Ocean Biomedical Announces New Data Deepening Understanding of Novel Cancer Immunotherapy Treatment Approach 


Ocean Biomedical recently announced Scientific Co-founder Dr. Jack A. Elias, MD, PhD, and colleagues have published new research in the Journal of Immunology that expands understanding of how CHI3L1 inhibits the body’s natural immune responses to lung cancers and related diseases such as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). This research demonstrates for the first time the complex ways that CHI3L1 inhibits macrophage phagocytosis by stimulating two key phagocytosis checkpoint pathways. The paper notes, “This inhibition of innate immune responses such as phagocytosis provides a mechanistic explanation for the ability of CHI3L1 to stimulate immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICPs) and inhibit essential adaptive immune responses in cancer and COPD. The ability of CHI3L1 to simultaneously inhibit innate immune responses, stimulate ICPs, inhibit T cell costimulation, and regulate a number of other oncogenic and inflammation pathways suggests that CHI3L1-targeted therapeutics are promising interventions in cancer, COPD, and other disorders.” Dr. Elias’ research has shown that the inhibition of CHI3L1 diminishes natural adaptive immune responses and reduces cancer growth in vivo in standard and humanized mouse models.

Ocean Biomedical’s monoclonal antibody is one piece of a unique oncology platform that is working to build multiple approaches to activating natural cancer immune responses by suppressing Chi3L1, with potential for broad application. The patent allowance has been granted for Prostate Cancer, Colon Cancer, Rectal Cancer, Ovarian Cancer, Kidney Cancer, Breast Cancer, Glioblastoma, Melanoma, and Lung Cancer.

“This pathway discovery is an unprecedented leap forward, because if you control Chi3L1, you don’t just control one anti-cancer pathway, you simultaneously control many anti-cancer pathways,” said Dr. Jack A. Elias. “Uncovering the mechanisms by which CHI3L1 works will help us drive cancer research, and eventually treatment and patient outcomes, forward.”

Dr. Jack A. Elias is the former Chair of Yale’s Department of Medicine, and the Dean Emeritus of Medicine and Biological Sciences at Brown University. He is a leading pulmonary care specialist and research pioneer. In 2019 he founded Ocean Biomedical with several Brown University colleagues and alums to help address major unmet medical needs by accelerating more discovery science into needed therapeutics.

“This is one more step in a systematic progression towards IND-enabling studies that we hope will move us towards new cancer therapeutics,” added Ocean Biomedical CEO Elizabeth Ng. “It is exciting because our in-vivo testing has already shown efficacy in humanized mouse models, and we know that this major regulating mechanism is at work in so many cancers.

“We are excited to see Dr. Elias’ work receive this important validation, and we hope to continue deepening our understanding of the CHI3L1 pathways to help us apply our patented technology for the good of patients globally,” commented Dr. Chirinjeev Kathuria, Ocean Biomedical’s Chairman and Co-founder.

Ocean Biomedical, Inc. is a Providence, Rhode Island-based biopharma company with an innovative business model that accelerates the development and commercialization of scientifically compelling assets from research universities and medical centers. Ocean Biomedical deploys the funding and expertise to move new therapeutic candidates efficiently from the laboratory to the clinic, to the world. Ocean Biomedical is currently developing five promising discoveries that have the potential to achieve life-changing outcomes in lung cancer, brain cancer, pulmonary fibrosis, and the prevention and treatment of malaria. The Ocean Biomedical team is working on solving some of the world’s toughest problems, for the people who need it most. For more information, visit www.oceanbiomedical.com.