NASDAQ:CRVS Corvus Pharmaceuticals Q2 2025 Earnings Report $4.31 +0.18 (+4.36%) Closing price 08/8/2025 04:00 PM EasternExtended Trading$4.22 -0.09 (-1.97%) As of 08/8/2025 05:01 PM Eastern Extended trading is trading that happens on electronic markets outside of regular trading hours. This is a fair market value extended hours price provided by Polygon.io. Learn more. ProfileEarnings HistoryForecast Corvus Pharmaceuticals EPS ResultsActual EPS-$0.10Consensus EPS -$0.13Beat/MissBeat by +$0.03One Year Ago EPSN/ACorvus Pharmaceuticals Revenue ResultsActual RevenueN/AExpected RevenueN/ABeat/MissN/AYoY Revenue GrowthN/ACorvus Pharmaceuticals Announcement DetailsQuarterQ2 2025Date8/7/2025TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateThursday, August 7, 2025Conference Call Time4:30PM ETConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfilePowered by Corvus Pharmaceuticals Q2 2025 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrAugust 7, 2025 ShareLink copied to clipboard.Key Takeaways Negative Sentiment: Research and development expenses increased by $3.8 million to $7.9 million in Q2 2025, driven by higher clinical trial and manufacturing costs for selcolitinib and increased personnel expenses. Negative Sentiment: The net loss for Q2 2025 doubled to $8 million, compared to $4.3 million in Q2 2024, reflecting both operating losses and non-cash fair value changes. Positive Sentiment: As of June 30, 2025, Corvus held $74.4 million in cash, cash equivalents, and marketable securities and raised $35.7 million from warrant exercises, providing funding into 2026. Positive Sentiment: Phase 1 data for selcolitinib in atopic dermatitis Cohort 3 showed a 64.8% mean EASI score reduction at four weeks versus 34.4% for placebo, with no safety issues and enhanced itch relief. Neutral Sentiment: Corvus plans to launch a randomized, placebo-controlled Phase 2 trial of selcolitinib in atopic dermatitis by year-end, enroll 200 patients across four dosing arms, and advance multiple oncology and immunology programs globally. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallCorvus Pharmaceuticals Q2 202500:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xThere are 6 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good afternoon, everyone. Thank you for standing by, and welcome to the Corvus Pharmaceuticals Second Quarter twenty twenty five Business Update and Financial Results Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. Later, we will conduct a question and answer session and instructions will follow at that time. It is now my pleasure to turn the call over to Zach Kubo of Real Chemistry. Operator00:00:22Please go ahead, sir. Speaker 100:00:25Thank you, operator, and good afternoon, everyone. Thanks for joining us for the Corvus Pharmaceuticals second quarter twenty twenty five business update and financial results conference call. On the call to discuss the results and business updates are Richard Miller, Chief Executive Officer Leif Li, Chief Financial Officer Jeff Arcara, Chief Business Officer and Ben Jones, Senior Vice President of Regulatory and Pharmaceutical Sciences. The executive team will open the call with some prepared remarks followed by a question and answer period. I would like to remind everyone that comments made by management today and answers to questions will include forward looking statements. Speaker 100:01:04Forward looking statements are based on estimates and assumptions as of today and are subject to risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed or implied by those statements, including the risks and uncertainties described in Corvus' quarterly report on Form 10 Q for the quarter ended 06/30/2025, and other filings the company makes with the SEC from time to time. The company undertakes no obligation to publicly update or revise any forward looking statements except as required by law. With that, I'd like to turn the call over to Lafayette. Lafayette? Speaker 200:01:40Thank you, Zach. I will begin with a brief overview of our second quarter twenty twenty five financials and then turn the call over to Richard for a business update. Research and development expenses in the 2025 totaled $7,900,000 compared to $4,100,000 for the same period in 2024. The $3,800,000 increase was primarily due to higher clinical trial and manufacturing costs associated with the development of selcolitinib as well as an increase in personnel related costs. The net loss for the 2025 was $8,000,000 including a non cash loss of $400,000 related to Angel Pharmaceuticals, our partner in China. Speaker 200:02:25In addition, we recorded a non cash gain of $2,000,000 from the change in fair value of Corvus's warrant liability during the 2025. This compares to a net loss of $4,300,000 for the same period in 2024, which included a $1,800,000 non cash gain related to the change in fair value of Corvus's warrant liability and a $600,000 non cash loss related to Angel Pharmaceuticals. Total stock compensation expense for the second quarter twenty twenty five was $1,300,000 compared to $800,000 in the same period in 2024. As of 06/30/2025, Corvus had cash, cash equivalents and marketable securities totaling $74,400,000 as compared to $52,000,000 at 12/31/2024. During the second quarter, all the remaining common stock warrants were exercised resulting in cash proceeds of approximately $35,700,000 which included $2,000,000 from warrants exercised by our CEO, Doctor. Speaker 200:03:35Miller. Based on our current plans, we expect our current cash to fund operations into the 2026. I now turn the call over to Richard who will discuss our clinical progress and elaborate on our strategy and plans. Speaker 300:03:52Thank you, Leif, and good afternoon, everyone. Thank you for joining us today for our update call. Our main focus continues to be the development of socolitinib for atopic dermatitis, where we believe we are uniquely positioned with an oral medication featuring a novel mechanism of action that so far has shown favorable safety and efficacy profile. We are making significant progress on multiple fronts, including new data from our Phase one trial reported in June that increases our confidence in the long term potential for socolitinib in this indication and beyond. On today's call, I will provide a high level recap of this data, review our go forward clinical plans, including our planned Phase two trial design, and briefly discuss our progress with our other clinical programs. Speaker 300:04:48We view the data through Cohort three of the Phase one trial as very encouraging. All of the treatment cohorts demonstrated a favorable safety and efficacy profile compared to placebo and cohort three data is especially exciting, demonstrating earlier and deeper and more durable responses compared to cohorts one and two. Specifically, at just four weeks of treatment, cohort three showed a mean percent reduction of EASI score of 64.8% compared to 54.6% for the combined cohorts one and two and