annual market potential for LP-one hundred and eighty four's target indications, we believe is in excess of $10,000,000,000 to $12,000,000,000 consisting about $4,000,000,000 to $5,000,000,000 in CNS cancers and $7,000,000,000 to $8,000,000,000 for other solid tumors. For LP-two eighty four, the 3rd cohort of patients are being dosed and no dose limiting toxicities have been observed in this Phase 1a trial and we expect to open additional sites throughout the quarter with the potential to advance to Phase 1b and Phase 2 by the close of this year or early 2025. LP284 has shown nanomolar potency across multiple published in vitro and in vivo studies, including mantle cell, double hit and other non Hodgkin's lymphomas and especially those with DNA damage response deficiency. We published in cancers that had compromised functioning of ATM due to mutations or deletions. Now nearly all MCL double hits high grade B cell lymphoma patients relapse from the current standard of care agents and there's this urgent and unmet need for novel improved therapeutics for these patients. Speaker 100:11:42We believe the annual market potential in this group is in excess of $3,000,000,000 We've also begun a review of some notable mechanism of action that we've observed in LP284 and we think we can actually leverage those in other diseases and conditions. Lantern expects to review those preclinical studies and findings later this quarter. Our current enrollment efforts are focused on cancer patients with tumors that have what's called DNA damage repair deficiency. They've been observed to have higher sensitivity to 184 and even in some cases 284. So DDR genomic alterations are of interest for these trials and we may consider other genomic alterations based on other emerging data. Speaker 100:12:29We also continue to make significant progress in the launch of our clinical stage CNS and brain cancer focused subsidiary, Starlight Therapeutics. This is a company that has been largely developed as a result of big data because the billions of data points that we had in our system, we used AI methods to look at specific indications, validated those computationally, optimize our understanding and then took them into studies, wet lab studies with animals and mice and PDX models. And now we're actually at a point where we can start taking these indications into the clinic. Notably, we've also actually started site selection for the upcoming Phase Ib and Phase II trials, especially in recurrent IDH wild type high grade gliomas like GBM. This is very different than the most recent approval, which was an IDH mutant. Speaker 100:13:22So if you've not reviewed our webinar Wednesday on Starlight with Doctor. Mark Chamberlain, I would definitely urge you all to listen to the webinars where we provide a detailed timing and focus of the trials that we anticipate launching with Starlight. Now the golden age of AI in medicine is just beginning as witnessed even today by a discussion of today's merger among 2 big AI companies, Recursion in the U. S. And Exscientia in the U. Speaker 100:13:49K. And there's a need to really use large scale highly available computing power, massive data storage and the tremendous high def biology that's available today. And that is what we're at the forefront of. But we're also at Lantern's Way, we're harnessing those capabilities in a way we believe is much more efficient. We want to harness these capabilities in this emerging tech bio industry and be a long term leader, not only where we create massive value for patients and also continue to drive innovation, but we're also thoughtful about the economics of cancer drug development. Speaker 100:14:26It's one of the first reasons many of us joined this company is we wanted to not only make drugs faster, but we also wanted to make them smarter and cheaper. And Lantern is among the leaders in this transformation of the pace, the risk and the cost of oncology drug discovery and development. This transformation has a promise not only to make medicines faster, cheaper and with increased precision for patients, but also to help change the direction of R and D productivity and output in cancer in the cancer biopharma industry. Now let's turn to our focus to our financial updates and highlights. So David, I'll now turn the call over to our CFO, David Margrave, who'll provide an overview of our quarter's financial results. Speaker 100:15:07David? Speaker 300:15:08Thank you, Pana, and good afternoon, everyone. I'll now share some financial highlights from our Q2 ended June 30, 2024. We recorded a net loss of approximately $4,960,000 for the Q2 of 2024 or $0.46 per share compared to a net loss of approximately $4,750,000 or $0.44 per share for the Q2 of 2023. For the Q2 of 2024, our R and D expenses were approximately $3,900,000 up from approximately $3,600,000 for the Q2 of 2023. This increase was largely driven by an increase in clinical trial activity. Speaker 300:16:01Our general and administrative expenses for the Q2 of 