Cellectis SA (CLLS)
Q4 2020 Earnings Call
Mar 5, 2021, 8:00 a.m. ET
Contents:
- Prepared Remarks
- Questions and Answers
- Call Participants
Prepared Remarks:
Operator
Greetings. Welcome to the Cellectis Fourth Quarter and Full-Year 2020 Earnings Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode and a question-and-answer session will follow the formal presentation. [Operator Instructions] Please note this conference is being recorded.
At this time, I'll turn the conference over to Simon Harnest, Chief Investment Officer. Simon, you may begin.
Simon Harnest -- Chief Investment Officer
Thank you, and welcome everyone to Cellectis' fourth quarter and full-year corporate update and financial results conference call for the 2020 fiscal year. Joining me on the call today with prepared remarks are Dr. Andre Choulika, our Chief Executive Officer; Dr. Carrie Brownstein, our Chief Medical Officer; and Eric Dutang, our Chief Financial Officer.
Yesterday evening, Cellectis filed its annual report and issued a press release reporting our financial results for the fourth quarter and year ending December 31, 2020. These reports and press releases are available on our website at cellectis.com.
As a reminder, we will make forward-looking statements regarding Cellectis' financial outlook in addition to its regulatory and product development plans. These statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results to differ forecasted. A description of these risks can be found in our most recent Form 20-F filed with the SEC and the financial report, including the management report for the year ending on December 31, 2020 and subsequent filings Cellectis makes with the SEC from time to time.
I would now like to turn the call over to Andre. Andre, please go ahead.
Andre Choulika -- Board Director & Chief Executive Officer
Thank you, Simon. Good morning, and thank you, everyone, for joining us today. 2020 has been focused on advancing our Company objectives. Despite the challenges the world is facing, Cellectis has achieved key milestones and we are incredibly grateful and proud for all the hard work achieved by our team, our partners and our stakeholders during this challenging year. Some of the progress we've made in 2020 while[Phonetic] moving into 2021 determined on our commitment to a cure. We're thrilled to share with you over the next half an hour this progress and our vision on an exciting future for Cellectis.
In 2020, we fully entered into clinical development of our first three wholly controlled clinical programs. With our pioneering allogeneic UCART cell programs in ALL, AML and multiple myeloma, we're developing alternative targets to the overcrowded CD19 and BCMA landscape. We have already shared early data on our ALL program BALLI-01 at ASH this past December. All three programs are currently enrolling patients in Phase 1 dose-escalation trials, and we are investigating differently for depleting depletion regimens.
While 2020 was an extremely challenging year with a significant impact on logistics, Cellectis successfully completed the construction of our in-house manufacturing facilities on-time in Raleigh, North Carolina and in Paris, France. Both facilities are now up and running with the tech transfer between Paris and Raleigh happening in the first half of this year in order for Raleigh to start manufacturing GMP UCART cell batches in the second half of this year.
Successful product development is highly dependent upon manufacturing from stable clinical supplies to drive the execution of our clinical plans to ensuring consistent quality and meeting regulatory expectations. Our facilities in Raleigh and Paris will allow us to achieve a large degree of manufacturing independence, which is one of the most important value drivers for any cell and gene therapy company. We expect to achieve this by year-end and believe this step will propel Cellectis further ahead as we continue to lead this class of cell therapy companies.
Our clinical execution strongly accelerated during 2020 as we established a world-class team of clinical experts from the CAR T-cell and the hematology/oncology space around Chief -- our Chief Medical Officer, Dr. Carrie Brownstein who joined us from Celgene. Carrie and her team have been instrumental in establishing a broad clinical presence for Cellectis within seven of the top U.S. hospitals, giving us an unprecedented access to large patient population from which we enroll into our clinical trials. In addition to expanding our general management and global manufacturing team with top talent, we appointed Mr. Jean-Pierre Garnier as the Chairman of the Board of Directors in November 2020. Jean-Pierre is a seasoned leader with decades of experience within the global biopharma industry, most notably as the previous CEO of GlaxoSmithKline.
From gene editing to CAR T-cells, Cellectis has always been a strong scientific leader in this space. As an example, Nature Magazine recently ranked top organizations in term of number of patents filed and owned in the CAR T-cell space. In this ranking, Cellectis became -- become as the fourth institution worldwide, just behind Upenn, BMS and Novartis. In the same publication, among the top 20 CAR T-cell inventors, six, so close to one-third, are from Cellectis. This is a great achievement overall. We're also listed as the Number 1 biotech company in the study and this is just for CAR T and I'm not talking about gene editing. Yes, we are a leader in this field and we have plenty of followers.
On the business development front, we're pleased about our recent agreement with Cytovia Therapeutics, which we announced last month. This partnership leads us to expand our TALEN gene-editing platform into iPSC-derived Natural Killer cells and chimeric antigen receptor, so CAR NK cells, for a series of different tumor types will be responsible to develop custom TALEN, which will be used by Cytovia to edit iPSCs to be differentiated into NK cells addressing multiple gene target for therapeutic use in several cancer indication. Cytovia will be -- will conduct the development on the mutually agreed upon therapeutic candidates and we will be eligible for up to $716 million of development, regulatory and sales milestones, as well as a single-digit royalty payment on net sales. We will also receive an equity stake of $15 million in Cytovia stock as well as an option to invest in future financing round, which will allow us to be part of Cytovia as a growing value driver.
Together with the research collaboration and exclusive worldwide license agreement with Iovance on gene-edited tumor infiltrating lymphocytes, we announced last year this partnership shows the growing attraction and relevance of our TALEN platform as the gene-editing solution of choice for cell therapy. We're looking forward to see these next-generation gene-edited cell therapy programs become a reality for cancer patients.
