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AACR 2026 | The future of anti-CCR8 antibodies in solid tumor oncology

Bruno Bockorny, MD, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, MA, comments on the development of anti-CCR8 therapies, highlighting the supportive data for the ongoing development of denikitug as a monotherapy and in combination with checkpoint inhibitors or chemotherapy in selected tumor types. Several clinical trials are underway, including a first-in-human trial of denikitug plus anti-PD-1 (NCT05007782). This interview took place at the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) Annual Meeting 2026 in San Diego, CA.

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Transcript

Yeah, so anti-CCR8 fields are becoming very active. There are multiple programs in development. I think the data we generated and reported are supportive of the ongoing development of denikitug, both as a monotherapy and in combination with checkpoint inhibitors or chemotherapy in selected tumor types. I’ll highlight three separate efforts. One, we did include the denikitug and anti-PD-1 in this first-in-human trial, and we are still collecting the data...

Yeah, so anti-CCR8 fields are becoming very active. There are multiple programs in development. I think the data we generated and reported are supportive of the ongoing development of denikitug, both as a monotherapy and in combination with checkpoint inhibitors or chemotherapy in selected tumor types. I’ll highlight three separate efforts. One, we did include the denikitug and anti-PD-1 in this first-in-human trial, and we are still collecting the data. The results of the Nikita plus anti-PD-1 will be reported later. And there are actually two global phase two clinical trials that are being initiated. One in microsatellite-stable colorectal cancer, where the denikitug is going to be investigated as a monotherapy or combined with anti-PD-1 and standard of care chemotherapy. And the second phase two clinical trial will be in upper GI cancers, also the denikitug as a monotherapy or combined with anti-PD-1 and standard of care chemotherapy.

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