2024 were approximately $1,500,000 down slightly from approximately $1,600,000 for the Q2 of 2023. The decrease was primarily attributable to decreases in payroll and compensation expense and decreases in insurance expenses. Our R and D expenses continue to exceed our G and A expenses by a strong margin, reflecting our focus on advancing our product candidates and pipeline. Our loss from operations in the Q2 of 2024 was partially offset by interest income and other income net totaling approximately $449,000 as compared to interest income and other income net totaling approximately $444,000 for the Q2 of 2023. Our cash position, which includes cash equivalents and marketable securities, was approximately $33,300,000 as of June 30, 2024. Speaker 300:17:13We anticipate this balance will provide us with a cash runway into at least Q3 of 2025. Importantly, we believe our solid financial position will fuel continued growth and evolution of our radar AI platform and continue the advancement of our portfolio of targeted oncology drug candidates. As of June 30, 2024, we had 10,758,805 shares of common outstanding, so about 10,750,000 shares of common stock outstanding. We had outstanding warrants to purchase 81,496 shares of common stock and outstanding options to purchase 1,063,548 shares of common stock. These warrants and options combined with our outstanding shares of common stock, give us a total fully diluted shares outstanding of approximately 11,900,000 shares as of June 30, 2024. Speaker 300:18:19Our team continues to be very productive under a hybrid operating model. We currently have approximately 22 employees and 4 FTE consultants focused primarily on leading and advancing our research and drug development efforts. We see this number expanding slightly in coming quarters as we add additional experienced and talented individuals to help advance our mission. I'll now turn the call over to Reggie for a review of initial Phase II patient results and future directions for our HARMONIC trial. Reggie? Speaker 200:18:55Thank you, David. I will start up by reviewing the study design for the HARMONY trial. There are 2 stages in the HARMONIC trial. The stage 1 is the safety leading and then the randomization and expansion stage of the study. It is worth noting at this point though that investigators are completely satisfied and aligned with this strategy because it aligns very well with current dosing intervals for the standard of care regimen as well as the disease evaluation intervals. Speaker 200:19:38I will spend the remaining of my time really going over the data. The safety lead in is now completed with a total of 7 patients enrolled and the preliminary data is the subject of my presentation in most of the subsequent slides. The study started with geographically dispersed sites in the United States with Doctor. Treat at Fox Chase as the global lead investigator. The number of sites have now been extended to the Asia Pacific region and includes renowned investigators like Doctor. Speaker 200:20:14Godo at the National Cancer Center Hospital in Tokyo as well as other experienced and reputable investigators both in Japan and Taiwan. The obvious need for this expansion of sites should be pretty obvious. This is due to the fact that relatively high prevalence of the patient population in that part of the world. So let me now present the clinical data as it relates to safety when LP300 is combined with the standard of care chemotherapy doublets. To summarize, the safety profile is in keeping with what is expected for the standard of care regimen. Speaker 200:20:59Overall, the events observed were primarily Grade 1 or 2 adverse events. Now most of these events seen in this presentation were attributable to a single patient who entered the study with multiple comorbidities. Of note, however, having completed at this stage of the program, there were no dose limiting toxicities, severe adverse events, or more importantly, new unexpected toxicities reported. And no patient has discontinued any of the treatment due to toxicity. Now this is key to a new regimen because it speaks to the tolerability of the triplet regimen. Speaker 200:21:46I will now hand over the presentation to Panhard, the CEO to review the key takeaways from the clinical data and I will join him as part of that presentation. Speaker 100:21:57Thanks, Rajiv. I want to review for everyone the key patient characteristics and our studies endpoints. And obviously, these will remain the same as we go now from the lead in to the expansion phase. The patients are all never smokers that have histopathological evidence of Stage 3 or 4 primary lung adenocarcinoma. They have to have TKI molecular alterations such as EGFR, MET exon 14, ROS1, BRAF, ALK and TRAC fusions and they have to have relapsed after 1 or more lines of therapy with those TKIs. Speaker 100:22:35So obviously these are identified TKIs, which we believe are in a small family of all the potential TKI mutations that can possibly occur. That's of