Our partnerships with Allogene and Servier are also gaining momentum and further establishing our growing allogeneic CAR T platform value. Allogene presented initial data from the ALLO-715 program in relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma at ASH in December 2020, the first data set ever presented on an allogeneic cell therapy targeting BCMA. In this initial data readout, 31 patients treated with ALLO-715 were evaluable for safety and 26 patients is eligible for initial efficacy. Allogene is now moving into the next steps in this study, mainly optimizing cell doses and lymphodepletion and plan to provide an update on ALLO-715 later this year. Allogene also initiated a cohort exploring ALLO-715 in combination with the gamma secretase inhibitor nirogacestat with their partner SpringWorks Therapeutics, and is on track to submit an IND for ALLO-605, the first TurboCAR T targeting BCMA for multiple myeloma in the first half of this year.
Regarding CD19, Allogene presented initial data on 22 NHL patients treated with ALLO-501, of which 19 were evaluable for efficacy. At ASCO 2020, in parallel to ALPHA, Allogene ALLO-501A ALPHA 2 trial is designed to enroll homogeneous patient population focused on relapsed/refractory LBCL and was recently granted Fast Track designation for the treatment of this population. The ALPHA 2 trial is designed to potentially move into pivotal Phase 2 trial should the data supported which would make us eligible for milestone payments. ALLO will be assessing the best course of action for pivotal trial in second half of this year, setting this product into a trajectory to potentially become the first-ever approved allergenic CAR T-cell candidate in the world.
Finally, we're excited about the third target licensed to Allogene. CD70 entering the clinic this year with the TRAVERSE trial evaluating ALLO-316 in clear cell renal cell carcinoma. This is our first licensed allogeneic CAR T targeting solid tumors and was eligible for a milestone payment for the first patient dosed. In addition to further de-risking our allogeneic CAR T platform, our alliance with Servier and Allogene are a major value driver to Cellectis. The agreement on CD19 was amended last year, now makes us eligible to up to $410 million in the development and sales milestone, plus double-digit royalty on sales. And the licensing agreement with Allogene on 15 additional allogeneic CAR T targets makes us eligible to over $2.8 billion in -- to potential future milestone payment plus royalty on sales.
With that, I would like to hand the call over to Dr. Carrie Brownstein, our Chief Medical Officer, for an overview of our proprietary clinical programs. Carrie, please go ahead.
Carrie Brownstein -- Chief Medical Officer
Thank you, Andre. I would like to start with our first proprietary product UCART22, our CD22-directed TALEN gene-edited allogeneic off-the-shelf CAR T-cell product candidate currently being evaluated in patients with relapsed and refractory B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia or BALL. We presented preliminary data from patients enrolled in the first two dose levels of our Phase 1 dose-escalation trial BALLI-01 at the American Society of Hematology Annual Meeting in December. This is the first publicly released data from Cellectis' BALLI-01 clinical trial.
As of the November 2, 2020 data cutoff, seven patients were enrolled and five patients received UCART22 following lymphodepletion with fludarabine and cyclophosphamide or FC preconditioning. One patient failed screening and one patient was discontinued prior to the administration of UCART22 due to an adverse event related to the lymphodepletion regimen. Importantly, no patient experienced dose-limiting toxicity, immune cell-associated neurotoxicity syndrome, graft versus host disease, adverse events of special interest nor Grade 3 or higher adverse event or serious adverse events related to UCART22.
No patients discontinued treatment due to a UCART22-related treatment-emergent adverse event. Two patients in dose level one achieved an objective response of complete remission with incomplete count recovery or CRi at day 28, one of which attains -- attained a complete remission or CR at day 42 and proceeded to hematopoietic stem cell transplant after subsequent therapy with inotuzumab.
One patient in dose level two achieved a noteworthy reduction in bone marrow blasts of 60% at screening to 13% at day 28 after treatment with UCART22 and subsequently progressed. Host lymphocyte reconstitution was observed in all patients within the DLT period and correlative analysis of UCAR T-cell expansion and persistence remains ongoing. We are encouraged that UCART22 demonstrated preliminary signs of activity at low dose levels with FC lymphodepletion without unexpected nor significant treatment related toxicity.
Our next step is to evaluate and optimize the cell dose and lymphodepletion in order to augment these early responses. We have added an arm to the trial in which we explore the addition of alemtuzumab, an anti-CD52 antibody added to the FC lymphodepletion regimen, which we call FCA, which is expected to result in a deeper and more sustained T-cell depletion and thereby promote expansion and persistence of UCART22 cells. We are currently enrolling patients in dose level two with FCA and we plan to give an interim clinical data update on this cohort in the second half of this year.
Coming to UCARTCS1, our CS1-directed TALEN gene-edited allogeneic CAR T-cell product candidate being evaluated in patients with relapsed or refractory multiple myeloma. We collected preliminary translational data from the first group of patients enrolled last year, and we plan to share an early look at this data in the first half of this year. Similar to BCMA, CS1 is a widely and consistently expressed target on the plasma cells of multiple myeloma. Interestingly, CS1 is also expressed on other immune cells, including T-cells and NK cells.
Cellectis is uniquely positioned to leverage this important myeloma target because through the use of our gene-editing technology, we are able to knock out CS1 from the T-cells prior to inserting the CS1-directed CAR which avoids T-cell fratricide during manufacturing. An additional differentiating factor is that our UCARTCS1 cells self-generate lymphodepletion through targeting CS1 expressing lymphocytes and thus did not require additional preconditioning with the CD52-directed antibody.
