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Nektar Therapeutics (NKTR -5.99%)
Q2 2020 Earnings Call
Aug 6, 2020, 5:00 p.m. ET

Contents:

  • Prepared Remarks
  • Questions and Answers
  • Call Participants

Prepared Remarks:

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by, and welcome to the Nektar Therapeutics Second Quarter 2020 Financial Results Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] Please be advised that today's conference may be recorded. [Operator Instructions] I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today, Ms. Jennifer Ruddock, Head of Corporate Affairs. Ma'am, you may begin.

Jennifer Ruddock -- Senior Vice President, Strategy and Corporate Affairs

Thank you, Crystal. Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining us today. With us are Howard Robin, our President and CEO; Gil Labrucherie, our COO and CFO; Dr. Jonathan Zalevsky, our Chief of Research and Development; and Dr. Wei Lin, our Head of Development. On today's call, we expect to make forward-looking statements regarding our business, including clinical trial enrollment and clinical trial results, timing and plans for future clinical trials, timing and plans for future clinical data presentations, the therapeutic potential of our drug candidates; outcomes and plans for health authority regulatory actions and decisions, estimates and predictions of the COVID-19 pandemic's impact on our business and clinical trials, financial guidance and certain other statements regarding the future of our business. Because these forward look statements relate to the future, they are subject to inherent uncertainties and risks that are difficult to predict and many of which are outside of our control. Important risks and uncertainties are set forth in our Form 10-Q that we filed on May 8, 2020, which is available at sec.gov. We undertake no obligation to update any of these forward-looking statements whether as a result of new information, future developments or otherwise. A webcast of this call will be available on the IR page at Nektar's website at nektar.com. Before turning the call over to Howard, I'd like to comment on a small housekeeping item. Due to the continued shelter-in-place restrictions in San Francisco, each of us are, again, calling in from different locations. So in order to facilitate a smooth call flow, I will moderate the Q&A session for our team, so we can avoid technical issues during the session. We appreciate your patience as we work to ensure that there are no technology disruptions for those who are listening. With that said, I will hand the call over to our President and CEO, Howard Robin. Howard?

Howard W. Robin -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you, Jennifer, and thank you to everyone for joining us on the call today. I'd like to start the call by reviewing the ways in which we've successfully led our business as well as our accomplishments during the second quarter and year-to-date. For all of us located in the many areas that we operate our business and our clinical trials, we continue to face a complex environment caused by COVID-19. Our key focus has been to navigate this dynamic situation with minimal disruption to our business. And as a result of these efforts, we've been we've seen continued progress in the advancement of our registrational and earlier-stage clinical trials as well as the continuation of our research and manufacturing activities in spite of the challenges posed by the COVID-19 pandemic. We ended the second quarter in a position of exceptional strength. We have built a robust pipeline in oncology and immunology with multiple registrational and earlier-stage clinical trials under way, and we ended the second quarter in a strong financial position with $1.2 billion in cash and investments and no debt on our balance sheet. During this time, we've adapted our practices to allow us to both protect the health of our employees and continue essential operations at our locations, such as research and manufacturing laboratory-based activities, which are essential to our business.

We've also worked tirelessly with our trial investigators and their teams to ensure that they can continue to provide superior care and uninterrupted access to study treatment to patients fighting cancer in our clinical trials. Finally, we've been diligently working to ensure that the conduct of our clinical trials is minimally impacted by the evolving situation and that the integrity and quality of data being collected from these studies are maintained and tracked appropriately. Wei will review these items in more detail later in the call. With these things in mind, we made great progress on a number of fronts during the second quarter, including continuing to enroll new patients in our clinical studies in order to meet our enrollment time lines, while at the same time, providing effective oversight of trial conduct and support to our trial sites. We've worked closely with our pharmaceutical partners on this front as well, and I will provide more updates on this in a moment. We have experienced no supply interruptions for manufacturing and our continued preparations for commercial supply of bempeg remain on track. Many of you continue to ask about our assessment of current clinical trial time lines or impacts to any of our clinical studies related to COVID, and I'll provide a review of the current time lines for our studies today.

We have been tracking time lines for all of our studies very closely during a fluid and uncertain time, and we will need to continually assess these time lines as well as assess any impact to patients in our clinical studies throughout this year. This quarter, we continued a laser focus on oversight and advancement of the five registrational studies for bempeg plus nivo in the BMS-Nektar joint development program. These are the first-line metastatic melanoma study, the first-line bladder cancer study, the first-line renal cell carcinoma study, the muscle-invasive bladder cancer study and the adjuvant melanoma study. In addition to these registrational trials, we are also advancing nicely in the PROPEL study of bempeg plus pembro, the NKTR-262 REVEAL study with bempeg and finally, the NKTR-255 study in hematological malignancies. First, starting with adjuvant melanoma. We're particularly pleased to announce today that Nektar achieved our goal to start this Phase III study of bempeg plus nivolumab, which plans to enroll 950 patients. Our team was able to initiate this trial in early Q3, which was ahead of our original schedule, with the first patients in the study entering screening just last week.

This is an important study that builds on our breakthrough designation achieved with a doublet in metastatic melanoma. In Q2, we recognized a new $25 million milestone payment from BMS related to the study start. I'm very proud of our team and the progress and execution on this front. With respect to the first-line metastatic melanoma study, which is being run by our partner, BMS, starting in July, BMS has successfully restarted enrollment activities for this study in many countries. They also have a plan to bring on more sites to the study in order to make up for the lost time related to COVID pause. At the recent analyst event, BMS indicated that the first data from the melanoma study would be expected in Q4 of 2021 or Q1 of '22, and this is relatively consistent with our assessment of the situation, which we provided last quarter, that we expected enrollment delays related to COVID could push time lines out by as long as six months. While we are all disappointed in the time line delay relative to COVID-19, we are very pleased to see that BMS is actively bringing back enrollment activities, which were paused as a result of the pandemic and that they are working to meet these revised time lines for this very important study. Many of you have listened to the BMS analyst call this morning, and where they highlighted bempeg as an important next generational late-stage medicine in IO that has achieved proof-of-concept in their development pipeline.

With respect to the first-line bladder cancer study, we expect to be on track to reach our enrollment goal late this summer. As a reminder, the primary endpoints of the study are ORR and duration of response by independent review for patients with under 10 CPS score. Depending upon how long we follow patients for duration of response, we are projecting a time line to achieve top line results for this study in the second half of 2021, consistent with our prior guidance. For the first-line renal cell carcinoma study, we remain on track for our projections for enrollment with this study, which means we also expect to potentially achieve the first interim analysis on the primary endpoint of overall survival in the first quarter of '22, consistent with our prior guidance. For the first-line muscle-invasive bladder cancer study, which is being run by BMS, the study is enrolling approximately 540 patients who will receive bempeg plus nivo or nivo for a 12-month treatment period following surgery. The study is actively recruiting patients and more sites are being initiated throughout the year. As this study is longer, we expect first data readouts to be in 2024. With respect to earlier-stage studies of bempeg in the BMS and Nektar development program, BMS is also planning to start an additional study of bempeg plus nivo in combination with a TKI in patients in the first-line renal cell carcinoma.

The study builds on the registrational study in RCC that we are running of the doublet of bempeg plus nivo versus a TKI. With respect to first-line non-small cell lung cancer, as you know, Nektar has been running the PROPEL study of bempeg plus pembro as a separate independent study from the BMS development program with the goal of moving forward with a registrational strategy in non-small cell lung cancer that combines bempeg with the existing and preferred standard of care, which is pembrolizumab. A development and regulatory pathway for bempeg plus nivo is very challenging given nivolumab's lack of a single-agent label in first-line non-small cell lung cancer. BMS has recently informed us that they will not start the Phase II study in first-line non-small cell lung cancer with bempeg plus nivo that was outlined in our amended agreement, thus in line with this agreement, Nektar no longer has any exclusivity obligations related to advancing registrational or other trials in non-small cell lung cancer with BMS. With pembrolizumab firmly established as the preferred standard of care, we are now in a position to move quickly on the strategy for a registrational trial in first-line non-small cell lung cancer with pembro upon successful outcomes with the PROPEL study.