thirty four point four percent for placebo. No placebo patients achieved the clinically meaningful endpoints of EZ75, EZ90 or IGA0 or one. We compare this to the results seen for the socolitinib patients where many achieved these endpoints. Speaker 300:05:45In cohort three, fifty percent of patients achieved EZ-seventy five, eight percent achieved 90, EASY ninety and twenty five percent achieved IGA zero or one. This compares to twenty nine percent, four percent and twenty one percent in the combined cohorts one and two that were treated respectively. In terms of the kinetics of response, cohort three showed earlier and deeper separation from placebo beginning at day eight with the EASI score improvement continuing through day fifteen and twenty eight and far beyond. For cohorts one and two, the separation from placebo began at day fifteen and showed continued separation at day twenty eight. For all three cohorts, this separation was maintained during the thirty day post treatment follow-up period. Speaker 300:06:36In addition, for all three cohorts, the downward slope of the curves at day fifteen to day twenty eight suggests that longer treatment duration could potentially deepen responses further. We also have found a remarkable impact on PPNRS, a patient self reported assessment of itch. A number of Cohort three patients reported steep drops in the score beginning at day eight, which aligned with the reductions we see in serum cytokine levels of IL-thirty one and IL-thirty one, IL-thirty three. Both of these cytokines are known to be involved in the itch response. In addition, other biomarker data from the trial continues to support the ITK inhibition mechanism of action, including the potential induction of anti inflammatory T regulatory cells. Speaker 300:07:32Regarding safety, there were no safety issues observed with socolitinib with no significant differences between treatment and placebo groups and no clinically significant laboratory abnormalities were seen. The total current treatment experience with socolitinib now involves over one hundred and fifty patients with T cell lymphoma or atopic dermatitis representing more than nine thousand patient treatment days. In our lymphoma trial, some patients have been on continuous daily therapy up to two years. Based on the results obtained to date, we are advancing the clinical development of socolitinib in two ways. First, we amended the Phase one trial protocol to replace the previously planned Cohort four with an extension Cohort four that will evaluate an additional 24 patients at the cohort three dose of two hundred milligrams twice per day, given for eight weeks with an additional thirty day follow-up without therapy. Speaker 300:08:33The 24 patients will be randomized in a blinded fashion, one to one with placebo, 12 active and 12 placebo. The extension cohort four will give us data on a longer treatment duration of eight weeks versus four weeks seen with cohorts one and three. We have now enrolled more than half the patients and continue to anticipate that data from the extension cohort will be available in the fourth quarter. Second, we are finalizing the design of our plan. Phase two clinical trial of soclinip for atopic dermatitis. Speaker 300:09:11And I am happy to share those plans with you. Now, the trial will be an international randomized placebo controlled and double blinded. The company will also be blinded. It will enroll approximately 200 patients with moderate to severe atopic dermatitis that have failed at least one prior topical or systemic therapy. Patients will be required to have a baseline EASI score that is greater than or equal to 16, IGA of three or four and body surface involvement that is greater than or equal to 10%. Speaker 300:09:47The patients will be randomized equally into four cohorts. Fifty patients in each cohort receiving either two hundred mg socolitinib once per day, two hundred mg twice per day, four hundred milligrams once per day or placebo. Let me repeat those groups two hundred milligrams once per day, two hundred milligrams twice per day, four hundred milligrams once per day or placebo. The treatment period will be twelve weeks and patients will be followed for an additional thirty days without therapy. The primary endpoint will be the percent change in EASI score from baseline to week twelve. Speaker 300:10:29Secondary endpoints will include the percent of patients achieving EASI 75 or IGA one at week twelve. The impact on itch will be measured by percent of patients achieving greater than or equal to four point decrease in the PPNRF scale at week twelve and of course safety as well. We anticipate including 30 to 40 clinical trial sites globally. We are currently finalizing the trial design with the investigators with strong interest from many leading centers and we are on track to initiate the trial before the end of the year. Outside of our clinical trials, our partner in China, Angel Pharmaceuticals, plans to initiate a Phase 1btwo trial of socolitinib for atopic dermatitis in China. Speaker 300:11:18This study will enroll 48 patients and is anticipated to build on the data from our Phase one trial by studying a longer treatment period of twelve weeks and an additional dosing option of four hundred milligrams once daily in line with the direction we are headed with our phase two trial. Briefly on our other clinical programs, we have submitted an abstract to present the final results from our Phase one clinical trial of socolitinib for the treatment of relapsedrefractory T cell lymphomas at the American Society of Hematology meeting in December. We continue to enroll patients in our registrational Phase three trial of socolitinib in patients with relapsed PTCL driving towards interim data in late twenty twenty six. In addition, patient enrollment is ongoing in our Phase two trial of socolitinib in patients with ALPS, autoimmune lymphoproliferative syndrome. Depending on enrollment trends, it is possible we could see initial data from the Phase two ALPS study in late twenty twenty five or early twenty twenty six. Speaker 300:12:27We have completed enrollment in our Phase two trial with ciforadenant in renal cell cancer. These data will be presented in an oral presentation in October at the ESMO meeting, European Society for Medical Oncology. In closing, the socolitinib results in atopic dermatitis and T cell lymphoma underscore the importance of ITK as a critical target for a range of diseases involving inflammation and cancer and the broad potential for so called it in many areas of medicine, such as dermatology, oncology, rheumatology, pulmonary medicine and other areas. We feel we may be entering a new era of immunotherapy for autoimmune inflammatory diseases that is based on drugs with novel mechanisms of action that modulate or rebalance immunity by keeping pro inflammatory or aberrant T cells in check. This potential has motivated us to complement the development of socolitinib with the discovery