While the FDA had placed a clinical hold on this program last year following a patient death in dose level two which occurred toward the end of the 28-day observation period, this hold has been since lifted with updates to the protocol and the study has resumed.
Next is UCART123, our CD123-directed TALEN gene-edited allogeneic CAR T-cell product candidate being evaluated in patients with relapsed and refractory acute myeloid leukemia. This program is addressing one of the highest unmet medical need population, and a successful CAR T-cell program in relapsed and refractory AML could be a significant paradigm shift for patients. Our current clinical product is an enhanced version of UCART123, which includes updates to the manufacturing process and incorporates the CD52 knockout to allow the use of an FCA lymphodepletion regimen. We are currently enrolling in our Phase 1 dose-escalation trial with two study arms, one with FC and one with FCA lymphodepletion. Enrollment in both arms is ongoing and the data obtained will give us great insight into the CAR T-cell kinetics and host lymphocyte recovery using both strategies. We are looking forward to sharing this data from the program when available.
Building on the technology platform of our current proprietary clinical program, I would like to add that we plan to submit INDs and initiate new clinical trials this year for novel proprietary product candidates targeting additional oncology indications as well as genetic disease settings. We look forward to sharing additional information in the near future.
Our licensed allogeneic CAR T-cell development programs are making great progress as well. As Andre mentioned before, this year, we are expecting rich clinical data flow from Allogene and Servier from our licensed CD19 programs and relapsed/refractory NHL and from Allogene for the BCMA program and multiple myeloma at various medical meetings, further validating the allogeneic CAR T-cell approach which we invented and pioneered.
With that, I would like to hand the call over to Eric, our Chief Financial Officer, for a more detailed overview of our business development activities. Eric, please go ahead.
Eric Dutang -- Chief Financial Officer
Thank you, Carrie, and good morning. Before I provide a brief overview of financials for the quarter and year-end, I'd like to spend a few minutes on some of our business development activities in 2020 and in early 2021.
In particular, at the beginning of 2021, we announced our alliance with Cytovia, which includes up to $760 million of development, regulatory and sales milestones, and we will also receive single-digit royalty payments on the net sales of all partnered products commercialized by Cytovia. We will also receive an equity stake of $15 million in Cytovia stock or an upfront cash payment of $15 million if certain conditions are not met by December 31, 2021, as well as an option to invest in future financing rounds.
In 2020, we announced our collaboration with Iovance on gene-edited TILs with significant undisclosed development and sales milestones, plus royalties on sales along with an amendment of our partnership agreement with Servier with up to $410 million in development and sales milestones, plus low-double-digit royalties on sales. Further later, we will potentially receive in 2021 a milestone payment from the first pivotal trial of ALLO-501A in large B-cell lymphoma.
Finally, as a reminder, we are also eligible to receive up to $2.8 billion in development and sales milestone, plus high-single-digit royalties on sales from Allogene related to 15 targets. We will potentially receive in 2021 a milestone payment from the launch of the TRAVERSE trial of ALLO-316 in renal cell carcinoma.
Now onto our financials. The cash, cash equivalents, current financial assets, and restricted cash position of Cellectis, excluding Calyxt, as of December 31, 2020 was $244 million compared to $304 million as of December 31, 2019. This difference mainly reflects $28 million of proceeds received from Servier in the first quarter of 2020 and the receipt of $21 million state-guaranteed loan, which were offset by $102 million of other net cash flows used in operating, investing and lease financing activities. This cash position is expected to be sufficient to fund Cellectis stand-alone operations into late 2022. This runway discounts any future milestone payments.
The consolidated cash, cash equivalents, current financial assets and restricted cash position of Cellectis, including Calyxt, was $274 million as of December 31, 2020 compared to $364 million as of December 31, 2019. The net cash flow used in operating, capital expenditure and leases were $86 million at Cellectis and $44 million at Calyxt in the full year of 2020.
The net loss attributable to shareholders of Cellectis, excluding Calyxt, was $54 million in the full year of 2020 compared to a net loss of $75 million in 2019. This $21 million increase in the net results between 2020 and 2019 was primarily driven by a significant increase in revenues and other income of $44 million, which was partially offset by an increase in SG&A expenses of $5 million and a decrease in financial gains of $19 million.
The consolidated net loss attributable to shareholders of Cellectis, including Calyxt, was $81 million or $1.91 per share in the full year of 2020 compared to $102 million or $2.41 per share in 2019. The consolidated adjusted net loss attributable to shareholders of Cellectis, excluding non-cash stock-based compensation expenses, was $67 million or $1.77[Phonetic] per share in the full year of 2020 compared to $79 million or $1.86 per share in 2019.
We are laser focused to spend our cash on developing our deep pipeline of wholly owned product candidates in the clinic and operating our state-of-the-art manufacturing facilities in Paris and in Raleigh. On the other hand, our focus on maintaining an efficient corporate infrastructure should enable more limited growth in G&A spend.
With that, I would like to hand the call back over to Andre for concluding remarks. Andre, please go ahead.
Andre Choulika -- Board Director & Chief Executive Officer
Thank you, Eric. Again, we're very proud of the organization and team that we have built over the past years. We started treating the first patient in pediatric ALL in 2015 under compassionate use protocol with the first-ever gene-edited allogeneic CAR T-cell therapy. Those babies are now young kids in school and continue to be tumor-free. This is what motivates us, our entire team to get to work every day with the mission to save the lives and offer a treatment option to those cancer patients that have exhausted all other treatment option.