important note because our drug we believe has effects on the TKI receptors. The study endpoints are progression free survival and overall survival and we'll give you a little discussion of what we've seen as benchmarks for those toward the end. And the secondary endpoints, which we have some of which today are objective response rate, duration of response and clinical benefit rate. And again, it's very surprising oftentimes that those who stop responding to those TKIs that are never smokers actually have very poor duration of response and after they go to chemo doublets, in fact, usually well under 5 6 months. Speaker 100:23:33So there is a very urgent need for targeting this population. Reg, do you want to talk a little bit about some of the patient highlights so far? Speaker 200:23:42Yes, absolutely. Maybe if we go on to the next slide. As required, one of what we do in clinical trials is to look at the data from different angles. The first thing we did here was to look at the spider plot, which goes over the preliminary data, but with the intent to really understand the attributes of the regimen. What you see on this slide or presentation is the onset of the clinical benefit. Speaker 200:24:15This is rapid and it will appear durable. Now this is key, so what we're expecting is from the regimen if a patient is treated within the first three cycles, if they're going to derive clinical benefit, that should be sustainable. And that's what we're beginning to observe. So we'll go on to the next slide. We'll look at the data from another perspective, which is the waterfall plant. Speaker 200:24:41Now it gives us the magnitude of the clinical benefit. And as you can see on this presentation, is quite impressive. The response is just after 3 cycles and this has been seen virtually for all the patients in this cohort. The emerging durability of the clinical benefit, however, is presented on the next slide, which is the SWIMR's plot. So again, you begin to get a sense from this presentation that the 86% disease control rate in this patient population with a 43% objective response rate, which includes 1 patient maintaining a 50% reduction in tumor size over 14 months. Speaker 200:25:25Clearly we are encouraged by these preliminary results. We shared the results with investigators. They all with that exception are very encouraged with what we're seeing here with this regimen. So I'll now go on to the next slide which talks about really the demographics of these patients and we want to pay particular attention to where we think we're seeing this benefit in the patients. We are closely monitoring the patients, but it is very clear from this that a couple of encouraging observations while accessing the demographics and specifics. Speaker 200:26:001, the patient population is relatively more heterogeneous that will be the case with typical studies in this space, which tend to be restricted to 1 driver mutation populations. To the tyrosine kinase receptor genomic alterations at baseline is other than EGFR or EGFR alone. So, there are 1 or 2 patients we co mutation at baseline. We know those patients don't tend to do well with EGFR than targeted therapies. But you will also notice that after 3 cycles, the tumor response is remarkably exaggerated at metabolic lesion sites, leading to complete disappearance or resolution to normalcy in size in the case of lymph nodes. Speaker 200:26:50Patients with low intermediate tumor mutational burden are driving clinical benefit, which is very exciting for us because we believe this will pave the way for a more acceptable and adaptable biomarker selection strategy, since this assessment is already part of routine clinical practice. My next slide relates to the prior lines of cancer treatment and the response we're observing so far. Looking at this data, the median number of prior lines of therapy is 2 with a range of 1 to 4. Notwithstanding, the preliminary efficacy data suggests that regardless of the number of prior lines of treatment or type of prior tyrosine kinase inhibitor treatment, LP300 when used in combination with standard of care regimen is likely to provide clinical benefit. Now it's important to point out that one of the patients in this cohort had already been exposed to caboplatin chemo doublet, but still derive remarkable and durable response. Speaker 200:27:56We strongly believe that based on the mechanism of action of LP300, what we are seeing here is what we've always come to know about the drug, which is that the drug is known to resensitize tumor cells to the effect of chemotherapy through a mechanism where it resets the results cycle. So this is very encouraging set of data for us. And again, all the investigators including Doctor. Treats that we share the data with are very excited and we look at this as being very promising. Next slide. Speaker 200:28:32So I will just review the top part of this slide and I will invite the CEO, Doctor. Panara to review the latter part of this slide. So to summarize, we have 7 patients that have been enrolled in the Stage 1 or the safety leading phase of the study. 