and development of next generation ITK inhibitors with unique properties. Speaker 300:13:33In the near term, we look forward to continuing the clinical development of soclolitinib in atopic dermatitis and PTCL and look forward to providing updates on our programs in the coming quarters. I will now turn the call over to the operator for a questions and answer period. Operator. Operator00:13:53Thank you, ladies and gentlemen. We will now begin the question and answer session. Should you have a question, please press the star key followed by the number one on your touch tone phone. You will hear a prompt that your hand has been raised. Should you wish to decline from the polling process, please press the star key followed by the number two. Operator00:14:21Your first question comes from Jeff Jones. Your line is now open. Speaker 400:14:26Good afternoon, guys, and thanks for taking the question and congrats on a hugely productive quarter. I guess, you've got a plethora of opportunities in front of you. As you think about CFO in autoimmune disease, in addition to accelerating as you are in the Phase two, how are you thinking about next indications and financially being able to support the many opportunities that CFO represents. Speaker 300:15:03Okay, so Jeff, let me first correct. Yes, CFO is renal cell cancer and But socolitinib, obviously we're pursuing aggressively atopic dermatitis, but we've already begun to think about follow-up indications. And the two indications that we're thinking about, we're thinking about two of them. One, of course, sort of want to maintain our presence in dermatology. We have experience there now. Speaker 300:15:33We have a lot of information on, we think the behavior of the drug in these cutaneous diseases. So I think a likely target for us might be something like hidradenitis suppurativa. There's totally unmet need there I would say. And then the other disease moving away from dermatology in the inflammation area would be a pulmonary disease. Asthma is probably scientifically the most justification for a disease is probably asthma. Speaker 300:16:05We have three or four different animal models where we see excellent activity of our drug in asthma, both acute and chronic. Also the mechanism of action, specifically the inhibition of what are called innate lymphoid cells really leads us to believe that we might have a very important novel approach to asthma and perhaps other pulmonary diseases. But you're quite right. It is difficult for us to pursue all these indications but we've shown that we're very adept at an agile in terms of efficiently maximizing the value of, I'd say each of our products. Speaker 400:16:45Appreciate that. And then the follow-up question is actually on CFO. In terms of the renal update coming at ESMO, how are you thinking about next steps for the program? Assuming within a world that there's going to be a positive update here on the program. Speaker 300:17:08Okay, so just to remind everyone, ciforadenant is an A2A antagonist oral medication. We did a Phase two study in first line renal cell cancer patients who are receiving ipinivo. So we added the A2A antagonist and the idea of there, of course, is to look at response rate, but also very importantly to look at since they stay on the A2A antagonist every day for a long time, they get the ipinivo for a short time. I think one of the things that we'll be looking for in addition to, of course, objective responses is the durability of responses and or PFS in other words. So let's see what that data is. Speaker 300:17:50This is a study that was conducted by the Kidney Cancer Consortium, several centers MD Anderson, Vanderbilt and several others. They ran that study. We of course provided the drug and some financial support. So let's see what's presented in an oral presentation at ESMO and then we'll go from there based on the data that comes out of that. We'll make our decisions about how to follow-up on that. Speaker 300:18:20Okay, but it is quite a unique study. I mean, it's first line disease, it's renal cell cancer. We know that's immuno responsive. I'm emphasising this because I know today some other company came out with some A2A stuff and I think it was metastatic colon cancer and they had chemotherapy and a number of various treatments there. And one of the things that we've always done well is to carefully study our agents initially as a monotherapy and then move into combinations where we have a good understanding of the efficacy and safety and mechanism. Speaker 300:18:57So that's helped us a lot. That answer your It Speaker 400:19:02does. Thank you, Richard. I'll hop back into the queue. Operator00:19:09Our next question comes from Craig Suvanevej. Please go ahead. Speaker 400:19:15Hi. This is Sam on for Craig. Thanks for taking the question and congrats on the progress. Maybe just a quick one on soclipinib and PTCL. Just curious how the enrollment is going and if the previous guidance for data in late twenty twenty six is still there. Speaker 400:19:32Thank you. Speaker 300:19:34Our guidance is still intact. We're enrolling according to plan. We have probably about 20 centers open now. These are the best of the best centers in The United States and Canada. So everything there is going according to plan. Speaker 300:19:51And we're hoping that our presentation on the Phase one will really start to focus attention on this drug. Speaker 400:20:01Got it. Thanks for the update. Operator00:20:06Your next call comes from Aden Hussainov. Please go ahead. Speaker 500:20:11Hi, everyone. Thank you for taking questions and congrats with the quarter. Couple of questions from us. So could you walk us through the decision process, thinking process regarding the Phase two trial design for atopic dermatitis? So I appreciate giving us color about, you know, four different cohorts, two hundred QD, two hundred BID, four hundred QD and placebo. Speaker 500:20:38Just, you know, so far we see atopic dermatitis, the most productive cohort is cohort three. So, was curious to better understand, was it more like an FDA suggestion to give a little bit weaker dose, a little bit harder, a little bit stronger dose? Just walk us through the process if you could. Speaker 300:20:59Okay, thank you for that question. So, of all, there's a lot of precedence now for phase two trials in atopic dermatitis. We're not the first company to do that. And a 200 patient trial with roughly 50 per arm is, I would say pretty standard. And you're correct, Aiden. Speaker 300:21:17Usually, there is, you know, the FDA wants to see some dosing, different doses studied so that you can determine what's the lowest dose that's possibly effective and what's a higher dose that becomes maybe not more effective than another dose. So, we selected these doses because the two hundred once a day we think is active. We don't think it's going to be and we've already You've seen that data in Cohort two. I think that will be an active dose. Speaker 300:21:46It's a