Fast forward from 2015 to today, we now are a fully integrated gene-editing biotech company with seven therapeutic development programs in clinical trials, including three wholly controlled targets based on our proprietary TALEN gene-editing technology. To further expand our current clinical pipeline, we're in the middle of finalizing preclinical work on a series of new allogeneic CAR T-cell targets and other product candidates. We strongly believe that our proprietary cell and gene therapy platform, combined with our in-house manufacturing facility, our broad clinical pipeline will lead to a paradigm shift in the cancer therapeutics and cell therapies in general, positioning us at the forefront of this promising scientific field.
With that, I would like to open the call for Q&A.
Questions and Answers:
Operator
Thank you. At this time, we'll now be conducting a question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] To allow as many as possible to ask questions today, please limit yourself to one question and one follow-up. Thank you. And our first question is from the line of Michael Schmidt with Guggenheim. Please proceed with your question.
Michael Schmidt -- Guggenheim -- Analyst
Hi guys. Good morning. Thanks for taking my question. I actually had a question around your investment into the CAR NK space as part of the Cytovia collaboration. I was just curious if you could share maybe how the Cytovia technology and approach, together with the Europe TALEN approach. How that might differ compared to what others are doing in the CAR NK space? And longer term, how you think CAR NK cell products might be positioned relative to CAR T products within oncology indications? Thank you so much.
Simon Harnest -- Chief Investment Officer
Thanks, Michael. I appreciate the question and thanks for joining us this morning. This is Simon. Very good question. We make very selective business development deals with very high-quality technology partners. We want to be very selective, as I said, because there is such a wealth of new technologies coming into the market and we think Cytovia is one of the best partners in the iPSC-derived NK cell space. So that's obviously a space that catches a lot of momentum currently. And we can make a significant difference here by adding our TALEN gene edit and this collaboration is also positioned more as an investment for Cellectis due to the fact that we actually have an equity stake in the company rather than an upfront cash payment. So, we are very encouraged by the progress of the company so far, and we are continuing to be very excited about the growth that can come out of this collaboration.
As we said, we have obviously over $700 million in development milestones, regulatory milestones, some sales milestones. But for us, it's much more interesting to actually make a significant change to improve with gene editing what is a very wonderful scientific platform on the iPSC-derived NK cell front. So for us, it's a foray into this space. This will include some solid tumor targets as well, but without taking the focus and resources away from us to focus on our off-the-shelf CAR T-cell treatments, which we think have the best shots on goal for the targets that we're pursuing.
And Andre, feel free to add anything.
Andre Choulika -- Board Director & Chief Executive Officer
Well, it's in fact something that is important for us because there is a lot of selection among all the gene-editing technologies, and we see more and more people that are focusing on TALEN interest because of the performance of the technology and the quality of the cells that comes out, plus Cellectis is a one-stop shop in the field of gene editing. It means we have daily proportion technologies, we have the TALEN technologies, we have other gene-editing technologies and we have a huge amount of experience in handling cells and editing them.
On the fact of between NK, T-cells, etc., Cellectis is focusing on T-cells, Cytovia is focusing on NK. We cannot be on all fronts and we believe very strongly that the focus that we have on primary T-cells is very promising and very straightforward currently because of the successes that we are starting to see in the field. The NK, we believe in them, we think Cytovia is the best partner to do it, but we don't think that Cellectis should spread itself into all directions.
Why in the T-cell space we'd like primary cells, for the simple reason that T-cells are more of a cocktail than NK cells. There is of course like different type of NK cells, but in the space of T-cells, there is CD8, CD4s, gamma-delta, T-central memory, etc. So it's a cocktail that is part of the know-how of Cellectis and how to extract this from a leukopak of the healthy donor and that's also not within the reach of -- immediate reach of filing product on something that would be a sophisticated product in there.
Now, we believe in the iPSC and the stem cell differentiation and something that we are very excited about the technology of Cytovia that come from very prestigious labs in the -- on the West Coast, and we think that it's going to deliver very strong results at the end.
Michael Schmidt -- Guggenheim -- Analyst
Okay. Thank you.
Operator
Our next question comes from the line of Gena Wang with Barclays. Please proceed with your questions.
Gena Wang -- Barclays -- Analyst
Thank you. I also have one question regarding the Cytovia partnership. Just wondering the -- if any color you can share with the initial target. And also, will Cytovia or Cellectis be responsible for any product manufacturing?
And second question is regarding the CS1, UCARTCS1. I know your clinical hold left was much faster or earlier than expected. Can you give a little bit more color, what FDA was looking for, and then what was the modification of the protocol going forward for the program?
Simon Harnest -- Chief Investment Officer
Yes. Hey, Gena. Thank you so much for the wonderful questions. Maybe I can take the first part of the question and then I'll direct it over to Carrie, who is the Chief Medical Officer who can answer a little bit of the background on the CS1 program. So for Cytovia, they will be responsible for the manufacturing of NK cell programs, we provide the technology for them needed to make the gene-editing part, which is a pretty straightforward system that we have perfected in-house and which we have already provided. For example, Iovance's TIL programs for the gene-editing approaches there, so it's the similar set up.
We haven't given too much color around the targets. Obviously, the company is still a private company and has the benefit to move forward without disclosing those targets too early, but the mix of solid and liquid tumor targets. And Carrie, maybe you talk little bit about CS1. Thank you so much.
Carrie Brownstein -- Chief Medical Officer
Yeah. Hi, Gena. Nice to hear you. So yeah, we were really pleased with the lifting of the hold back in the fall. And as we had previously disclosed to everyone that the hold initially was due to a patient death at dose level two during the dose-limiting toxicity window. We are planning on sharing data, hopefully, very soon from this first group of patients from last year prior to the hold. And with that, we will be providing additional details on what we were -- what we were -- what we've done to reopen the study.