The PROPEL study is actively enrolling patients in line with our time line objectives, although last quarter, we mentioned that the COVID situation delayed initiation. For some investigator sites in Europe for PROPEL, we were able to successfully bring several new European sites online during the second quarter, and these sites are now actively enrolling patients. We expect to be on track to generate initial safety as well as preliminary ORR data for between 10 and 20 patients with a minimum of two scans on treatment from both the dose escalation and non-small cell lung cancer cohorts of the study by end of this year or first quarter 2021. Our Phase I/II REVEAL study of NKTR-262 is also on track. We are in the expansion phase of the study, which is evaluating simultaneous dosing of the recommended Phase II dose of NKTR-262 administered in combination with bempeg, either with or without nivolumab in up to 24 relapsed and refractory melanoma patients. As we stated last quarter, we observed high levels of TLR activation in the tumor microenvironment during the sequential dosing of NKTR-262 and bempeg, and we're able to characterize safety for NKTR-262. These data are being submitted for presentation at the SITC Congress this November and support our advancement into the relapsed and refractory melanoma patient population post IO treatments with this program.

For NKTR-255, our IL-15 agonist program and our next cytokine therapy in clinical development, we are actively enrolling patients into the first-in-human clinical study of NKTR-255 in patients with hematological malignancies, which began late last year. Our goal is to complete the dose escalation monotherapy portion of the study by the end of this year. Of course, meeting this goal will depend on how many dose cohorts we need to enroll before achieving a maximum tolerated dose. As a reminder, this study is evaluating NKTR-255 versus a monotherapy in dose escalation, after which we will expand into several arms that will evaluate NKTR-255 as a monotherapy at the recommended Phase II dose and also evaluate NKTR-255 in combination with daratumumab in multiple myeloma and with rituximab in non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. We have already observed target engagement of the IL-15 pathway starting from the first dose level studied, and we are very excited to submit these preliminary data for presentation at this year's SITC Congress. There has been an increasing interest in natural killer cell therapies, and we are taking a comprehensive approach to developing NKTR-255 in several cancer settings.

In addition to the studies ongoing in heme malignancies, we are also planning to initiate a study of NKTR-255 in patients with solid tumors before the end of this year. And JZ will talk more about this study in a moment. Moving on to our partner, Eli Lilly and NKTR-358, our Treg stimulatory program, we recently presented data at the EULAR Congress from the Phase Ib study of NKTR-358 in patients with mild-to-moderate lupus. These exciting data led to the Phase II study, which is also being run by Lilly in patients with moderate-to-severe lupus. And I'm excited to announce that Lilly began initiating clinical sites in late July, and screening patients in this study just this week. JZ will again talk more about this study later in the call. In addition, the Phase I multiple dose study in psoriasis and atopic dermatitis being conducted by Lilly are enrolling patients again after a three-month pause in response to the COVID-19 situation. Finally, we are planning to present additional data on NKTR-358 from the Phase Ib study at the 2020 American College of Rheumatology Congress, also known as ACR, which occurs in early November. So we're all looking forward to sharing new data on NKTR-358 with you folks.

Finally, Lilly plans to start another Phase II study in an additional autoimmune disease in the second half of this year. We are very pleased with Lilly's continued commitment to NKTR-358 as well as their broad plans for its development, which reflect the potential of this truly novel mechanism to play an important role in the treatment of a wide range of autoimmune diseases. Before I hand the call to Wei, I'd like to mention additional data presentation for bempeg that we're planning this year. First, for the melanoma cohort, from PIVOT-02, as many of you know, last year, we obtained an FDA breakthrough therapy designation for bempeg plus nivo in patients with metastatic melanoma based upon the positive data from the PIVOT-02 study, including a high RECIST, complete response rate of 34%, with 42% of patients experiencing complete regression of their RECIST target lesions. As we stated on our last call, at the 21-month median follow-up point for patients in this cohort, we had still not achieved median PFS. We continue to see deepening of response for these patients and are very excited to submit updated data from the melanoma cohort with an even later data cut closer to this year's SITC 2020 meeting. We also plan to present some initial landmark survival data. As we've stated in the past, we are very excited about the potential of this doublet combination for melanoma patients. So for this year's SITC Congress, our plans are to present data from three Nektar programs. Updated data from the first-line Me metastatic melanoma cohort, as I just stated, data from the first patients in the NKTR-255 study in hematological malignancies and data from the dose escalation phase of the NKTR-262 study. And with that, I'd like to turn the call over to Wei to review in more detail the bempeg development program.

Wei Lin -- Senior Vice President and Head of Development

Thank you, Howard. As Howard said, we continue to take all possible measures to ensure that our clinical studies remain on track given the COVID pandemic. In addition to the rigorous ways our study teams conduct our clinical trials, our monitors and data collection systems are also capturing any COVID-related protocol deviations or changes in study conduct that we may need to provide to the FDA in the future. As you know, the FDA issued guidance on clinical trial conduct given the pandemic, and we're closely following FDA guidance as we track any impact of COVID on the patients in our study. We have seen very good patient compliance, particularly in their visits to study sites to receive study treatments and for scheduled scans. We continue to be tremendously impressed with high degree of engagement from our investigators and their staff and extraordinary care they're providing to their patients during this very challenging time for all of us. In response to some questions we're receiving, we have received only a few reports of patients in our studies who have suspected or confirmed COVID infection. As of today, for the clinical studies that Nektar is running across our 200-plus investigator sites globally, we have a few reports of patients who have been diagnosed with COVID or have missed study treatment or missed study scans due to COVID. We're carefully collecting all information pertaining to these cases and any other impact to the studies that could be related to COVID and are following FDA guidance to enable us to communicate any protocol deviations related to COVID to the FDA to ensure future registration.

Before I hand the call to JZ to discuss our work with NKTR-358 and NKTR-255, I want to follow up on continued inquiries we've received on the changing of the interim response rate endpoint from overall response rate, ORR, to complete response rate, CRR, in our first-line melanoma study. As you know, we received a breakthrough therapy designation for bempeg plus nivo based on the high complete response rate we observed in this patient population. In the Phase III study, we have three endpoints, overall response rate, or ORR, progression-free survival, or PFS, and overall survival, OS. The first endpoint is an interim analysis where a very small amount of alpha is spent to compare the ORR in the doublet arm of bempeg plus nivo to the ORR in the nivo monotherapy arm, which will be done in a specific number of patients with at least six months of follow-up. This endpoint will allow a potential early accelerated filing for the doublet so that we could bring innovative treatment to patients earlier. The full approval filing in the U.S. and in Europe will be based on PFS and OS. Because of our high complete response rate, many of you have asked whether we could change the interim ORR endpoint to look at the complete response rate instead. We and our partner, BMS, continue to explore this possibility, including outreach to global health authorities to discuss how best to support this registration path. Of utmost importance to both companies during this process is that we maintain the integrity of the ongoing Phase III trial so that we can use the data from the study for global registration of bempeg plus nivo in first-line melanoma. This process may take some time. However, we are hopeful that we could provide an update on this before the end of this year. In the meantime, the study continues to have the original three endpoints of ORR, PFS and OS. The original design of the study is based on CheckMate 67, the PFS analysis is projected to occur approximately six to seven months after the first interim analysis of ORR. However, this projection is affected by the rate of enrollment and the rate at which PFS events occur on the study. Thus, that timing could change. For both ORR and PFS, the results will be analyzed by blinded independent radiology review. So this process will affect timing for the completion of any data analysis as well. As we get closer to achieving these endpoints, we will be able to refine our time line and share them publicly. As I just stated, ORR is designed as an accelerated approval endpoint, we spent only a small amount of alpha on this, and PFS is the full approval endpoint. With that, I'll hand the call to JZ to discuss more on our NKTR-358 and NKTR-355 program. JZ?