6 out of 7 patients have derived clinical benefit. 3 of those are partial responders, which are really significant in magnitude of response, including very remarkable reduction in metastatic lesion sites with an average tumor size reduction of about 51%. Speaker 200:29:07There are 3 noticeable stabilities which have resulted in an average of about 13% tumor size reduction. But overall, with a clinical benefit rate of 86% and an overall response rate of 43% from this initial cohort, we believe that this is very promising. Notably from a safety perspective, there are no DLTs, no serious adverse events in excess of what we would expect from standard of care chemotherapy regimen, but more importantly, no new added toxicity to the doublet regimen, which tells us very clearly that after 3 cycles, this is a regimen that is very tolerable and most welcome in this space. I'll hand over to Panay to review the last part of the slide. Speaker 100:29:56Yes, thanks, Reggie. So obviously the key ongoing consideration is really the measuring for the durability of response going forward and that's going to be very important for us. We are considering we believe to file for a breakthrough therapy designation if we continue to see the types of trends that we're seeing, which again isn't just the clinical benefit rate, but also as Rejji pointed to that there's no increase in toxicity or adverse events, which is very important because oftentimes in this patient group, again, you're looking at some serious adverse events. And so far, we've been fortunate not to have that, but more importantly, we're not seeing any that are above the normal standard of care, which is critical. So we believe the types of clinical benefit coupled with the safety profile that we've observed to date, make us very excited to look at if these statistics continue to hold over the next few cycles to apply for breakthrough therapy designation. Speaker 100:31:06We've also observed, which is very important to note, this has been hypothesized early on and we're beginning to see some good data, is that tumor mutation burden or TMB levels that are measured as either low or intermediate are responsive to this therapy, triplet. And these are typically patients that are not responsive immunotherapies or checkpoint inhibitors. Usually high TNB or high PD L1 is associated with an improved response to PD L and PD L1. So all signs point to that we really need to accelerate the enrollment in this trial and we've begun sharing the observations to date with the sites and with our Asian colleagues and that we believe we'll be able to get to some significant enrollment over the next several months as the trial now goes into the expansion phase. Let's go to the next slide please. Speaker 200:32:05So let me conclude my part of the presentation. And to put the HARMONY trial in context, I think there are several studies you see on this slide pertaining to the impact or lack thereof of immunotherapy in the do not respond well to immunotherapy either when used alone or in combination with the standard of care of a Black Nouveau. However, the preliminary profile and activity we're seeing in this study will seem to suggest that this subgroup of patients who tend to have low or intermediate tumor mutational burden will potentially benefit from this Harmonic trial regimen. The study is currently enrolling in the randomization and expansion phase and as Panal pointed out, more data in the near future will further define and or validate the clinical activity that we've observed so far. Could we go on to the next slide, please? Speaker 200:33:15This just summarizes at a very high level the key highlights about LP300. There were previous studies, this laid down the scientific rationale for the current design where we saw very impressive improvement in clinical benefit in terms of survival, when we looked at never smokers versus smokers. So that's the scientific basis for using LP300 in combination with the current doublet standard of care. The mechanism of action are reflected on this slide, but one thing that is very fundamental in terms of the regimen which we are beginning to observe is that well over a 1,000 patients have been dosed with this drug either alone even in healthy volunteers or in combination with different chemotherapy regimens. So the safety profile is well established, no surprise from this study that we have currently and is welcomed by all the investigators as we have looked at the first cohort of patients from a safety and tolerability perspective. Speaker 200:34:17I just thought I should share with you all the comparative data, the historical benchmark for what we are talking about. The next phase of this study obviously is combining LP300 plus the permitrexate carboplatin doublet versus carboplatin permitrexate doublet. Now this is the benchmark when you look at overall response rate in these studies they're going