single it's a daily dose. Some people, of course, preferred a single dose once a day dosing for atopic dermatitis. But the two hundred BID, we saw better response. That's a doubling of the dose in our Cohort three. And that's what we're studying in our extension now. Speaker 300:22:03So that's the second cohort two hundred once a day, two hundred twice a day. And then of course, we want to do four hundred once a day, same total dose as the two hundred BID, but given once a day. I think we can do once a day dosing. So this will give us an opportunity to confirm that. And then of course, placebo. Speaker 300:22:24I can't emphasize enough how important it is to have placebos in phase one and phase two trials. I am seeing companies now do these studies with no placebos and it's actually astounding to me. But in any event, so fifty patients in each arm, 200 total, placebo controlled, totally blinded, companies blinded. The endpoints are pretty standard. The mean percent change in EASI is the usual primary endpoint for a Phase two study, secondary endpoints being EASI75 and IGA01s. Speaker 300:22:58So that's all really pretty standard. Yeah, and we're moving to twelve weeks of therapy. We'll have experience with eight weeks of therapy, which we already have right now. And we think that should give us a pretty good result. In terms of the statistics, if we have even a 20% improvement in any of the groups, you can just, we can just look at any one group versus the placebo. Speaker 300:23:24If we're 20%, 22% better, we want it, we expect to be better than that. But even if that's the lower end of our information, we have an 80% power to see that a P value of 0.05 on that. And in the phase two trial, that'll be fine. So the size is statistically makes sense. The dosing makes sense based on what we know, what we also know about occupancy and the receptor. Speaker 300:23:51And we think this is a very manageable trial for us. There's a lot of experience in doing these international phase 2s. 200 patients would be very manageable for a company like Corvus. I hope that answered your Speaker 500:24:06question. I appreciate it. Absolutely. Yeah, it does. Just wanted to couple of follow-up questions on this trial. Speaker 500:24:12So I know this could be a little bit early, but would you be able to provide the timeline? When do you think we can see the results? I mean, understand this is randomized blinded trial but if you could give us some heads in terms of when it could be ready. Okay, Speaker 300:24:29no happy to give that. We've of course been thinking about that. I think you're looking at enrolment twelve to fifteen months. Maybe you have results in eighteen months and we'll start the trial in December. And we have a couple of things I think going for us. Speaker 300:24:44Obviously, it's oral, that should help enrolment. I think the second thing, novel mechanism of action, I think that will also facilitate enrollment. We're not requiring biopsies, although we're going to have some centers where we're going to try to motivate people to do some biopsies. But of course, that should also improve enrollment. But the biggest thing that's going to facilitate enrollment is that we are allowing patients who have failed systemic therapies. Speaker 300:25:20So that really opens up the potential patient population. So many of these studies, they won't take you if you've already failed a systemic therapy, a JAK inhibitor, let's say, or a dupi or something like that, or anti IL-thirteen. But we're allowing those patients. And the reason we're allowing those patients is because our mechanism of action is completely distinct from those. Number one and number two, we've had patients like that on our studies so far and it hasn't mattered. Speaker 300:25:49They've done just as well. Speaker 500:25:51So, assumption is that you'll probably be stratifying based on which exactly therapy they failed, or systemic, yes. Speaker 300:26:03Oh, absolutely. I mean, there is a few things you might stratify on. Obviously EASI score. I mean, if your baseline EASI score, that will be a stratification factor and whether or not you failed the systemic therapy. Yes, we haven't gotten into that degree of detail yet, but they'll probably be two or three different stratification factors. Speaker 300:26:25You can't get too many in a study with only 200 patients. Speaker 500:26:29Right, right. Yeah, and my question I have was about the next generation ITK inhibitor. As we move forward with that, could you give us some thoughts on how it will be different from socolitinib and which indications you'd be planning to target if it's not too early? Speaker 300:26:47Okay, so first of all, for certain intellectual property reasons, I'd rather not go into the details of how they're different because there are a lot of people who are now working on on INTK inhibitors and I'd rather not go into the details. But suffice it to say, let me answer your question this way. ITK plays many roles in a cell. T cell receptor signaling, everything from T cell receptor signaling to control of Th2 cytokine production to apoptosis. And we think we have compounds that might work better for some of those indications than others or some of those mechanisms. Speaker 300:27:33So let me answer it that way. Speaker 500:27:38Okay, alright. Thank you. Thanks so much, children. Congrats for the quarter again. Operator00:27:48There are no further questions at this time. I will now turn the call over to Richard Miller. Please continue. Speaker 300:27:53Thank you, operator. First of let me thank everyone for participating in today's call. Look forward to updating you again in the next quarter and updating you on the progress with all our clinical trials. Thank you very much. Operator00:28:11Ladies and gentlemen, that concludes today's conference call. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.Read morePowered by Earnings DocumentsPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) Corvus Pharmaceuticals Earnings HeadlinesCorvus Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (CRVS) Q2 2025 Earnings Call TranscriptAugust 8 at 4:06 PM | seekingalpha.comCorvus Pharmaceuticals Provides Business Update and Reports Second Quarter 2025 Financial ResultsAugust 7, 2025 | globenewswire.comAlex’s “Next Magnificent Seven” stocksThe original “Magnificent Seven” turned $7K into $1.18 million. Now, Alex Green has identified AI’s Next Magnificent Seven—seven stocks he believes could deliver similar gains in under six years. His full breakdown is now live. | The Oxford Club (Ad)Corvus Pharmaceuticals (CRVS) Expected to Announce Quarterly Earnings on ThursdayAugust 6, 2025 | americanbankingnews.comCorvus Pharmaceuticals, Inc.'s (NASDAQ:CRVS) top owners are retail investors with 48% stake, while 33% is held by institutionsAugust 5, 2025 | finance.yahoo.comCompanies Like Corvus Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ:CRVS) Are In A Position To Invest In GrowthJune 25, 2025 | finance.yahoo.comSee More Corvus Pharmaceuticals Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Corvus Pharmaceuticals? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Corvus Pharmaceuticals and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Corvus PharmaceuticalsCorvus Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ:CRVS), a clinical stage biopharmaceutical company, focuses on the development and commercialization of immune modulator product candidates to treat solid cancers, T cell lymphomas, autoimmune, allergic, and infectious diseases. Its lead product candidate is soquelitinib (CPI-818), a selective covalent inhibitor of interleukin 2 inducible T cell kinase (ITK), which is in a multi-center Phase 1/1b clinical trial for the treatment of peripheral T cell lymphoma, solid tumors, and atopic dermatitis. The company is also developing ciforadenant (CPI-444), an oral small molecule antagonist of the A2A receptor that is in Phase 2 clinical trial for the treatment of metastatic renal cell cancer; and mupadolimab (CPI-006), a humanized monoclonal antibody, which is in Phase 1b clinical trial for the treatment of non-small cell lung cancer and head and neck cancer. In addition, it is developing CPI-182, an antibody designed to block inflammation and myeloid suppression that is in investigational new drug application-enabling studies, as well as CPI-935, an adenosine A2B receptor antagonist to prevent fibrosis. Corvus Pharmaceuticals, Inc. has a license afreemnt with Monash University to research, develop, and commercialize certain antibodies directed to CXCR2 for the treatment of human diseases; and Vernalis (R&D) Limited to develop, manufacture, and commercialize products containing certain adenosine receptor antagonists, including ciforadenant, as well as strategic collaboration with Angel Pharmaceuticals Co. Ltd. for the development and commercialization of mupadolimab. Corvus Pharmaceuticals, Inc. was incorporated in 2014 and is based in Burlingame, California.View Corvus Pharmaceuticals ProfileRead more More Earnings Resources from MarketBeat Earnings Tools Today's Earnings Tomorrow's Earnings Next Week's Earnings Upcoming Earnings Calls Earnings Newsletter Earnings Call Transcripts Earnings Beats & Misses Corporate Guidance Earnings Screener Earnings By Country U.S. Earnings Reports Canadian Earnings Reports U.K. Earnings Reports Latest Articles Airbnb Beats Earnings, But the Growth Story Is Losing AltitudeDutch Bros Just Flipped the Script With a Massive Earnings BeatIs Eli Lilly’s 14% Post-Earnings Slide a Buy-the-Dip Opportunity?Constellation Energy’s Earnings Beat Signals a New EraRealty Income Rallies Post-Earnings Miss—Here’s What Drove ItDon't Mix the Signal for Noise in Super Micro Computer's EarningsWhy Monolithic Power's Earnings and Guidance Ignited a Rally Upcoming Earnings SEA (8/12/2025)Cisco Systems (8/13/2025)Alibaba Group (8/13/2025)NetEase (8/14/2025)Applied Materials (8/14/2025)Petroleo Brasileiro S.A.- Petrobras (8/14/2025)NU (8/14/2025)Deere & Company (8/14/2025)Palo Alto Networks (8/18/2025)Medtronic (8/19/2025) Get 30 Days of MarketBeat All Access for Free Sign up for MarketBeat All Access to gain access to MarketBeat's full suite of research tools. 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There are 6 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good afternoon, everyone. Thank you for standing by, and welcome to the Corvus Pharmaceuticals Second Quarter twenty twenty five Business Update and Financial Results Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. Later, we will conduct a question and answer session and instructions will follow at that time. It is now my pleasure to turn the call over to Zach Kubo of Real Chemistry. Operator00:00:22Please go ahead, sir. Speaker 100:00:25Thank you, operator, and good afternoon, everyone. Thanks for joining us for the Corvus Pharmaceuticals second quarter twenty twenty five business update and financial results conference call. On the call to discuss the results and business updates are Richard Miller, Chief Executive Officer Leif Li, Chief Financial Officer Jeff Arcara, Chief Business Officer and Ben Jones, Senior Vice President of Regulatory and Pharmaceutical Sciences. The executive team will open the call with some prepared remarks followed by a question and answer period. I would like to remind everyone that comments made by management today and answers to questions will include forward looking statements. Speaker 100:01:04Forward looking statements are based on estimates and assumptions as of today and are subject to risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed or implied by those statements, including the risks and uncertainties described in Corvus' quarterly report on Form 10 Q for the quarter ended 06/30/2025, and other filings the company makes with the SEC from time to time. The company undertakes no obligation to publicly update or revise any forward looking statements except as required by law. With that, I'd like to turn the call over to Lafayette. Lafayette? Speaker 200:01:40Thank you, Zach. I will begin with a brief overview of our second quarter twenty twenty five financials and then turn the call over to Richard for a business update. Research and development expenses in the 2025 totaled $7,900,000 compared to $4,100,000 for the same period in 2024. The $3,800,000 increase was primarily due to higher clinical trial and manufacturing costs associated with the development of selcolitinib as well as an increase in personnel related costs. The net loss for the 2025 was $8,000,000 including a non cash loss of $400,000 related to Angel Pharmaceuticals, our partner in China. Speaker 200:02:25In addition, we recorded a non cash gain of $2,000,000 from the change in fair value of Corvus's warrant liability during the 2025. This compares to a net loss of $4,300,000 for the same period in 2024, which included a $1,800,000 non cash gain related to the change in fair value of Corvus's warrant liability and a $600,000 non cash loss related to Angel Pharmaceuticals. Total stock compensation expense for the second quarter twenty twenty five was $1,300,000 compared to $800,000 in the same period in 2024. As of 06/30/2025, Corvus had cash, cash equivalents and marketable securities totaling $74,400,000 as compared to $52,000,000 at 12/31/2024. During the second quarter, all the remaining common stock warrants were exercised resulting in cash proceeds of approximately $35,700,000 which included $2,000,000 from warrants exercised by our CEO, Doctor. Speaker 200:03:35Miller. Based on our current plans, we expect our current cash to fund operations into the 2026. I now turn the call over to Richard who will discuss our clinical progress and elaborate on our strategy and plans. Speaker 300:03:52Thank you, Leif, and good afternoon, everyone. Thank you for joining us today for our update call. Our main focus continues to be the development of socolitinib for atopic dermatitis, where we believe we