Jonathan Zalevsky -- Chief Research and Development Officer

Thanks, Wei. I'd like to spend a little more time discussing two programs. The first is the NKTR-358 program and our plans for the lupus study; and the second is our IL-15 program, NKTR-255. First, for NKTR-358, and as Howard stated, we presented our first data from the Phase Ib multiple-ascending dose study, which was conducted in patients with mild-to-moderate lupus at this year's European League Against Rheumatism, or EULAR, conference in early June. We are the only company that has presented data from a multiple ascending dose study of a novel Treg stimulating therapy in patients. We are tremendously pleased that these promising data have now led to our partner, Eli Lilly, initiating a Phase II study in lupus patients with plans for a second Phase II in an another autoimmune indication by year's end. Many autoimmune disorders, including systemic lupus, are associated with decreased Treg numbers, reduced Treg function and/or reduced production of IL-2. Treg deficiencies are important in the pathogenesis of these autoimmune diseases. And with NKTR-358, our goal is to address these Treg abnormalities and disease and to develop an IL-2-like molecule that could selectively stimulate Tregs in a much more effective manner than IL-2. The results from the Phase I study presented at EULAR concluded that NKTR-358 was safe and well tolerated when multiple doses were administered in patients with lupus. This reinforces our earlier study findings with single-dose administration in healthy volunteers. Additionally, demonstrating that the safety profile was similar between single and repeat administrations was critically important for potential treatments for chronic disease. The data also showed a dose proportional PK and prolonged exposure with the half-life of 10 to 13 days, that easily enables every 2-week dosing in the Phase II study.

Importantly, NKTR-358 elicited a marked, selective and dose-dependent expansion of proliferating Tregs in patients with lupus, and this was maintained through multiple-dose administrations. As Howard stated earlier, the Phase IIb study is now under way, being run by Lilly. The patient population is similar to other Phase IIb lupus studies in regards to required diagnosis of SLE using ACR classification criteria, positive autoantibodies characteristic of lupus and active clinical disease activity despite standard of care treatment. In this study, patients must have a systemic lupus erythematosus disease activity index, or SLEDAI-2k, that's greater than six points at screening. In addition, patients must have a measurable level of clinical activity at baseline, including secondary organ manifestations such as arthritic joints or skin involvement. Patients were randomized to one of three dosages of NKTR-358 administered every two weeks or placebo for a treatment period of six months or 24 weeks. The primary endpoint in the Phase II study is percent of patients achieving at least a 4-point reduction in the SLEDAI-2k scale. Important secondary endpoints include the percent of patients who achieved an SRI-4 response, BILAG-based BICLA response and the level of low disease as defined by the lupus low disease activity state, or LLDAS. We will also characterize pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics and immunogenicity in treated patients. The primary and key secondary endpoints will all be measured at week 24, and we expect this study to be completed within 18 to 24 months. And moving on to NKTR-255. As Howard stated, the dose escalation portion of this Phase I/II study in patients with heme malignancies is proceeding and we plan to present initial data from the first patients of the dose escalation at this year's SITC Congress in November.

The study is evaluating the safety, pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of NKTR-255 in hematological malignancies in order to establish a Phase II dose to be used either as a monotherapy and in parallel, tested in combination with antibodies that work through an ADCC mechanism, including daratumumab and rituximab. Depending upon how many dose cohorts we proceed through, we plan to enroll up to 40 patients with relapsed or refractory multiple myeloma and non-Hodgkin lymphoma in the dose escalation part of the study. We have also introduced a robust biomarker program into this trial, including measurement of the NKTR-255 effect on multiple immune cell populations of both peripheral blood and lymphoid tissues. We are especially focused on expansion of NK cell numbers and analysis of NK cell subsets as well as their activation and function. As Howard stated, our goal is to complete the dose escalation monotherapy portion of the Phase I trial by the end of this year, and we are excited about the early biomarker results we've observed in the first patients enrolled. So we look forward to sharing these with you in November.

Additionally, we are planning to initiate a second Phase I/II study of NKTR-255 in solid tumors before the end of the year. This study will evaluate NKTR-255 in two solid tumor settings in combination with cetuximab. The first setting is head and neck cancer, enrolling patients who have progressed on platinum therapy and a checkpoint. The second setting is metastatic colorectal cancer, enrolling patients who have received two prior metastatic treatments. The overall study will enroll up to 75 patients and will include a dose escalation component for a combination regimen and then expand into dedicated cohorts in head and neck and colorectal cancer. And with that update, let me turn the call over to Gil for a review of the financials.

Gil M. Labrucherie -- Chief Operating Officer and Chief Financial Officer

Thank you, JZ, and good afternoon, everyone. On this call, I'll review our 2020 financial guidance, which is unchanged. Starting with our strong financial position, during the second quarter, we repaid $250 million in outstanding senior notes, ending the quarter with $1.2 billion in cash and investments and no debt on our balance sheet. We still plan to end 2020 with over $1 billion in cash and investments. Turning to our annual financial guidance. Our full year GAAP revenue guidance remains between $140 million and $145 million for 2020. This includes $50 million of milestone payments from BMS and $90 million to $95 million of royalties, product sales and other revenue. We recognized a $25 million milestone for the start of the muscle-invasive bladder cancer study in Q1. And as Howard mentioned, we successfully initiated the adjuvant melanoma study ahead of schedule and recognized a second $25 million milestone under the BMS collaboration in Q2 rather than Q3 as we projected last quarter. The $90 million to $95 million of remaining GAAP revenue is still expected to be recognized on a fairly ratable basis over the four quarters of this year. Our GAAP R&D expense guidance is also unchanged as our clinical pipeline progress remains largely on track. We anticipate 2020 GAAP R&D expense will range between $475 million and $500 million, which includes approximately $70 million of noncash depreciation and stock compensation expense. Our G&A expense for 2020 is still projected to be between $105 million and $115 million, which includes approximately $45 million of noncash depreciation and stock compensation expense. We continue to closely manage our operating expenses and remain highly focused on the execution of our broad portfolio of research and development programs. And as I reviewed earlier, we plan to end 2020 with at least $1 billion in cash and investments. And with that, I'll open the call to the questions.

Operator

Operator? [Operator Instructions] And our first question comes from Peter Lawson from Barclays. Your line is open.

Peter Richard Lawson -- Analyst

Right. Thanks for taking the questions. Just really on the early clinical data that we see for 262 and 255, is there something that we should focus on what should we expect? And is there anything we should draw our attention to?

Jennifer Ruddock -- Senior Vice President, Strategy and Corporate Affairs

JZ, I'm going to ask you to answer that question.

Jonathan Zalevsky -- Chief Research and Development Officer

Yes. Thanks, Peter. So certainly, both programs are giving early data, both of them from first-in-human studies. So the things that we pay attention to are really what the focus and design of the studies were. So these studies are designed to assess the overall tolerability and safety of the agents, also to assess the pharmacokinetics and also the pharmacodynamics. Now as you know, we really pay a lot of attention on to the mechanism that these drugs have. And really that's really built in into how we do our drug development, and especially at the early stages. So both of the studies have robust biomarker programs built in. So in the setting of NKTR-262 in REVEAL, we are looking at key biomarkers associated with TLR seven and eight activation. And remember, we can analyze those as a monotherapy in the first cycle. And then also in the combination with bempeg on successive cycles. Remember, that study has a kind of a staggered design because it was a first-in-human for a novel-novel combination. So in that setting, we'll be looking very closely at the interferon responses, type one induced by the TLR activation. And the type two interferon response is induced by bempeg.