anywhere from about 26% to probably on the very high end recently with the Mariposa II study about 36%. Right now with the data that we have sharing with this is the opinion of the investigators, we are clearly above what the historical data is and I think we can attest to that. But more importantly, as the data matures, we are keen on understanding the median duration of response as well as the PFS, which obviously is the primary endpoint of this study, co primary endpoint with survival. Speaker 200:35:15But all these studies either with IO agents or bispecifics as you look at this particular set of the standard of care regimen, right now, preliminary data obviously is looking better than what has been known in this space. So I will conclude by saying that the data that we have, the clinical data from a safety perspective is spot on, is on the standard of care regimen as expected and safety profile. And in terms of the preliminary and emerging clinical efficacy profile, I think we're encouraged by what we're seeing. So thank you. Speaker 100:35:56Well, Reggie, thank you. And thank you to our clinical colleagues and of course, patients for the 1st phase. Moving back to other aspects of our portfolio and people are very excited about Starlight. We've seen some really good movement this year in brain cancers, obviously initially in pediatric brain cancers with the results from day 1 pharmaceutical and now more recently with the result in IDH mutant gliomas. And so it's an exciting time. Speaker 100:36:29And I think as we've stated before, we want to further monetize Starlight, because Starlight is pointed at some very important and significant indications. We've now started site selection for the upcoming Phase 1b and 2 trials. We'll make several announcements in the coming months and the progress in those fronts and also on additional talent and leadership that we plan on leveraging at Starlight. For those who have not listened in on the backdrop of Starlight or on the details of the trials, we have some webinars that we invite you to listen to. Additionally, a major part of our business obviously is to inform, educate and share with the general public and investors and the oncology community, the details of our programs and our efforts. Speaker 100:37:14So last Wednesday of every month, we'll focus on our trials, our publications, our collaborations and on our AI developments. Our next webinar will be the end of this month, August 28, on Wednesday, where Reggie will dive deeper into some of the data and clinical readouts and that will be followed up with additional data from our AI platform in September and some insights about our efforts in immuno oncology with 184 in September. So all very, very relevant. We've also had additional publications highlighting the clinical value of our radar work. We had a great publication that showed the potential for LP-one hundred and eighty four to be synergistic with PARP inhibitors in a wide range of solid tumors. Speaker 100:38:03This was published at AACR Journals Cancer Research Communications. And again, this is in a wide range of solid tumors that are what's called HRD, homologous repair deficient. And this is a very under addressed large category that's generating billions in drug sales annually. The preclinical findings in the paper illustrate the potential of LP-one hundred and eighty four to be a pan HRD cancer therapeutic, which could be the 1st drug of this type in this class. So it's a really great observation and we believe help us establish a combination trial in this group of patients once we've established the MTD in the Phase Ia for LP-one hundred and eighty four. Speaker 100:38:45Also as we communicated yesterday, we have new data and scientific findings conducted in conjunction with doctors. Jiang Du and Phoebe Lin at MD Anderson and these were presented at the immuno oncology summit just yesterday by our colleague. And these findings showcase what Lantron believes to be the role of LP-one hundred and eighty four to be combined with checkpoint inhibitors to provide greater response in triple negative breast cancer due to the synergy, but also we believe because of a mechanism where LP-one hundred and eighty four can transform triple negative breast cancer tumors that are unresponsive or what's called cold to responsive or hot to checkpoint inhibitors. And we believe that it reshapes tumor microenvironment both through heightened T cell aggregation and also by decreasing M2 macrophages, both are really, really critical in heightening the potential for IO therapies to work. The poster can be found on our website under our poster section. Speaker 100:39:50Now 2024 has emerged to be a year of progress for us where we've accelerated ideas and AI driven insights now to the clinic. And these insights are now, not just good publications and great theory, but they're impacting patients in their journey to fight cancer and also influencing and develop the development decisions of other people in the cancer