are uniquely positioned with an oral medication featuring a novel mechanism of action that so far has shown favorable safety and efficacy profile. We are making significant progress on multiple fronts, including new data from our Phase one trial reported in June that increases our confidence in the long term potential for socolitinib in this indication and beyond. On today's call, I will provide a high level recap of this data, review our go forward clinical plans, including our planned Phase two trial design, and briefly discuss our progress with our other clinical programs. Speaker 300:04:48We view the data through Cohort three of the Phase one trial as very encouraging. All of the treatment cohorts demonstrated a favorable safety and efficacy profile compared to placebo and cohort three data is especially exciting, demonstrating earlier and deeper and more durable responses compared to cohorts one and two. Specifically, at just four weeks of treatment, cohort three showed a mean percent reduction of EASI score of 64.8% compared to 54.6% for the combined cohorts one and two and thirty four point four percent for placebo. No placebo patients achieved the clinically meaningful endpoints of EZ75, EZ90 or IGA0 or one. We compare this to the results seen for the socolitinib patients where many achieved these endpoints. Speaker 300:05:45In cohort three, fifty percent of patients achieved EZ-seventy five, eight percent achieved 90, EASY ninety and twenty five percent achieved IGA zero or one. This compares to twenty nine percent, four percent and twenty one percent in the combined cohorts one and two that were treated respectively. In terms of the kinetics of response, cohort three showed earlier and deeper separation from placebo beginning at day eight with the EASI score improvement continuing through day fifteen and twenty eight and far beyond. For cohorts one and two, the separation from placebo began at day fifteen and showed continued separation at day twenty eight. For all three cohorts, this separation was maintained during the thirty day post treatment follow-up period. Speaker 300:06:36In addition, for all three cohorts, the downward slope of the curves at day fifteen to day twenty eight suggests that longer treatment duration could potentially deepen responses further. We also have found a remarkable impact on PPNRS, a patient self reported assessment of itch. A number of Cohort three patients reported steep drops in the score beginning at day eight, which aligned with the reductions we see in serum cytokine levels of IL-thirty one and IL-thirty one, IL-thirty three. Both of these cytokines are known to be involved in the itch response. In addition, other biomarker data from the trial continues to support the ITK inhibition mechanism of action, including the potential induction of anti inflammatory T regulatory cells. Speaker 300:07:32Regarding safety, there were no safety issues observed with socolitinib with no significant differences between treatment and placebo groups and no clinically significant laboratory abnormalities were seen. The total current treatment experience with socolitinib now involves over one hundred and fifty patients with T cell lymphoma or atopic dermatitis representing more than nine thousand patient treatment days. In our lymphoma trial, some patients have been on continuous daily therapy up to two years. Based on the results obtained to date, we are advancing the clinical development of socolitinib in two ways. First, we amended the Phase one trial protocol to replace the previously planned Cohort four with an extension Cohort four that will evaluate an additional 24 patients at the cohort three dose of two hundred milligrams twice per day, given for eight weeks with an additional thirty day follow-up without therapy. Speaker 300:08:33The 24 patients will be randomized in a blinded fashion, one to one with placebo, 12 active and 12 placebo. The extension cohort four will give us data on a longer treatment duration of eight weeks versus four weeks seen with cohorts one and three. We have now enrolled more than half the patients and continue to anticipate that data from the extension cohort will be available in the fourth quarter. Second, we are finalizing the design of our plan. Phase two clinical trial of soclinip for atopic dermatitis. Speaker 300:09:11And I am happy to share those plans with you. Now, the trial will be an international randomized placebo controlled and double blinded. The company will also be blinded. It will enroll approximately 200 patients with moderate to severe atopic dermatitis that have failed at least one prior topical or systemic therapy. Patients will be required to have a baseline EASI score that is greater than or equal to 16, IGA of three or four and body surface involvement that is greater than or equal to 10%. Speaker 300:09:47The patients will be randomized equally into four cohorts. Fifty patients in each cohort receiving either two hundred mg socolitinib once per day, two hundred mg twice per day, four hundred milligrams once per day or placebo. Let me repeat those groups two hundred milligrams once per day, two hundred milligrams twice per day, four hundred milligrams once per day or placebo. The treatment period will be twelve weeks and patients will be followed for an additional thirty days without therapy. The primary endpoint will be the percent change in EASI score from baseline to week twelve. Speaker 300:10:29Secondary endpoints will include the percent of patients achieving EASI 75 or IGA one at week twelve. The impact on itch will be measured by percent of patients achieving greater than or equal to four point decrease in the PPNRF scale at week twelve and of course safety as well. We anticipate including 30 to 40 clinical trial sites globally. We are currently finalizing the trial design with the investigators with strong interest from many leading centers and we are on track to initiate the trial before the end of the year. Outside of our clinical trials, our partner in China, Angel Pharmaceuticals, plans to initiate a Phase 1btwo trial of socolitinib for atopic dermatitis in China. Speaker 300:11:18This study will enroll 48 patients and is anticipated to build on the data from our Phase one trial by studying a longer treatment period of twelve weeks and an additional dosing option of four hundred milligrams once daily in line with the direction we are headed with our phase two trial. Briefly on our other clinical programs, we have submitted an abstract to present the final results from our Phase one clinical trial of socolitinib for the treatment of relapsedrefractory T cell lymphomas at the American Society of Hematology meeting in December. We continue to enroll patients in our registrational Phase three trial of socolitinib in patients with relapsed PTCL driving towards interim data in late twenty twenty six. In addition, patient enrollment is ongoing in our Phase two trial of socolitinib in patients with ALPS, autoimmune