Operator
Our next question is from the line of Salveen Richter with Goldman Sachs. Please proceed with your questions.
Salveen Richter -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst
Good morning. Thanks for taking my questions. Just wondering if you could provide us with some timelines for the program -- the new programs moving into the clinic, be it genetic diseases that you mentioned or you're looking to file INDs or these Natural Killer iPSC cell program?
Simon Harnest -- Chief Investment Officer
Yes. Hi, Salveen. Thank you so much. So first of all, the timelines for our new IND that Carrie mentioned briefly on the call, this is something we will talk much more about this year. As we're progressing toward IND filing, what we do want to show is that we have been quiet for the last couple of years on our preclinical development and our gene-editing platform, while at the same time actually making a lot of progress on that front. And we would really like to show the street what is under the surface at Cellectis because we are a world-leading gene-editing company with a platform in T-cells, internally we have partnerships with leading companies, in NK cells and TIL and we have a gene therapy program that we would like to really put front and center as a new pillar of value for the Company.
But for us, the biggest focus and timeline this year is getting very exciting with our clinical development of our current proprietary CAR T program. We are advancing this through the dose-escalation phases that we mentioned. So we expect some very interesting data flow out of our current clinical programs, and then we expect new IND filings within 12 months. So bear with us just a little longer. I think we will give more information in the second and third quarter of this year as we are getting really close to these IND filings.
Salveen Richter -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst
Thank you.
Operator
Our next question is from the line of Hartaj Singh with Oppenheimer. Please proceed with your questions.
Hartaj Singh -- Oppenheimer -- Analyst
Great, thank you for the question and all of the progress. Just one question. [Technical Issues] quite few companies and out in the field of problems locating things as simple as pipettes also plasmid, mRNA, etc. a lot of it seems to be vacuumed up into the COVID-19 space. How -- Andre, how are you positioned with your Paris and your Raleigh facility in this regards also being autonomous by the end of this year? And then I just have a quick follow-up after that. Thank you.
Andre Choulika -- Board Director & Chief Executive Officer
Thank you very much, Hartaj, for the question. I think it's an important question. And we took the decision in 2018 to start constructing our manufacturing plant and we take it -- took a decision to split in order to go fast on the first phase and -- because the second phase would be longer. So the first phase was essentially to build up manufacturing plant fully GMP to manufacture DNA, plasmids, mRNA for the TALEN and vectors to bring the CARs inside the cells. And that's operational since 2020 and start producing.
Imagine, in 2020, with the COVID crisis, trying to order an mRNA with what's happening in there, even a plasmid, etc., it's becoming a real complication. And when I'm saying that Cellectis' full integration is kind of a one-stop shop, it goes like from the idea at the bench, and so we can manufacture everything. All the raw materials to make a CAR T, mRNA, like plasmids and so internally can immediately have them. We have all the quality system around this, we have all the vectors, all the mRNA, everything is shipped to Raleigh.
Raleigh is going to go operational this year and the cell and gene therapy is becoming a more and more intense market. And the fact that we can't build everything internally, including sometimes the buffer, but daily proportion technologies are ours, so we can tune up all the little details around this.
I believe today, in 2021, is one of the biggest strength and a differentiated company very strongly.
Hartaj Singh -- Oppenheimer -- Analyst
Great. Thank you, Andre. And then, just a quick question on UCART123. I think last year with new IND, you had mentioned that you'd be looking at patients with maybe a better performing status. Maybe a year, slightly younger group of patients and there might be a little bit more of a window between the core -- between doses. Has that changed or you still sort of going through those initial phases of that escalation protocol? Thank you for all the questions.
Simon Harnest -- Chief Investment Officer
Hey, Hartaj. Maybe I can take it and I can hand it over to Carrie. So we're currently dosing patients at dose level two at the arm of addition of alemtuzumab to the preconditioning cycle. So we actually do two arms of the study in parallel, one with [Indecipherable] plus alemtuzumab. And Carrie maybe you take over here for the patient population we're treating and the dose-escalation plan forward.
Carrie Brownstein -- Chief Medical Officer
Yeah. So thanks for the question. So as Simon pointed out, we have two arms now open in that trial and we're evaluating using alemtuzumab or not using alemtuzumab in this patient population. And I think it's important to point out and make that clear. Patients with AML are somewhat, I don't know if unstable is the right word, but it's a tough group of patients to crack, they tend to be older, they tend to have poor performance status, etc. So it's really critically important to look at preconditioning using alemtuzumab or not because alemtuzumab can sometimes add its own issues. So we want to be sure.
That said in terms of their performance side, the protocol allows people with relapsed/refractory disease, we have eligibility built in to ensure that patients -- we're enrolling patients that should be able to tolerate any side effects that we would expect like cytokine release, etc. But that said, as I said, patients with AML tend to be unpredictable.
What I'm very comfortable with and proud of is we have a really strong medical team, particularly in the leukemia space that I've been building since I joined early last year, and we're very close with our investigators, we're very close and speak with them regularly and discuss the patients and go over all of their criteria to ensure that we all think that this is the appropriate study for those patients. So, I feel confident that we're enrolling patients that can tolerate our products, so we can get some answers in this very difficult-to-treat patient population.
Hartaj Singh -- Oppenheimer -- Analyst
Great. Thank you.
Operator
Our next question is from the line of Yigal Nochomovitz with Citigroup. Please proceed with your question.