And then looking at the combination of the two having patients receive continued treatment. In the setting of 255, you know that's a different cytokine than bempeg. And it engages a different set of immunological pathways. So as I mentioned earlier in my presentation, they're really diving very, very deeply into certain immunological tissue and blood-based cellular compartments. In particular, we're focusing a lot on natural killer cells. NK cells are a very robust target of IL-15 pathway engagement and NKTR-255 really targets that compartment very well. So we don't just look at total book numbers. We'll even look at the different subsets of NK cells. Even precursor, in early maturing immune cells as well. And then we'll study markers of activation and even extend that to overall markers of effector function. So that's the nature of the data that we will be focusing on and kind of gives you a flavor of the kind of data that you can expect to see later this year.

Peter Richard Lawson -- Analyst

Okay. And then how many patients could we potentially see? And could we see do you think initial clinical efficacy or is that too early?

Jonathan Zalevsky -- Chief Research and Development Officer

Yes. So with the 255, it will be as subset, as we mentioned, that study is still ongoing, dose escalation. So that will be an early set of cohorts. And in the REVEAL study, we have the entire dose escalation moving through the identification of the recommended Phase II dose, which is being studied now in larger cohorts. So we'll definitely present all of the data that's available. We presented earlier that we had instances of responses observed in the REVEAL study, and we presented that data last year. So we'll continue to build on all of those. But to your point, it's really when we move into the larger cohorts that the studies start to enroll patients with low large enough patient cohorts, right, that we'll zero in on efficacy.

Peter Richard Lawson -- Analyst

Thanks for the question. Peter great, thanks.

Jonathan Zalevsky -- Chief Research and Development Officer

Thank you.

Operator

Our next question comes from Tyler Van Buren from Piper Sandler. Your line is open.

Tyler Martin Van Buren -- Analyst

Hey guys, good afternoon and congrats on all the progress. I guess I have two questions. The first one is on PROPEL, the first-line non-small cell lung cancer trial, combo with pembro. We're going to get initial data potentially year-end to early next year. And you noted that we could get overall response rate data in 10, 20 patients greater than two scans. So I guess, can you just help us understand exactly what pembro monotherapy would show at that time point? And therefore, what overall response rate with the combo you'd like to see to really be confident in the combo moving forward? And then the second question is just related to the process that you're undergoing to potentially in first-line melanoma to move that interim readout from the overall response rate to a CR rate interim look, which is, of course, encouraging given the wider delta there. But maybe just I'd like to hear the argument that you're going to make to the FDA and the regulatory agencies to get that changed?

Jennifer Ruddock -- Senior Vice President, Strategy and Corporate Affairs

Thanks, Tyler. Wei, I'm going to ask you to remind folks of the PROPEL design and the different cohorts that we're looking at with respect to non-small cell lung cancer and help Tyler with his first question.

Wei Lin -- Senior Vice President and Head of Development

Okay. Sure, absolutely. Yes. Thanks for the question. Yes, certainly, I think non-small cell lung cancer, even with the recent advancement, still remains a high unmet medical need. I think so we're building upon the standard-of-care pembro monotherapy. And as you know that non-small cell lung cancer really is segmented into three different populations based on PD-L1 status. You have the 50% and above PD-L1 expression and 1% to 49% and less than 1%. And there are different benchmarks. In the 50% and above and 1% to 49%, the response for a single agent is certainly different, and that's also different than the less than 1% where pem mono is not actually approved. Because we have available these response datas of pembro monotherapy, we can evaluate what the additive value of potential synergy the bempeg in combination with pembrolizumab can bring. And so that is how we're going to really evaluate the data. So with our PROPEL study design, so first of all, we have two parts of the study.

There's an optimization cohort and there's a expansion cohort in non-small cell lung cancer. And to really address your question, I'll focus on the expansion cohort in non-small cell lung cancer. And in there, we have actually subdivided the groups of patients into enrolling separately patients that are 50% and above, 1% to 49% and also less than 1% conforming with the current kind of the segmentation of use of either pembro monotherapy or pembro plus chemo in these segments and also knowing the different benchmarks. And so that is how we're going to really look at the data. So we'll enroll 20 patients roughly in each of these subgroups for a total of roughly 60 patients. And then based on the response we observe in the 50% and above, in the 1% to 49% and less 1% and benchmarking against pembro monotherapy, that's how we will make an assessment whether there's additivity or synergy that we can potentially observe with the combination with pembrolizumab and bempeg and our future registration trial in first-line non-small cell lung cancer would entirely be based on what we observe in each of these subgroups and what population will be ideally enrolled into the future registration study. So yes so that addresses the how we're going to look at the data in regard to making a registration decision in non-small cell lung cancer. Jennifer, should I go on and probably answer the melanoma...

Jennifer Ruddock -- Senior Vice President, Strategy and Corporate Affairs

Yes. Could you share a little bit on how we're thinking about the CR endpoint and what sort of things we're looking at there?

Wei Lin -- Senior Vice President and Head of Development

Sure, absolutely. ORR historically has always been used as sort of the benchmark for assessing the preliminary activity of any drug in oncology. Now I think these response rate endpoint are somewhat arbitrary and their strength relies on how they correlate with progression-free survival, ultimately overall survival. And what really helped us our assessment and certainly argument we're making to both FDA as well as ex U.S. health authorities, including EU and other places, it's really based on the venn analysis presented by FDA back in around ASCO 2019. And just a reminder, back at that time, FDA had pulled together all the patient data in first-line metastatic melanoma from all the registration trials, regardless of type of agent, whether it be TKIs, BRAF in that or IO therapy, whether it be PD-1, PD-L1 or even CTLA-4. Based on all these first-line data they have in their database, they performed meta-analysis, looked at the correlation of various response rate endpoints to progression-free survival, overall survival. And what they have actually demonstrated in their analysis of nearly 5,000 patients is even beyond just overall response rate, ORR, the depth response, the deeper the response, the stronger the correlation to PFS and overall survival.

So the correlation to long-term survival is higher for 50% depth response compared to 25% and even higher for patients who achieved 75% shrinkage of tumor compared to 25%. And the best patient would get the best are the patients who achieved 100% shrinkage of their tumor. So and that is really the strength with which we're proposing a change from ORR to CRR because of this stronger correlation with a deeper response. And the highest response or most depth of response can achieve is of course a complete response. And this is what we've been seeing with our data again from PIVOT-02 for the combination of bempeg for nivolumab, where we've achieved a 34% response rate with just a year of follow-up, and now we have beyond 21 months of follow-up. And that's a number, 34% is higher than what nivo or even nivo-ipi, which is the best available standard of care had achieved with five years of follow-up; they had only a 21% complete response rate with five years follow-up. And this is with a number that continued to evolve and deepen over time, which is very characteristic of immunotherapy.

So it is certainly our aspiration and hope that with longer follow-up, that complete response rate will both include in the PIVOT-02 cohort and also especially in the registration study that's actually operationalized by our partner, BMS. So I think this is really I think the argument we're making with the health org is, based on the FDA analysis, the depth response correlates to strongest with long-term survival and the complete response of all the depth response correlates to the strongest. And if there's one surrogate endpoint that could be used based on response rate, it should be a CRR endpoint. And with that strong linkage, that should be used for the early assessment of accelerated approval. So that is the argument we're making.

Tyler Martin Van Buren -- Analyst

Great, thanks for taking the questions.

Wei Lin -- Senior Vice President and Head of Development

Sure. Thank you.

Operator

Our next question comes from Chris Shibutani from Cowen. Your line is open.

Chris Shibutani -- Analyst

Great, thanks very much. Two questions, if I may. On 358, can you just remind us, and I apologize if you already mentioned, psoriasis and AD. Will we see data on this, and if so, when? It sounds like Lilly has commenced some Phase II in one of those during the year or that is the plan. And when we see that data, will it just be PK-PD similar to lupus? Or is there a possibility of seeing some early efficacy endpoints as well?

Jennifer Ruddock -- Senior Vice President, Strategy and Corporate Affairs

Thanks, Chris. JZ, I ask you to take the 358 question.