lymphoproliferative syndrome. Depending on enrollment trends, it is possible we could see initial data from the Phase two ALPS study in late twenty twenty five or early twenty twenty six. Speaker 300:12:27We have completed enrollment in our Phase two trial with ciforadenant in renal cell cancer. These data will be presented in an oral presentation in October at the ESMO meeting, European Society for Medical Oncology. In closing, the socolitinib results in atopic dermatitis and T cell lymphoma underscore the importance of ITK as a critical target for a range of diseases involving inflammation and cancer and the broad potential for so called it in many areas of medicine, such as dermatology, oncology, rheumatology, pulmonary medicine and other areas. We feel we may be entering a new era of immunotherapy for autoimmune inflammatory diseases that is based on drugs with novel mechanisms of action that modulate or rebalance immunity by keeping pro inflammatory or aberrant T cells in check. This potential has motivated us to complement the development of socolitinib with the discovery and development of next generation ITK inhibitors with unique properties. Speaker 300:13:33In the near term, we look forward to continuing the clinical development of soclolitinib in atopic dermatitis and PTCL and look forward to providing updates on our programs in the coming quarters. I will now turn the call over to the operator for a questions and answer period. Operator. Operator00:13:53Thank you, ladies and gentlemen. We will now begin the question and answer session. Should you have a question, please press the star key followed by the number one on your touch tone phone. You will hear a prompt that your hand has been raised. Should you wish to decline from the polling process, please press the star key followed by the number two. Operator00:14:21Your first question comes from Jeff Jones. Your line is now open. Speaker 400:14:26Good afternoon, guys, and thanks for taking the question and congrats on a hugely productive quarter. I guess, you've got a plethora of opportunities in front of you. As you think about CFO in autoimmune disease, in addition to accelerating as you are in the Phase two, how are you thinking about next indications and financially being able to support the many opportunities that CFO represents. Speaker 300:15:03Okay, so Jeff, let me first correct. Yes, CFO is renal cell cancer and But socolitinib, obviously we're pursuing aggressively atopic dermatitis, but we've already begun to think about follow-up indications. And the two indications that we're thinking about, we're thinking about two of them. One, of course, sort of want to maintain our presence in dermatology. We have experience there now. Speaker 300:15:33We have a lot of information on, we think the behavior of the drug in these cutaneous diseases. So I think a likely target for us might be something like hidradenitis suppurativa. There's totally unmet need there I would say. And then the other disease moving away from dermatology in the inflammation area would be a pulmonary disease. Asthma is probably scientifically the most justification for a disease is probably asthma. Speaker 300:16:05We have three or four different animal models where we see excellent activity of our drug in asthma, both acute and chronic. Also the mechanism of action, specifically the inhibition of what are called innate lymphoid cells really leads us to believe that we might have a very important novel approach to asthma and perhaps other pulmonary diseases. But you're quite right. It is difficult for us to pursue all these indications but we've shown that we're very adept at an agile in terms of efficiently maximizing the value of, I'd say each of our products. Speaker 400:16:45Appreciate that. And then the follow-up question is actually on CFO. In terms of the renal update coming at ESMO, how are you thinking about next steps for the program? Assuming within a world that there's going to be a positive update here on the program. Speaker 300:17:08Okay, so just to remind everyone, ciforadenant is an A2A antagonist oral medication. We did a Phase two study in first line renal cell cancer patients who are receiving ipinivo. So we added the A2A antagonist and the idea of there, of course, is to look at response rate, but also very importantly to look at since they stay on the A2A antagonist every day for a long time, they get the ipinivo for a short time. I think one of the things that we'll be looking for in addition to, of course, objective responses is the durability of responses and or PFS in other words. So let's see what that data is. Speaker 300:17:50This is a study that was conducted by the Kidney Cancer Consortium, several centers MD Anderson, Vanderbilt and several others. They ran that study. We of course provided the drug and some financial support. So let's see what's presented in an oral presentation at ESMO and then we'll go from there based on the data that comes out of that. We'll make our decisions about how to follow-up on that. Speaker 300:18:20Okay, but it is quite a unique study. I mean, it's first line disease, it's renal cell cancer. We know that's immuno responsive. I'm emphasising this because I know today some other company came out with some A2A stuff and I think it was metastatic colon cancer and they had chemotherapy and a number of various treatments there. And one of the things that we've always done well is to carefully study our agents initially as a monotherapy and then move into combinations where we have a good understanding of the efficacy and safety and mechanism. Speaker 300:18:57So that's helped us a lot. That answer your It Speaker 400:19:02does. Thank you, Richard. I'll hop back into the queue. Operator00:19:09Our next question comes from Craig Suvanevej. Please go ahead. Speaker 400:19:15Hi. This is Sam on for Craig. Thanks for taking the question and congrats on the progress. Maybe just a quick one on soclipinib and PTCL. Just curious how the enrollment is going and if the previous guidance for data in late twenty twenty six is still there. Speaker 400:19:32Thank you. Speaker 300:19:34Our guidance is still intact. We're enrolling according to plan. We have probably about 20 centers open now. These are the best of the best centers in The United States and Canada. So everything there is going according to plan. Speaker 300:19:51And we're hoping that our presentation on the Phase one will really start to focus attention on this drug. Speaker 400:20:01Got it. Thanks for the update. Operator00:20:06Your next call comes from Aden Hussainov. Please go ahead. Speaker 500:20:11Hi, everyone. Thank you for taking questions and congrats with the quarter. Couple of questions from us. So could you walk us through the decision process, thinking process regarding the Phase two trial design for atopic dermatitis? So I appreciate giving us color about, you know, four different cohorts, two hundred QD, two hundred BID, four hundred QD and