Yigal Nochomovitz -- Citigroup -- Analyst
Great. Hi, Andre, Simon and Carrie. Thank you very much for taking the questions. I just had one on UCART22. Could you clarify what you mean by the correlated analysis of cell expansion and persistence? Do you mean correlation of cell expansion and persistence with response? And will this analysis determine whether you need to adjust the lymphodepletion regimen?
And then a separate financial question. You just -- could you just comment where you stand with respect to your stake in Calyxt? Is that something you would consider selling to further finance the Company? Thank you.
Simon Harnest -- Chief Investment Officer
Yes. Thanks, Yigal. Maybe first question for Carrie and I can start with the second question really quick. So for Calyxt, we're over 50% shareholder in the company. We love what the company is doing, they actually have what we believe is a very strong period of growth ahead of them. Please monitor their earnings call as well that just happened last night or yesterday. It's a wonderful company with scarcity value because it's the only publicly traded gene-editing company in the agriculture space currently with a full focus on sustainability and improving crops in the ag space for consumer consumption. It's again something that we don't expect to divest anytime soon. Carrie, if you want to answer the question on 22. Thank you.
Carrie Brownstein -- Chief Medical Officer
Yeah. Sure. Thanks so much. So correlative analysis are basically all of our translational work where we're going to be looking at the lymphocyte recovery, the subset T, NK, B-cell subsets as they come back and correlating that with our expansion data on the cells, on the UCART cells as well as efficacy. And we're looking at that very closely to help us understand what our best foot forward will be, whether or not we need to make any additional adjustments to the preconditioning, etc., so we can give these UCART cells the best chance of success.
Yigal Nochomovitz -- Citigroup -- Analyst
Okay, thank you very much.
Carrie Brownstein -- Chief Medical Officer
You're welcome. Thank you.
Operator
Our next question is from the line of Wangzhi Li with Ladenburg. Please proceed with your questions.
Wangzhi Li -- Ladenburg -- Analyst
Hey, thanks for taking my question. I have two questions, too. The first one is regarding the new programs. You expect to file IND this year and Carrie mentioned also there is a new direction for genetic disease. So my question is, can you provide a more color in terms of the number of new INDs this year? Is this one program, model programs and the further genetic disease, can you provide any more color on what kind of direction or space assuming that ex-vivo approach for genetic disease, any color would be helpful.
And then the last question is on the CAR NK partnership. Can you provide us some high-level color on the target? Is it going to -- will it be -- not -- it will happen with your current CAR T targets or is allowed to for some same targets?
Simon Harnest -- Chief Investment Officer
Thanks, Wangzhi. Very good questions. I will have to say, short answer for the first question, we will provide more color on our programs that are previously undisclosed in the second quarter of this year. So, we will give you all the details then. And just rest assured, it's a very exciting program where we think we have a huge differentiating technology for. So it's something that currently cannot be done with any other technology. For the second question on NK cells, Andre, do you want to give a little more color on the target? I don't believe we have given that color.
Andre Choulika -- Board Director & Chief Executive Officer
Well, hi, Wangzhi. Well, we haven't disclosed the targets because it's more on the Cytovia side to say this. And like we're -- we -- everyone's copying on everyone in this space and more especially, everyone is copying on Cellectis in this space. So if you want to hear about what we're doing, then like it's -- like could fuel you know the market with new IDs[Phonetic] and we will definitely do this, but like to prepare ourselves as much as possible to try to like move forward very rapidly.
But on the Cytovia side, I think that nothing of this was disclosed. We're super excited by the IDs we've been growing together and it's -- no, there is no information we can unfortunately air on this, outside the fact of may be waiting for the second half, like second quarter to hear to reflect a good update on the pipeline, preclinical pipeline we have.
Wangzhi Li -- Ladenburg -- Analyst
Okay, fair enough. Thank you very much.
Operator
Our next question is from the line of Biren Amin with Jefferies. Please proceed with your questions.
Biren Amin -- Jefferies -- Analyst
Yeah. Hi guys. Thanks for taking my questions. Maybe on the myeloma program, given the clinical hold was lifted in mid-November, when do you expect to start redosing patients in that trial?
Simon Harnest -- Chief Investment Officer
Yes. Carrie, would you like to take that one? Thank you, Biren. Good question.
Carrie Brownstein -- Chief Medical Officer
Sure, absolutely. So once the hold was lifted, we started all of the downstream activities that would allow us to start redosing and we have already begun opening our sites and should be planning on first patients with redosing hopefully very soon.
Biren Amin -- Jefferies -- Analyst
Okay. And then I guess with any of these three programs, do you anticipate that you'll have sufficient clinical data by end of this year, where you can make a decision to go into a pivotal cohort next year?
Carrie Brownstein -- Chief Medical Officer
So our plans as of now are as we have the data available to give a good package of data, as I've said before that is meaningful. As I think we've previously stated, I think UCART22 is moving forward the most quickly and that could be something that potentially we could consider, but we will have to depend on what we see with our data and how things move forward.
Biren Amin -- Jefferies -- Analyst
Great. Thank you.
Carrie Brownstein -- Chief Medical Officer
Sure.
Operator
Our next question is from the line of Nick Abbott with Wells Fargo. Please proceed with your questions.
Nick Abbott -- Wells Fargo -- Analyst
Good morning, and thanks for taking our questions. First one is on UCART22. Have you demonstrated direct evidence of host immunity targeting UCART22? There is a correlation between T-cell reconstitution and disappearance of UCART22, but have you actually identified which host cells are targeting the UCART22 cells?
Carrie Brownstein -- Chief Medical Officer
Yeah. No, at this point, we haven't -- go ahead, sorry.
Simon Harnest -- Chief Investment Officer
No, no, I want to direct this to you, Carrie.