Jonathan Zalevsky -- Chief Research and Development Officer

Yes, Chris. So yes, just to clarify, Lilly is running two Phase Ib studies. That one is in psoriasis and the other is in atopic dermatitis. And we mentioned in the call also when the COVID pandemic broke out, Lilly's first response was to pause those studies, and it really made sense. Those are non-oncology studies, for example. So they're really the chronic nonlife threatening diseases. But as we did also mention earlier in the call, those studies have now been restarted, and they're enrolling patients. So we would expect that data from those studies will not be presented this year. Those studies are still in the enrollment phase, but it's reasonable that perhaps at the end of next year, that would be reasonable to see some data from these studies. And then in terms of what kind of data you could see, that these studies are Phase Ib, so they definitely have substantial pharmacokinetics as well as pharmacodynamic component to them. But the other thing that's also present here is, there are a lot of biomarkers that have been put in, especially, as you know, Chris, with your familiarity with a lot of skin studies, skin biopsies and punch biopsies are very, very doable. So there's also going to be an assessment of what's happening locally in the skin, for example, with the different keratinocytes, Things that are happening within disease lesions and in particularly looking for infiltration of Tregs, that could be very disease beneficial. I hope that answers your question.

Chris Shibutani -- Analyst

Yes. So then how will Lilly determine which one they'll start as Phase two trial in, in terms of the two indications? And will we get a visibility into that decision during 2020?

Jonathan Zalevsky -- Chief Research and Development Officer

Yes. So in the deal that we signed with Lilly a few years ago, in that deal, there were four Phase II studies. And Lilly very much likes to use the practice of not announcing what the indications are too early to maintain competitive and other advantages. So the lupus study is announced because that study just kicked off. As we stated, there's a second Phase II study that will begin later in the year in a different autoimmune indication, not lupus, a different one. And as we get closer to the start of that study, I expect Lilly will announce that indication. And then there are two more indications that are coming that again will be announced later. And we expect those two studies to begin next year.

Chris Shibutani -- Analyst

Great. And my quick second follow-up, the current conference calls have tended to be choice easter egg moments during Q&A, where you give us some sort of a bempeg PIVOT-02 melanoma update. Did I miss that? Is there anything you can share with us?

Jennifer Ruddock -- Senior Vice President, Strategy and Corporate Affairs

We're going to save that for SITC, Chris.

Chris Shibutani -- Analyst

Okay, thank you.

Jennifer Ruddock -- Senior Vice President, Strategy and Corporate Affairs

Thank you.

Operator

And our next question comes from Difei Yang from Mizuho. Your line is open.

Alexandre N. Bouilloux -- Analyst

Hey, good afternoon, everyone. This is Alex on for Difei. I was I had a question on the bladder cancer setting. I guess I was wondering if you could comment on how do you see the market opportunity there for bempeg? And where do you see the biggest unmet need given the evolving competitive dynamics, competitive landscape there?

Jennifer Ruddock -- Senior Vice President, Strategy and Corporate Affairs

So Wei, do you want to answer that question?

Wei Lin -- Senior Vice President and Head of Development

Sure. Yes. I'd be happy to. So I think so over the last year, I think the landscape for first-line metastatic bladder cancer has continued to evolve and we'll gain some clarity. I think with the success of avelumab in that disease setting, we see that maintenance therapy now has been introduced into bladder cancer in the first-line setting. And then with the failure of pembro in their registration trial in combination chemotherapy, I think the combination with chemotherapy, it looks like it won't be the de facto, sort of the dominant standard care in first line. So it remains fairly segmented in the sense that there you still have disease entities that are classified as cisplatin-eligible and cisplatin-ineligible. And the standard of care hasn't changed dramatically in the sense that in the cisplatin-ineligible remains to be segmented for IO for PD-L1 positive and PD-L1 negative, right? I think what has gained clarity is probably IO plus chemo is not going to be a dominant therapeutic option, unlike, say, non-small cell lung cancer or in head and neck cancer.

And remains fairly open for novel agents that can bring significant benefit to patients in that therapy. So providing that context first, I think the promising treatment that are currently in development certainly include not only our combination of bempeg plus nivolumab, but also PADCEV from Seattle Genetics plus pembrolizumab. And there's pros and cons with different regimen. I think the our regimen is a pure IO regimen that still reserve chemotherapy option for later line of therapy, whereas the PADCEV-pembro combination is really a combination that has a is ADC effectively a is pretty smart chemo backbone. And so I think the activity looks like it's higher based on early phase data, but the safety profile is actually probably worse compared to bempeg plus nivo. And so I think the [Indecipherable] out depends on how the we will have early phase data that we have presented publicly as well as Seattle Genetics and Merck. And I think it remains to be seen what the registration trial really delivers in terms of clinical activity. Now the highest unmet need, we still recognize as being the patients who are cisplatin-ineligible.

And hence, not the most powerful and most effective chemotherapy for treating bladder cancer are not available to these patients on the one hand. And on the other hand, in the PD-L1-negative population, IO therapy is not available to them as first-line therapy. So that's why I think our development strategy is still very relevant at this stage, even with all the evolving treatment landscape that we still believe the highest unmet need remains to be in the patients who are cisplatin-eligible and PD-L1 negative that subgroup of population. And I think our registration strategy is still positioning us as a potential new therapeutic option if we can successfully deliver on the PIVOT-10 study. So we're certainly optimistic that we can replicate what we have seen in PIVOT-02 that we still have can bring significant value to patients. And I think the usage in this disease area really ultimately depends on the both the safety as well as efficacy delivered by our combination and the combination of pembro plus PADCEV. And I think the safety consideration will probably be another key factor. I think there's certainly room for both potentially to have a registration path and ultimately, it's really going to be tailored by the individual positions based on the need and the health status of bladder cancer patients, many of whom have had the bladder removed and have comorbid conditions that may not allow them to tolerate a fairly toxic chemo regimen or treatment options that have sort of a chemo-like toxicity profile.

Alexandre N. Bouilloux -- Analyst

Okay. And then just on the PIVOT-02. Do you guys have any plans to provide an update from PIVOT-02 in bladder cancer by any chance before the Phase III data?

Wei Lin -- Senior Vice President and Head of Development

Yes. The data we provided to date publicly, both in public congresses as well as over earnings calls have been pretty mature data. I think for future update, we do plan to collate our data from PIVOT-02, including our bladder cancer data in a follow-up publication, where we can more finally more in greater detail dissect out all the nuances of the data and provide much rigorous set of data in a publication than can otherwise be presented in a 5- to 10-minute congress presentation.

Alexandre N. Bouilloux -- Analyst

Great, thanks for taking my questions.

Wei Lin -- Senior Vice President and Head of Development

Thank you.

Operator

Our next question comes from George Farmer from BMO Capital Markets. Your line is open.

Gobind Singh -- Analyst

Great, thanks. This is Gobind on for George. Just two questions. One on 358 and the other on the bempeg program, but for 358, are they as we think about the data coming up, I believe the mild-to-moderate data. And then I think JZ mentioned the lupus disease activity index for the upcoming trial is going to be taken above or for this one, it was probably below 6%. So I'm just trying to figure out here if we there's going to be some biomarker data, there's going to be some probably just not sure if there's going to be activity and this is going to be shown. How should we be thinking about what would be a meaningful change. It's totally understanding that this is not this was not a trial design for F50, short duration of treatment and all of that. And then the second question on the bempeg part was, for the bempeg Keytruda program, can you remind us again how bempeg was able to go higher? I believe you guys are dose escalating that, it's really higher than what you've done with OPDIVO and with that higher dose, is that something that you guys if you guys expanded into other tumor indications, you would be at this higher dose as well?

Jennifer Ruddock -- Senior Vice President, Strategy and Corporate Affairs

Thanks, Gobind. I'm going to ask JZ to take the first question on 358 and the ACR data that we plan on presenting, and then I'll have Wei take the second one on back to the PROPEL design and the dose escalation component of it. Thanks. JZ?