category. I think our collective efforts and dedication have fostered a transformational shift, not only for our company, but actually for groups of our industry and that's setting us in a very exciting trajectory where we can not only improve the lives of cancer patients, but also do it in ways that is more effective and more scalable. We believe that our business model will drive affordable, more personalized treatment options in cancer. Now with that, I'd like to now open the call to any questions or clarifications. Speaker 100:40:43If you'd like to ask a question, you can do so in 2 ways. One, you can raise your hand under the participant category. I think there's a hand raised already. And or you can also type it in and we can look at questions that way. So before we get into questions, I'd like to take a moment to personally thank our team for helping to prepare us for these calls and to gather all this. Speaker 100:41:09It takes a lot of work. So thank you for our team for taking time out of their normal day to day to help make this happen. So let's take some questions from our audience. I think our first question is from Keith at Chardan. Keith, please go ahead. Speaker 100:41:24I think you're muted, Keith. Okay, let's go on. Let's take a question from John. Speaker 400:41:31Hello. Am I coming through? Speaker 100:41:33Yes. Speaker 400:41:35Great. I thought I'd start with a question on just what kind of threshold you're looking for that shows LP300 merits a breakthrough candidacy status? Speaker 100:41:48I think if we see the current trajectory in the next, let's say, 12 to 20 patients plus we get some durability data, I think that would give us comfort level. But we'd have to see the totality of the data. 7 patients is a good start, but it's preliminary. We'd love to see 21 patients. If we had 14 patients out of 21, that would give us a lot get us pretty excited, 16 patients. Speaker 100:42:14I mean, but the overall clinical benefit rate of 86% is largely unheard of in this group. So we want to make sure that's durable. And so more patients drive the end number and then some durability of response, which I'm sure the FDA will want to look at for the for breakthrough. Speaker 400:42:32Okay. So about a 2 thirds clinical benefit rate is Speaker 300:42:36kind of what you'd be looking for? Speaker 100:42:38That's probably yes, that's kind of the guide. We'd have to take a look at the totality of the data. But yes, I mean metastatic lesion improvement, no safety issues, those all skew us towards some positive as well, right? Speaker 400:42:50And then looking at the safety profile that you've seen from the first 7 Harmonic patients and comparing it to some of the other NSCLC populations that were using EGFR TKIs and checkpoint inhibitors, kind of how does that safety profile compare to some of those other molecules out there or biologics out there? Speaker 100:43:15Well, I'll let our safety expert, Reggie, take that question on. Speaker 400:43:19Hi, Reggie. Speaker 200:43:20Hi, John. That's a very great question. I would just tell you off the bat, what is unheard of in this space is for patients to go on to about 9 weeks or 9 to 10 weeks of treatment with any kind of dosing interruption or discontinuation of the regimen. I mean, that is very common with the TKS in combination. You can look at the current the Mariposa II trial, example, which is the most recent with the bispecific combination with the TKI by the way for patients in the same population versus the same standard of care. Speaker 200:43:57It shouldn't surprise anybody in this field to know that certainly up to 80% of the patients discontinue treatment for one reason or the other because of toxicities and they had to interrupt treatment and a third or more of those patients literally discontinue treatments. So this again presenting this preliminary safety data with no new toxicity to these investigators was really exciting because for this length of time none of the patients have required those discontinuation for any of the certainly not LPD-three hundred. Okay, great. Speaker 400:44:32And just one more question on your collaborations. When you look at the Oregon Therapeutics and also Actuate and TTC, how will you determine if this is a success? I mean, what kind of milestones are you looking for kind of internally to show that these are kind of working and they're valuable? Speaker 100:44:50Yes. Each one is a little bit different. I'll take that question, Unique. I mean, Actuate has filed an S-one on and I think that the work our team did was definitely helpful for them in terms of understanding their patient population and developing some specific insights related to people who are refractory to PD-one therapy that would have potential to benefit from their drug orulagulisib? Yes. Speaker 100:45:20LRagulisib? It's a little hard to say. Yes, hard to say. But so we think it's we think that's on track to be successful because we've helped the company. And if they do go public and are able