Carrie Brownstein -- Chief Medical Officer
I know that. Yeah, sure. I'm sorry. I should have waited. Yeah. So we're doing all of that work. We're really looking to see -- to me, more important -- well, both things are very important, any of the cell recovery as well as which cells are actually targeting the allogeneic CAR Ts to be rejected. So we are looking at all that data. We don't have that data available to share.
That said, I do think the key is really ensuring that we are able to keep the count recovery long enough for the UCART cells to expand into their business and I think that the addition of alemtuzumab and ensuring that we find the best way of including it for both safety and efficacy is really key for this year and in terms of our goals. And we will be looking at all that data to help inform the best plan for moving forward, whether it'd be in a pivotal situation or otherwise.
Nick Abbott -- Wells Fargo -- Analyst
Thanks. And that's a great segue to my second question, which is on our alemtuzumab currently looking at 20 milligrams consecutively for three days. So how long do you expect that to be effective at dampening down this host immune recovery? How much variability do you expect to see? And how long do you want to keep that host immune recovery down?
Carrie Brownstein -- Chief Medical Officer
Yeah, that's a great question. Again, I think that's all goes to the data. So we know from earlier data with allogeneic transplant that the use of alemtuzumab can -- it is used in preconditioning for transplant and typically you would expect the lymphodepletion to be six weeks or so. It can be for quite a long time because it's our monoclonal antibody obviously with a very long half-life. So, finding that balance where we're keeping the host immune system at bay long enough for the cells to ablate the leukemia, but not too long that you end up with other issues is a critically important piece of this puzzle.
And as we gather data, I want to be making data-driven decisions on how we do that. So to answer the question, I can't exactly answer how long because it's going to depend on what we see with the data.
Nick Abbott -- Wells Fargo -- Analyst
Great, thanks for the questions.
Carrie Brownstein -- Chief Medical Officer
Sure. Thank you.
Operator
The next question is from the line of Raju Prasad with William Blair. Please proceed with your questions.
Samantha Corwin -- William Blair -- Analyst
Hi, there. This is Sami on for Raj. Thanks for taking our questions, and congrats on the progress. Based on your data and the data from Allogene today, how are you guys thinking about redosing across your trials? And then also could you remind us if you plan on enrolling patients refractory to BCMA therapies in your CS1 trial for multiple myeloma? Thanks.
Simon Harnest -- Chief Investment Officer
Absolutely. Carrie, you go ahead.
Carrie Brownstein -- Chief Medical Officer
So, the second -- the second part is -- the second part of the question is faster, so I'll start with that. So in all of our trials, whether it's BCMA or CD19 or other auto or ALLO CAR Ts, for that matter, we don't exclude them. So our programs, which I think makes them unique and exciting is that we're able to enroll patients and potentially see a signal in patient who has already failed one of these therapies and would not be able to go on to, let's say, if they had an auto BCMA and they may not go onto an ALLO BCMA for example. So it does give us more shots on goal because they are alternative targets and will really be only people pursuing them in the ALLO space in a large way. So I think that's a really important unique property of our programs. So the short answer is, yes, they can come on the study.
In regards to redosing, absolutely one of the key most important and exciting pieces of allogeneic CAR Ts is the fact that we can redose and so we are exploring that in these studies. And we will be -- when we have data to share, will be exciting to share that with you all.
Samantha Corwin -- William Blair -- Analyst
Thanks.
Carrie Brownstein -- Chief Medical Officer
Thank you.
Operator
Our next question is from the line of Ingrid Bensinger[Phonetic] with Kempen. Please proceed with your questions.
Ingrid Bensinger -- Kempen -- Analyst
Hi, good morning. Thank you for taking my question. Acknowledged it may be difficult for you to speak for your partners to the best of your knowledge, when would you be expecting to see something more from Servier and LNG about their plans for UCART19 and ALLO?
Simon Harnest -- Chief Investment Officer
Yes. Hey, Ingrid. Thank you so much for the questions. It's a very important point because it's obviously a strong value driver for us, not just from an economics perspective and milestone revenue but also from the platform validation perspective. So you UCART19 was the first product that Cellectis brought into the clinic in 2015, and that has since been renamed ALLO-501. And ALLO-501 is equal to UCART19. However, there has been a new version of UCART19 that omits a built-in off switch, which is activated by rituximab and that program is called ALLO-501A. So in short, it's just an easier-to-produce product that allow us to use UCART19 or ALLO-501 with patients that have been treated with rituximab, which is part of the standard of care approach in NHL.
So Allogene and Servier are now moving forward in a unified fashion, the ALLO-501A program. And that ALLO-501A program, as Allogene has recently mentioned, is slated for an update in the second quarter of this year at a medical meeting. So this is just a few months down the line now where we will have an update on patients treated with ALLO-501 and ALLO-501A. And both companies have said that they would like to join forces to initiate a Phase 2 study by the end of this year for this program, which could be potentially be pivotal registration trial for this program.
So it's a very exciting time for us at Cellectis because we think the first program that we brought into the clinic as a trailblazer of the allogeneic gene-edited off-the-shelf CAR T-cell space is now actually on track toward potentially for first product approval over the next 18 months or 24 months. So look out for news on that front from Servier and Allogene, there will be data on this program mid this year and potentially initiation of a Phase 2 trial by the end of this year.
Ingrid Bensinger -- Kempen -- Analyst
All right. Thank you, Simon. That was clear.
Operator
Our next question is from the line of Jack Allen with Baird. Please proceed with your questions.