Jonathan Zalevsky -- Chief Research and Development Officer

Yes. Thanks, Jennifer. Gobind, very insightful questions. So you're absolutely right. The MAD study in 358 was in mild-to-moderate lupus patients. So there's really a range of baseline disease, including very mild, right, in some cases because remember, the patients are on steroids and they could be under control, which is in stark contrast to the Phase IIb, where all patients will have at least a baseline SLEDAI of 6. So those patients are going to be much more advanced, and they'll all have clinical presentation of disease, which is not the case in the Phase Ib MAD. So the patient population is different. And then, of course, the duration of treatment is very different, right? It was a 6-week treatment in the Phase Ib, whereas it will be a six-month treatment in the Phase IIb. So then given all of those important differences, what are some of the things that you could look for? So when we present additional data from that study, firstly, we'll be presenting the same kind of sort of additional constellation of data that we presented for the single-ascending dose study in healthy volunteers. There's quite a bit more biomarker data. There's quite a bit more FOXP3 and other Treg associated data as well as potential for some genetic gene expression data as well.

So that we presented at ACR last year in the SAD data. So we'll present the same additional biomarkers. And then there's one additional set of features, which is that we do have measures of disease activity, anything that we measured and we measured a range of different endpoints, such as the SLEDAI scale, the classi scale and so forth. So with this kind of an early study in the early setting, what I really look for that makes me excited is, do I see dose-dependent changes? And you don't expect that under such a short amount of treatment, you would have a very profound setting on the disease course. But if I see dose-dependent changes in a clinically measurable marker, that would make me really excited. And certainly be the kinds of information that would make you feel really confident to move into the Phase IIb setting. So our aim will be we'll be working with Lilly, and we're going to present many additional features of that study. So please stay tuned for that. That's also coming up in November, Gobind. And now what I'll do is, I'll turn it over to you, Wei, to talk about dose escalation and optimization portion of the bempeg plus pembro program.

Wei Lin -- Senior Vice President and Head of Development

Thanks, JZ. So that's a really great question about the so why are we still optimizing the dose when the molecule is for the registration? So first of all, I think it's helpful to remind people that the 6-microgram per kilogram dose in combination nivolumab in registration in several of our programs is still it's a very efficacious dose. That's a dose on which we have obtained a breakthrough therapy destination from the FDA. So and so it's highly active. And so it's actually a very good dose and provide an outstanding safety profile, where we basically as far as immune-related AE is concerned, we observed the same rate of IMAE in nivolumab monotherapy. So that having been said, I think if you look at the entire oncology landscape and variety of tumor types, you kind of can segregate into roughly several different types in regard to the response to PD-L1 therapy. You have diseases like melanoma and RCC where a PD-L1 biomarker is not needed at all. So monotherapy pembro and monotherapy nivo works very, very well because of PD-L1 expression in melanoma.

In RCC in combination, you do not need a biomarker at all. Now then, on the other hand, you have tumor types such as non-small cell lung cancer, head and neck cancer and especially triple-negative breast cancer where a biomarker is needed. Now for both lung and for head and neck, monotherapy only works for a certain cut point or higher PD-L1 expression. Below that, you really need the boost from a chemotherapy. And for triple-negative breast cancer, both the pembro and atezolo data demonstrate even combination chemotherapy, the PD-L1 negative patients do not drive benefit from the addition of a checkpoint. So I think in some tumor types, you definitely need some additional activity of inflammation to really change the immune status of these tumors. And bempeg being a pro-inflammatory cytokine, we believe can provide that extra boost to immunotherapy.

And we have certainly clinical evidence to suggest that based on PIVOT-02, we have in several tumor types have demonstrated the upregulation of PD-L1 and other inflammatory status markers in the tumor after receiving just a single dose of bempeg. Specifically in our bladder cancer cohort, we had 10 patients, one of whom we obtained on-treatment biopsies. So those patients were dosed with bempeg plus nivo. And then before they received the second dose of bempeg-nivo prior to their 21-day follow-up, we obtained another biopsy, and that biopsy demonstrated just a single dose of bempeg were able to turn 10 patients who are previously PD-L1-negative, really PD-L1 expression 0 to become PD-1 positive. So that's seven out of 10. So that means on the case, we certainly have a lot of motivation to try to tackle diseases that are previously either cold to checkpoint monotherapy alone or even in the case of TNBC or even additional chemotherapy not able to really turn this into immunosensitive state, that with additional bempeg, I think we certainly are able to test hypotheses where the bempeg can actually provide that immune inflammation to make checkpoint wider efficacy across more tumor types. So that's our primary motivation.

Is that possible, right? Is it safe to do that? And we believe it can be done, probably also because of the wealth of data we have generated in all our ongoing programs. As we treat more and more patients and develop improved management guidelines to really manage a lot of the adverse events associated with bempeg, especially the cytokine-related toxicity, what we're seeing is these are very manageable and especially with given guidelines. One of which which was a dose-limiting toxicity of bempeg, which is hypotension can very well-managed by just proactive hydration during cycle 1. And when we implemented that, the rate of hypotension drops significantly. And then we don't see the high-grade event that we had typically seen at very early dose escalation when we did not have these management guidelines, hydration guidelines in place. So we actually believe with the current management guideline, bempeg has the safety profile for which we can increase the dose even higher and deliver a similar safety profile on the one hand, on the other hand, produce even more pro-inflammatory activity of our cytokine and perhaps through the combination of checkpoint can broaden the activity of a checkpoint to broader population of patients. So those are kind of the two primary motivations. And I think some evidence that we can actually do that. And then if we succeed in giving a higher dose, we can certainly take the combination to some of the tumor types I just highlighted where PD-L1 expression is low for a large portion of patients and the current IO therapy does not demonstrate significant activity in those patients.

Gobind Singh -- Analyst

That's really helpful. But if I may just have one more on top of that. Does that mean you guys have figured out what the new bempeg dose is with this new protocol? And can you share that with us?

Wei Lin -- Senior Vice President and Head of Development

And so that's it's still in dose isolation, the optimization cohort and is actually active, Gobind. And then I think so that data we would present at a future congress. And so far, we've not identified any DLTs in our ongoing dose escalation, but we'd certainly be happy to share the data at a future congress.

Gobind Singh -- Analyst

Thanks. Great, thank you.

Wei Lin -- Senior Vice President and Head of Development

Thank you.

Operator

Our next question comes from Aydin Huseynov from Benchmark. Your line is open.

Aydin Huseynov -- Analyst

Hi everyone, thank you for taking my questions and congrats on the progress this quarter. I have a question regarding bempeg adjuvant melanoma study. Is there any accelerated approval, kind of surrogate endpoint, just like CR in metastatic just to make this argument for adjuvant melanoma case? And also regarding the enrollment. So I think it was previously 1,100 patients. Could you just clarify the target enrollment at this time?

Jennifer Ruddock -- Senior Vice President, Strategy and Corporate Affairs

Wei, could you review the study design and address this question?

Wei Lin -- Senior Vice President and Head of Development

Yes. So for the adjuvant study, it's a wonderful question. I think that's sort of the holy grail. All of us would look like to have a surrogate endpoint that allow an early readout for adjuvant study because adjuvant study can be very, very long on the one hand and it requires large portion of patients and it's a huge investment, and then a lot of patients are certainly waiting because that's one area we can provide a cure to a lot of patients. So I think unlike, say, in the metastatic setting, adjuvant really is challenging in having a certain amount of data to link up some type of surrogate to either disease-free survival or relapse-free survival. And in melanoma, I think the most promising marker to date is probably some type of circulating tumor DNA clearance. However, that has not been firmly established yet. There's not a wealth of data, like I pointed out, with the FDA meta-analysis where they have connected the depth response with long-term survival. There has not been a wealth of data of a lot of patients tested with CTDNA in a completed registration study and linked to the clearance of CTDNA, say, with either DFS or RFS.