to raise additional capital, we definitely think it's because of the focus around understanding the patient profile. Speaker 100:45:40With regards to TTC, that's they came after. So that one, we're still working. We do have some very good ideas. TTC is out raising capital or looking for grant money for the next phase and but that one is not as well capitalized as Actuate has been, so they're slower. Oregon is the newest one and I already am pretty excited about what we're doing for Oregon and it's not it's barely 2 months old, so it's very early. Speaker 100:46:11But we have some very clear milestones in terms of developing some collaborative IP together that we can monetize, specifically helping them define combinations and define indications that they haven't thought of. So and I think we'll be able to accomplish that. Eventually, the IP has to be monetized for it to be success for everyone, but you got to have good strong valid ideas and do them inexpensively, which is part of the magic of AI. Speaker 300:46:38Yes. And just adding very quickly to that, John. In simple terms, I think it's a question of are we able to allow them to see things and do things that they wouldn't be able to do otherwise. And this goes beyond our collaborations in terms of radar and AI. And we're seeing just more and more evidence in these collaborations in other ways that's showing insights that wouldn't have arisen without that additional insight. Speaker 100:47:08Great. Speaker 400:47:08Thank you, guys. Appreciate it. Speaker 100:47:09Thank you. We will try Key again. I don't know if he's back on the line. Speaker 500:47:15You hear me now? Speaker 100:47:16Yes, we can hear you, Kee. Speaker 500:47:17Yes, it's Kee, it's Chardon. Appreciate all the detailed patient data. I guess the first question is, again with a huge caveat, this is small numbers, but the patient with the RET mutations had a nice response, not sure if they were retouchable suppuratamim or not, but was that a surprise to you based on your preclinical? Speaker 200:47:42Maybe I'll take that one. It wasn't really a surprise because again, if you maybe one of the highlights for LP300 and what we understand of the mechanism of action, one of the set of data we've been able to generate preclinically is understanding that the drug really binds to cysteine residues and of different Tyrosine Kinase Receptors, including RET. So seeing this kind of clinical data is very exciting to us. And that's why in the presentation I made sure to emphasize that it's not just a driver mutation of interest as you've seen other clinical trials in this space, but rather the protocol is designed to really capture any driver mutations for those patients that come in as far as they are never smokers. So this is very encouraging for us. Speaker 200:48:38It didn't come as a surprise. Speaker 500:48:40And then with respect to patient 1,000,000,002 who had progressive disease, Anything about their baseline that maybe might have predicted a less than favorable response there? Speaker 200:48:56This was the 1st patient enrolled in the trial. A lot of things going on with the protocol at that time, but this patient really accounted for most of the toxicities you've seen because of comorbidities. So the patient, one would say, wasn't an ideal patient for a clinical trial. Speaker 100:49:13Okay, great. Thanks. We have a question in the chat window that I'm going to go ahead and answer. I'll read it out for everyone. Can you please go deeper into checkpoint inhibitors and the market they currently garner specifically KEYTRUDA and why LP-one hundred and eighty four may be a great and synergistic partner? Speaker 100:49:36Good question. Now I'm not a KEYTRUDA rep or I'm not a Merck rep, but having done a lot of work for Merck in my prior career, I can tell you that the 57 patient trial that they had that got them on the map had remarkable results. The market today for checkpoint inhibitors, including KEYTRUDA is somewhere close to 40 $2,000,000,000 to $48,000,000,000 So it's a significant market. Now we all know that KEYTRUDA has some of these early stage PD L1s are coming off market and there's some new PD L1s already out or PD-1s. Coherus has one of those already out, I believe, that's a biosimilar. Speaker 100:50:25Pricing isn't great, but I've heard that the efficacy is very good. It's a clean biosimilar. So the market, I think, will remain fairly robust. Analysts project it will grow about 15% to 17% because there's a whole new wave of new checkpoint inhibitors. So it's a good market. Speaker 100:50:47Now we're not going after that whole market. What we're going after is we believe that there's even a larger group of patients that don't respond to checkpoint inhibitors that could benefit from them. And there's a whole group of people whose lives have been wonderfully prolonged, but their cancer is not cured. So they stop responding to checkpoint inhibitors and the tumor microenvironment reshapes itself. So that's where LP-one hundred and