placebo. Speaker 500:20:38Just, you know, so far we see atopic dermatitis, the most productive cohort is cohort three. So, was curious to better understand, was it more like an FDA suggestion to give a little bit weaker dose, a little bit harder, a little bit stronger dose? Just walk us through the process if you could. Speaker 300:20:59Okay, thank you for that question. So, of all, there's a lot of precedence now for phase two trials in atopic dermatitis. We're not the first company to do that. And a 200 patient trial with roughly 50 per arm is, I would say pretty standard. And you're correct, Aiden. Speaker 300:21:17Usually, there is, you know, the FDA wants to see some dosing, different doses studied so that you can determine what's the lowest dose that's possibly effective and what's a higher dose that becomes maybe not more effective than another dose. So, we selected these doses because the two hundred once a day we think is active. We don't think it's going to be and we've already You've seen that data in Cohort two. I think that will be an active dose. Speaker 300:21:46It's a single it's a daily dose. Some people, of course, preferred a single dose once a day dosing for atopic dermatitis. But the two hundred BID, we saw better response. That's a doubling of the dose in our Cohort three. And that's what we're studying in our extension now. Speaker 300:22:03So that's the second cohort two hundred once a day, two hundred twice a day. And then of course, we want to do four hundred once a day, same total dose as the two hundred BID, but given once a day. I think we can do once a day dosing. So this will give us an opportunity to confirm that. And then of course, placebo. Speaker 300:22:24I can't emphasize enough how important it is to have placebos in phase one and phase two trials. I am seeing companies now do these studies with no placebos and it's actually astounding to me. But in any event, so fifty patients in each arm, 200 total, placebo controlled, totally blinded, companies blinded. The endpoints are pretty standard. The mean percent change in EASI is the usual primary endpoint for a Phase two study, secondary endpoints being EASI75 and IGA01s. Speaker 300:22:58So that's all really pretty standard. Yeah, and we're moving to twelve weeks of therapy. We'll have experience with eight weeks of therapy, which we already have right now. And we think that should give us a pretty good result. In terms of the statistics, if we have even a 20% improvement in any of the groups, you can just, we can just look at any one group versus the placebo. Speaker 300:23:24If we're 20%, 22% better, we want it, we expect to be better than that. But even if that's the lower end of our information, we have an 80% power to see that a P value of 0.05 on that. And in the phase two trial, that'll be fine. So the size is statistically makes sense. The dosing makes sense based on what we know, what we also know about occupancy and the receptor. Speaker 300:23:51And we think this is a very manageable trial for us. There's a lot of experience in doing these international phase 2s. 200 patients would be very manageable for a company like Corvus. I hope that answered your Speaker 500:24:06question. I appreciate it. Absolutely. Yeah, it does. Just wanted to couple of follow-up questions on this trial. Speaker 500:24:12So I know this could be a little bit early, but would you be able to provide the timeline? When do you think we can see the results? I mean, understand this is randomized blinded trial but if you could give us some heads in terms of when it could be ready. Okay, Speaker 300:24:29no happy to give that. We've of course been thinking about that. I think you're looking at enrolment twelve to fifteen months. Maybe you have results in eighteen months and we'll start the trial in December. And we have a couple of things I think going for us. Speaker 300:24:44Obviously, it's oral, that should help enrolment. I think the second thing, novel mechanism of action, I think that will also facilitate enrollment. We're not requiring biopsies, although we're going to have some centers where we're going to try to motivate people to do some biopsies. But of course, that should also improve enrollment. But the biggest thing that's going to facilitate enrollment is that we are allowing patients who have failed systemic therapies. Speaker 300:25:20So that really opens up the potential patient population. So many of these studies, they won't take you if you've already failed a systemic therapy, a JAK inhibitor, let's say, or a dupi or something like that, or anti IL-thirteen. But we're allowing those patients. And the reason we're allowing those patients is because our mechanism of action is completely distinct from those. Number one and number two, we've had patients like that on our studies so far and it hasn't mattered. Speaker 300:25:49They've done just as well. Speaker 500:25:51So, assumption is that you'll probably be stratifying based on which exactly therapy they failed, or systemic, yes. Speaker 300:26:03Oh, absolutely. I mean, there is a few things you might stratify on. Obviously EASI score. I mean, if your baseline EASI score, that will be a stratification factor and whether or not you failed the systemic therapy. Yes, we haven't gotten into that degree of detail yet, but they'll probably be two or three different stratification factors. Speaker 300:26:25You can't get too many in a study with only 200 patients. Speaker 500:26:29Right, right. Yeah, and my question I have was about the next generation ITK inhibitor. As we move forward with that, could you give us some thoughts on how it will be different from socolitinib and which indications you'd be planning to target if it's not too early? Speaker 300:26:47Okay, so first of all, for certain intellectual property reasons, I'd rather not go into the details of how they're different because there are a lot of people who are now working on on INTK inhibitors and I'd rather not go into the details. But suffice it to say, let me answer your question this way. ITK plays many roles in a cell. T cell receptor signaling, everything from T cell receptor signaling to control of Th2 cytokine production to apoptosis. And we think we have compounds that might work better for some of those indications than others or some of those mechanisms. Speaker 300:27:33So let me answer it that way. Speaker 500:27:38Okay, alright. Thank you. Thanks so much, children. Congrats for the quarter again. Operator00:27:48There are no further questions at this time. I will now turn the call over to Richard Miller. Please continue. Speaker 300:27:53Thank you, operator. First of let me thank everyone for participating in today's call. Look forward to updating you again in the next quarter and updating you on the progress with all our clinical trials. Thank you very much. Operator00:28:11Ladies and gentlemen, that concludes today's conference call. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.Read morePowered by