So with that lacking, I think the Health Authority feedback, and I've certainly attended a number of workshops on this. And I think that's FDA made it clear in one of the workshops that, that is the kind of data they're looking for to really establish a marker such as CTDNA clearance as a potential surrogate for accelerated approval, right? So that's sort of the what has not been the what's the missing piece in terms of registration for adjuvant setting. Now whether that data will emerge between now and the completion of our melanoma study in adjuvant setting, I think that's to be seen. If such a data were to emerge and FDA feel confident about that data, that will certainly allow them to provide open up using, say, for instance, the CTDNA as a surrogate to allow early approval in Hodgkin's diagnostic study, followed by delivery of the DFS or RFS in that setting. I hope that answers your question.

Aydin Huseynov -- Analyst

Sure. Yes, absolutely. And for the target enrollment for this study?

Wei Lin -- Senior Vice President and Head of Development

For the target enrollment. Yes. Go ahead, Jennifer.

Jennifer Ruddock -- Senior Vice President, Strategy and Corporate Affairs

Yes. I was just going to say if you can explain the difference in the 950 and 1,100, we landed on 950 for the final protocol?

Wei Lin -- Senior Vice President and Head of Development

Yes. Is that what you're asking just the number or...

Aydin Huseynov -- Analyst

Yes. Just curious.

Wei Lin -- Senior Vice President and Head of Development

Yeah, yeah. Thanks. Sure.

Aydin Huseynov -- Analyst

Thank you.

Operator

Our next question comes from Jay Olson from Oppenheimer. Your line is open.

Jay Olson -- Analyst

Well, hey guys, congrats on the progress. I had a question about 358, and I was wondering if you could comment on Amgen's recent decision to discontinue development of their IL-2 muting in RA and focus on GI autoimmune disorders. Is there something about IL-2 that makes it particularly effective in the GI tract? And would you consider developing 358 for any GI indications?

Jennifer Ruddock -- Senior Vice President, Strategy and Corporate Affairs

JZ, I'm going to ask you to take that one.

Jonathan Zalevsky -- Chief Research and Development Officer

Sure. Yes. So yes, definitely, the we noted that AMG-592, through clinical trials, really they announced some modifications to that study. Remember that study has been really ongoing for a very long time, right? They never really reported on the 1B portion, and they moved into the expansion in lupus and then announced that the RA part of that went away. I'm not for me, from my standpoint, scientifically, you wouldn't say that Tregs are not appropriate for a study in RA. There's definitely some scientific rationale for that. I would just probably guess that they were focusing on other indications. Now we do know some data from the study that's going on in Europe called TRANSREG. This is a study that was run by David Klatzmann, where he used low-dose IL-2 where, as you know, you can get a small amount of Treg induction using some kind of high-frequency dose administration regimens, no more than doubling or tripling of cells over baseline. But in that study, 12 different autoimmune disease indications were explored, and it was noted that some of the GI indications, such as ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease, have a propensity.

And scientifically, that makes a lot of sense, Jay, because we know that Tregs play an important role in the GI tract. They actually help control some of the mucosal immunology that happens in between all the microbes on one side of the gut and all of the immune cells on the other side of the gut, and especially in areas like Peyer's patch and other parts of immunological structures. So it definitely makes a lot of sense to focus on GI indications. And of course, Amgen is continuing to focus on lupus, right, which has been the ongoing part of their ongoing clinical trial too.

Jay Olson -- Analyst

Great, thank you for the comprehensive overview that super helpful, I appreciate you're taking the question.

Jonathan Zalevsky -- Chief Research and Development Officer

Yeah, thanks.

Jay Olson -- Analyst

Thank you.

Operator

Our next question comes from Paul Choi from Goldman Sachs. Your line is open.

Corinne Jenkins -- Analyst

Hi, this is Corinne Jenkins on for Paul. I was just hoping you could talk a little bit more about how you think about a registrational study in non-small cell lung cancer. And what the catalyst path will look like post that initial data from PROPEL later this year or early next?

Jennifer Ruddock -- Senior Vice President, Strategy and Corporate Affairs

Thanks, Corinne. Wei, I'm going to ask you to help Corinne with that question.

Wei Lin -- Senior Vice President and Head of Development

Sure, absolutely. So as I discussed earlier, the current PROPEL study really has three substudies in the expansion cohort. It includes around 20 patients who are PD-L1 positive 50% and above. And then another 18 or 20 patients in the 1% to 49% group and then the less than 1% also has another 20 patients. And we'll be looking for both the response rate as well as depth response and durability response in each of these subgroups. Now the benchmark number for pembro in each of these subgroups are well-known and those are publicly available. So we can easily benchmark and the study is designed or analysis plan is designed to benchmark against these numbers. And it's really going to be based on these comparisons to the historic numbers that we're going to make assessment or combination deliver the greatest value, whether it's in the 50% and above patients, making already inflamed tumor even more inflamed and bring on the activity of pembro mono to even a higher level and then even potentially longer durability.

Or is it in the 1% to 49% where pembro mono seems to have comparable provide comparable survival benefit to just platinum double chemotherapy but does not provide any superiority to the existing chemotherapy. But safety-wise, that's actually superior. So that's another area, I think, really high potential for a cytokine-based drug like bempeg to really add a lot of substantial value by inflaming a tumor that's only low to moderately inflamed. And then obviously, there's still the patients who have basically effectively PD-L1 negative less than 1%. And those are the patients, monotherapy does not work, that's inferior to available chemotherapy. And for those patients, typically the standard of care today is chemo plus pembrolizumab or chemo plus atezolizumab. And so that obviously does deliver clinical benefit but really has the added toxicity of the combination chemotherapy. And I think what patients and their doctors are looking for is a chemo-free regimen that can provide similar superior benefit to what chemo plus a checkpoint can really deliver. And so these are really almost three different subgroups for which we're going to have independent decisions made. And the Phase III trials are going to really be based on what the observed activity and durability of our responses and the depth response that we can see in the PROPEL study.

Corinne Jenkins -- Analyst

Great. And then separately, can you talk about how you landed on the solid tumor indications you're looking out with NKTR-255? What's the rationale for an IL-15 in head and neck and colorectal cancer? And are there any other indications where IL-15 really makes sense in your view?

Wei Lin -- Senior Vice President and Head of Development

Yes. I think the selection of those two tumor types are based on a couple of considerations. I think the now IL-15 really acts on two different cell populations, among others. In terms of therapeutic effect, one is the affected T cell population and the other is NK cell population. And currently, the solid tumor study is really leveraging or focusing and trying to harness the NK activity of our 255 molecule. And so the NK cell are instrumental for delivering the ADCC activity of monoclonal antibodies, which is the backbone of many of the current standard of care in oncology. And when we look at the entire treatment landscape in cell tumor and where you have benefit offered by monoclonal therapy, we were looking for tumor types and also drug combination that can still have potential room for improvement and can provide a proof of concept, after which we really can expand the utility of 255 into many other solid tumor types because there are many other monoclonal antibodies that are in use in solid tumor in addition to cetuximab, which is the backbone we're adding on to here.

I think head and neck and colorectal cancer offer a couple of advantages as that first initial proof-of-concept because the as monotherapy, the cetuximab alone delivered response rate in 10% to 15% range. So it is active, the way that single agent chemotherapy is active, but it's not so active that it's very hard to improve upon. And so that provides sort of ideal platform for demonstrating and providing that proof-of-concept where there's still substantial room for improvement in an agent like 255 that can significantly expand the NK cell population and really grow the army upon which these monoclonal antibody will rely on in executing the cell killing of these monoclonal antibodies. I think we can probably see have the opportunity to see the greatest signal and provided by really a strong proof of concept by selecting cetuximab in head, neck and colorectal cancer. So that's where the sort of the clinical and biological consideration. And the other element of this, both of these tumor types are have potential population, right, and where the EGFR monoclonal antibody like cetuximab has really been broad used and as part of the strong standard of care. Basically every patient who have access to these antibodies always get needs cetuximab as part of their standard-of-care treatment.