Jack Allen -- RW Baird -- Analyst
Hi, thank you so much for taking our questions. I wanted to ask about your thoughts with regards to timing of getting the TALEN-based products into the clinic in solid tumors. I know you mentioned that ALLO-316 is expected to enter the clinic in the coming months. But I was also wondering if you could touch on the timing with respect to if anything clinical products, with respect to the Iovance and Cytovia partnerships as well. Thank you so much.
Simon Harnest -- Chief Investment Officer
Thanks, Jack. Yeah, it's a wonderful question. We think solid tumor approaches are really the next frontier for cell therapies as this pertains to our partnership as well as to our proprietary programs that we're aiming to move into the clinic. So, we mentioned this in the past that new INDs will also address solid tumor targets from Cellectis. So proprietary targets to Cellectis, I think, will make an interesting development case here, but as you said, also on the TILs and NK cell platforms.
So we wanted to derisk our technology first in liquid tumors where we've seen really great responses with our CAR T-cell approaches and now we are expanding that beyond liquid tumors into solid tumors.
Jack Allen -- RW Baird -- Analyst
Thanks so much.
Operator
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Soumit Roy with Jones Trading. Please proceed with your questions.
Soumit Roy -- Jones Trading -- Analyst
Hi, thank you for taking the question. Sticking with the -- in line with the prior question, could you give us some broad stroke thought process on attacking solid tumor like? Especially looking through the lens of Cytovia deal, are you taking winning strategies here with iPSC NK cell line or how do you think between gamma-delta or alpha-beta? Are you looking into tissue penetration of cell type or T-cell modification? What do you think will crack the solid tumor nut?
Simon Harnest -- Chief Investment Officer
Carrie, maybe you want to provide some comment on that first. And thank you Soumit for that question. Carrie go ahead.
Carrie Brownstein -- Chief Medical Officer
Yeah, sorry, I was unmute. I'm not 100% clear on the question to be honest with you. So just in terms of which targets or I'm not sure...
Soumit Roy -- Jones Trading -- Analyst
No, like the cell type. Like are you think still thinking alpha-beta T-cell is the right cell type to tackle a solid tumor or with Cytovia deal you are indicating maybe iPSC NK cells are a better candidate for tissue penetration in the solid tumor versus liquid tumors?
Carrie Brownstein -- Chief Medical Officer
Yeah. So I think that's a good question that we just don't know -- we don't know the answer to. And I also would turn to Andre for more color on that. But I do think -- what I think it's critical here for us as Cellectis is that we have the gene-editing platform so we can do all of these different approaches to whether it'd be a liquid tumor, solid tumor or other diseases. And I think that applying in this platform to different -- to all these different platforms, whether it'd be iPSCs or gamma-delta, alpha-beta, what have you, are important clinical and research questions that need to be answered, but I don't think there is any answer. And so I think it's what's important that we're doing here at Cellectis is where we have our feet or toes or fingers in all these different potential options that will help patients in need. And that's why I think being here so exciting because we can make a difference in all these different ways and we will figure out what is actually the best strategy, whether it'd be for a liquid tumor, solid tumor or other diseases.
Andre Choulika -- Board Director & Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, I cannot agree more with Carrie. The limitation that Cellectis has is not technical. We can do everything technically. Our gene-editing technology is extremely powerful and there is more and more papers that are coming, showing that the access of TALEN to any kind of DNA and the precision of this technology and its accuracy and its specificity and the ability to promote DNA recombination or replacement, correction etc., is unprecedented in this arena, plus we have like liberation[Phonetic] etc., the limitations are not technical for Cellectis.
The problem is more focus of the Company and also was for the past years on the manufacturing, but we just unplugged this blockage that we have. The manufacturing is internalized bit by bit, and this year, 2021, will have no limit in terms of what we can manufacture for clinical supplies, but also for commercial supplies. And also Carrie is building a huge and awesome clinical team around her from cleanup to translational, etc., and that like the limit is more people and what we can do, and of course the finances of the Company that have to follow on this.
But we cannot spread ourselves on the thin layer. The problem is certainly not technology-wise because we own it all. The problem is on the focus of the Company and I think we're really laser-focused on what we're doing currently.
Soumit Roy -- Jones Trading -- Analyst
Got it. Thank you and good luck with the upcoming catalysts.
Andre Choulika -- Board Director & Chief Executive Officer
Thanks.
Operator
Thank you. At this time, we have reached the end of our question-and-answer session. And now I'll hand the floor back over to Simon Harnest for closing remarks.
Simon Harnest -- Chief Investment Officer
Thank you so much. And again, thank you all for joining us. We'll have a couple of follow-up calls after this. Feel free to always reach out to me. And again, I'm very excited about this year because I think there's going to be a lot of clinical data coming that we're all very much eagerly waiting. So thank you again for joining us and we'll speak to you soon.
Operator
[Operator Closing Remarks]
Duration: 63 minutes
Call participants:
Simon Harnest -- Chief Investment Officer
Andre Choulika -- Board Director & Chief Executive Officer
Carrie Brownstein -- Chief Medical Officer
Eric Dutang -- Chief Financial Officer
Michael Schmidt -- Guggenheim -- Analyst
Gena Wang -- Barclays -- Analyst
Salveen Richter -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst
Hartaj Singh -- Oppenheimer -- Analyst
Yigal Nochomovitz -- Citigroup -- Analyst
Wangzhi Li -- Ladenburg -- Analyst
Biren Amin -- Jefferies -- Analyst
Nick Abbott -- Wells Fargo -- Analyst
Samantha Corwin -- William Blair -- Analyst
Ingrid Bensinger -- Kempen -- Analyst
Jack Allen -- RW Baird -- Analyst
Soumit Roy -- Jones Trading -- Analyst