eighty four we believe can be a great and synergistic partner. Speaker 100:51:18The first one of course, we have some data on that we're excited about is in triple negative breast cancer. And triple negative breast cancer can be rapidly evolving in terms of its clonal evolution. So it's also part of the reason why it'd be good to go after. And so we think that TNBC would be a great initial target to get early an early win and then potentially go after other places where checkpoint inhibitors can be improved, which will be many of those tumors where you have complex tumor micro environments and you have rapid clonal evolution. And so that to me can be multiple, multiple 1,000,000,000 of dollars of potential over time. Speaker 100:52:03But the key is to pick 1 where we know that we could have a good effect and potential win and TNBC looks like one where we've seen synergy, we've demonstrated clinical evidence, we see 2 of the most important hallmarks. 1 is we're bringing and recruiting the right kind of T cell environment and we're also decreasing the number of M2 macrophages, both which have been very, very correlated with reducing response to immunotherapies. Thank you for that question, John. Take another question in the chat window that just popped up. Michael, is that right? Speaker 100:52:42Yes. Michael's question I'll read is, are you open to small pharma partnership opportunities? Well, Michael being a small pharma ourselves, yes, absolutely. Yes, we're a small biopharma that acts like a big pharma, but we are a small pharma. I mean, we're very so we're always looking for partnership opportunities and welcome me to send myself or members that you know in the company and an email and we'll get back to you quickly. Speaker 100:53:09I have time for one more question. I don't know if there's any more questions. There's one more question. So I'll go ahead and take this one. The question is given the market cap of the company, do you think Lantern is still relevant to be a major player in the industry? Speaker 100:53:29That's a great it's a good fundamental question as an investor, I think. So thank you for being involved. I think there's room for big companies and small and I always like to urge everyone that with the exception of a few handful of companies, every big company started small, except LabCorp, which started because of Roche and U. S. Labs, but very I mean, even Regeneron and Biogen. Speaker 100:53:53Now is that what we're going to be in the future? Who knows? But I do think that very likely that our approach and our drugs will be partnered, licensed and sold. That's what we're doing or we'll spin out the assets. So I think that we are very relevant to the industry and I've seen a lot of companies try to copycat our approach. Speaker 100:54:11A lot of companies are very interested. So I think we will be very relevant and I think you will see ups and downs in this industry just like every other industry. I like to remind people that even Amazon before it became the huge behemoth, not that we're going to become Amazon, saw 80% 90% reductions in stock price about 4 or 5 times during on their way up. So stock prices and everything, I think it's a huge indicator of how much of your cost of capital will be. But I think we're probably the cheapest company with a Phase 2 drug and 2 Phase 1 drugs that are 1st in class. Speaker 100:54:45So that does give me at times concerned and frustrated. But and we're not spending $60,000,000 to $80,000,000 a quarter like some other companies who are in the them differently. You can't say you're going to use You can't say you're going to use AI and then spend like Eli Lilly or Roche. So I think we can do things differently with AI, pick the right kind of very select focused bets and opportunities and try to develop those with a tremendous amount of operational efficiency. And so I think that will pay a lot of dividends to our investors, but also will allow us to be very relevant in the industry. Speaker 100:55:28And just adding to that very quickly, we are beginning to see some great momentum on multiple fronts. Speaker 300:55:35We talked a lot today about Harmonic, but there are some very exciting things going on with our other candidates as well and then radar in addition to that. So we're building some great momentum that we think will be value driving in multiple ways. Speaker 100:55:50Thank you. So in closing, I want to express my thanks and gratitude to our team, our partners, our stakeholders and those who are following the company for their support and interest. Together, I think we are really lighting the way toward a brighter future in oncology and solving real world problems for patients with proprietary AI solutions and insight. And we think we're going to radically alter the potential to change the cost structure and timelines in drug discovery. So thank you everyone for your time this afternoon. Speaker 100:56:23With that, I'd like to adjourn the call today. Thanks a lot. Thank you.Read morePowered by