And colorectal cancer patients as long as they're KRAS wild-type, they, invariably, either first line or second line receive a EGFR monoclonal antibody. So the patient population and the opportunity is fairly large if we can demonstrate that proof of concept, and there's clear registration path to go forward. And if we are able to demonstrate clinical efficacy in these two tumor types, then I think we have such potential proof of concept with one monocle antibody over two different tumor types that provides really a strength to our data. And also the only 10% to 15% baseline response rate give us substantial room to demonstrate how much improvement we can actually provide. And that allow us to really move on to other tumor types or monoclonal antibodies are also established standard of care in solid tumors.

Corinne Jenkins -- Analyst

Great, thank you. Thanks.

Wei Lin -- Senior Vice President and Head of Development

Thank you.

Operator

[Operator Instructions] And our next question comes from Daina Graybosch from SVB Leerink. Your line is open.

Daina Michelle Graybosch -- Analyst

All right, thank you. Two questions for me. One, 2-part and one, 1-part. The 2-part one on NKTR-358. Lilly is pretty excited about lupus, and they have multiple agents in the clinic for lupus, including their JAK and a BTLA inhibitor. And I wonder how you think Lilly's thinking about their portfolio, if they're going to take them all forward or pick one? And then sort of the second part to that, lupus has been a really hard place to do clinical trials. And I wonder if you can talk about why that is and what about your design is going to help you avoid those pitfalls in the past? And then one small question on NKTR-262. I wonder in the biomarkers you've seen thus far and that we'll see in the fall if you're going to tease out the relative concentration of TLR seven and TLR eight agonism?

Jennifer Ruddock -- Senior Vice President, Strategy and Corporate Affairs

Great. JZ, do you mind taking the three questions?

Jonathan Zalevsky -- Chief Research and Development Officer

Sure. Yes. So OK. So Daina, thanks for the question. So let's start off. You asked questions about Lilly's lupus portfolio. And yes, they have multiple agents, small and large molecule there, bari as well as BTLA. And basically, those agents, right, as you know, they're targeting activation immunological mechanisms, right? So JAK inhibitor is blocking signaling through any JAK stat-mediated pathway, so primarily in the cytokine driven way. And then BTLA is also blocking one of the co-stimulatory coadapter kinds of molecules. So one of the reasons why Lilly places so much excitement and importance around the 358 program is because that's what we call a resolution therapeutic. And so conceptually, it's targeting a different kind of mode of addressing the underlying pathology of the disease. Whereas the other agents in Lilly's pipeline and even other ones including anifrolumab and others, they're blocking mechanisms of activation of immunological pathways and inflammatory pathways, whether they're triggered by release of, say, RNA from dying cells that trigger an event or other kinds of systemic chronic inflammation. But the Treg mechanism is actually aiming to activate the body's natural immune restoration or homeostatic for immune-resolving pathway. So it's really a different arm and a different approach, right, for targeting these kinds of diseases.

And one important component of that is it also does even if you really have a long view in mind, which you do, if you're building, say, a pipeline of multiple agents targeting lupus, you also start to envision having the opportunities for combinations. And if you have a drug that say blocks activation and say another drug that stimulates resolution, now you're starting to talk about a really rational scientifically driven kinds of approach to treating these diseases. And traditionally, it's been difficult to stack agents that block activation as they have a lot of overlapping toxicity profiles. But again, that's not the case if you have the resolution therapeutic. So that's one of the ways that I think really is really eyeing their long-term vision in autoimmune disease and really in building an industry-leading pipeline in lupus and in other indications. Your next question was about sort of the concept of doing lupus trials. And I think that historically, we've sort of walked away with the understanding and notion that it's just very hard to develop in this field. And that notion was driven by a couple of things like the kind of heterogeneity of the patient population. And then the fact that there wasn't a clear-cut instrument to measure the disease. While there is SELENA-SLEDAI and BICLA and BILAG, there are other measures that you see coming in more recently, for example, with anifrolumab, that has started to help clarify some of that. So I think that's one of the pitfalls.

And then the other is that I think you just we haven't seen very strong mechanisms, mechanisms that can be measured on top of the standard-of-care steroids that the patients are getting. So we've addressed that in a couple of ways. One of the ways is we're including all of the possible endpoints to measure the disease. So while the primary is based on SLEDAI-2k reduction, secondary is, as you know, include BICLA-BILAG as well as SRI-4 and even other low disease activity scoring systems. So those are really addressing all of the different ways that rheumatologists address and measure the disease. We're also trying to clarify the patient population by really zeroing in on patients with the right kind of severe disease. All of them stratified to at least having active disease. And then, of course, we're also allowing the opportunity to taper steroid use throughout the study. And then the last point for us is that one of the sort of hallmarks of lupus, particularly severe lupus is a well-documented dysfunction of the IL-2 compartment. And that manifests itself both in terms of not just low cytokine levels but also in a reduction in Treg numbers and really also a reduction in Treg capacity. And that's often, as you know, balanced by an over kind of abundance or an increase in the amount of TH17 cells that you see in these patients. And so what we are really also addressing is, I think, really an underlying disease pathology, also by targeting the disease with NKTR-358.

So we're very hopeful that with this design and with this mechanism that we'll have the opportunity to see activity of NKTR-358 in the Phase IIb study. And we're obviously very excited as we believe that the study is now under way. Now the next question you asked was about NKTR-262. And in our biomarker program we'll zero in and look for signs of target engagement for both TLR7 and TLR8 as well as the difference between those. And you it's a very insightful question because the base drug that we conjugated to the polymer is resiquimod, right? And so that's a dual TLR7/8 agonist. And so we do have the opportunity using gene expression with various mRNA networks to focus in on networks that are more TLR7 and more TLR8 related. In addition, as you know, certain cell types have more or less one or the other, in particular, if you consider things like plasmacytoid dendritic cells, right? Those are TLR8-specific and TLR 8-only, they don't even express TLR7. So the biomarker program that we've put in, which includes all of the deep biopsy analysis, it includes cellular composition analysis and the biopsies as well as the gene networks. And so our aim is very much to demonstrate that when we say we're engaging the target, we can say TLR7, TLR8 or both or either one or the other. Thanks for the question, Daina.

Operator

Thank you. And that does conclude our question-and-answer session for today's conference. I'd now like to turn the conference back over to Howard Robin for any closing remarks.

Howard W. Robin -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Well, thank you, everyone, for joining us today. And I'd like to thank our employees for their hard work and commitment during these very difficult times for business in general. We're very proud of how our employees have worked tirelessly to advance our clinical studies, keep our business on track and navigate this environment with both optimism and perseverance. We're fortunate and proud that Nektar has built a highly valuable pipeline of programs in immuno-oncology, in immunology that address significant areas of unmet medical need in solid and liquid tumors across many potential treatment indications and across multiple autoimmune and chronic inflammatory disease states. And as I stated earlier, we're in a unique position of financial strength, with a robust balance sheet with $1.2 billion of cash and no debt. This enables us to continue our important work on advancing potential new medicines that can transform patient care. And we thank you all for your support as shareholders. We look forward to continuing to provide you with updates on our progress, and we also wish you and your families safety and health during this time. So thank you for joining us today. Appreciate it.

Operator

[Operator Closing Remarks]

Questions and Answers:

Duration: 89 minutes

Call participants:

Jennifer Ruddock -- Senior Vice President, Strategy and Corporate Affairs

Howard W. Robin -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Wei Lin -- Senior Vice President and Head of Development

Jonathan Zalevsky -- Chief Research and Development Officer

Gil M. Labrucherie -- Chief Operating Officer and Chief Financial Officer

Peter Richard Lawson -- Barclays Bank -- Analyst

Tyler Martin Van Buren -- Piper Sandler -- Analyst

Chris Shibutani -- Cowen and Company -- Analyst

Alexandre N. Bouilloux -- Mizuho Securities -- Analyst

Gobind Singh -- BMO Capital -- Analyst

Aydin Huseynov -- The Benchmark Company -- Analyst

Jay Olson -- Oppenheimer -- Analyst

Corinne Jenkins -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

Daina Michelle Graybosch -- SVB Leerink -- Analyst

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