NEW YORK, NY, APRIL 18, 2023

News — NEW YORK – After years of broad and rapid growth, immuno-oncology (IO) clinical trials seem to be shifting from the traditional heavyweights to new directions, according to by the Cancer Research Institute (CRI) Anna-Maria Kellen Clinical Accelerator.

“As the field of IO matures and works to develop therapies that will be effective for all cancer patients, it is obvious that scientific innovation continues to drive clinical discovery,” says CRI CEO and Director of Scientific Affairs Jill O’Donnell-Tormey, PhD. 

Overall, while the number of new IO trials dropped for the first time since this analysis began in 2018, a record number of IO targets (195) are being investigated in clinical trials launched in 2022. Significant increases in new cell therapies, cancer vaccines, and other immunomodulators led to “healthy signs of innovation” that will hopefully lead to more cures for more patients.

This latest analysis examined 9,007 IO trials that began between 2018 and 2022 and observed a 2.86% decrease in new trials in 2022 compared to 2021, driven by a 6.4% decrease in phase 2 trials. Conversely, the number of phase 1 and phase 3 trials increased by 8.8% and 6.6%, respectively. Among all trials, there was a 10.3% decrease in those using PD-1/PD-L1 inhibitors, whereas other targets like CTLA-4, LAG-3, and CD3 T cell-engager increased 17.9%, 36.8%, and 13.3%, respectively.

Cell therapy clinical trials increased across the board, especially with more novel approaches. Trials with the most established cell therapy technique — CAR T cells — increased 5.6%, compared to increases of 24.2% for other T cell therapies, 7.7% for natural killer cell therapies, and 28.6% for therapies involving bacteria.

Immense investments were made in cell therapies for the treatment of solid cancers, which have proven elusive for current cell therapies. The hope is they can begin to approach the incredible effectiveness these treatments have achieved in blood cancers. In 2022, cell therapy trials in solid cancers accounted for 47% of all cell therapy trials, up 14.2% from the previous year.

The scope of IO-based therapies also expanded, with the number of therapeutic targets expanding from 146 in 2020, to 160 in 2021, to 195 targets now in 2022. IO modalities with significant growth in trials included cancer vaccines (17.4%) and non-T cell immunomodulators (9.2%). For the latter, there was a prominent shift — 10.4% compared to 2021 — away from antibody-based therapies. In contrast, trials with recombinant or fusion proteins, now the dominant modality among non-T cell immunomodulators, grew by 8% in 2022.

“The changes we observe in our latest analysis of the IO landscape are very exciting for the IO field. We see that interrogation of novel targets and mechanisms of action keeps growing and that newer therapeutic modalities are gaining ground to anti-PD1/PDL1 monoclonal antibodies,” says the Nature Reviews Drug Discovery article’s first author, Ana Rosa Sáez Ibáñez, PhD, research analyst for CRI’s Clinical Accelerator and Venture Fund. “These newer agents, such as T-cell engagers, bispecific antibodies, and cell therapies in the solid tumor space, hold huge potentials. The fact that we observe an increase in research utilizing these modalities is good news for cancer patients.”

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Related Link: View CRI’s interactive dashboard reflecting the latest I-O Landscape data at

About the Cancer Research Institute

The Cancer Research Institute (CRI), established in 1953, is a top-rated U.S. nonprofit organization dedicated exclusively to saving more lives by fueling the discovery and development of powerful immunotherapies for all cancers. Guided by a world-renowned Scientific Advisory Council that includes four Nobel laureates and 27 members of the National Academy of Sciences, CRI has invested $500 million in support of research conducted by immunologists and tumor immunologists at the world’s leading medical centers and universities and has contributed to many of the key scientific advances that demonstrate the potential for immunotherapy to change the face of cancer treatment. To learn more, go to cancerresearch.org.

About the Anna-Maria Kellen Clinical Accelerator 

The CRI Anna-Maria Kellen Clinical Accelerator is a unique nonprofit-academia-industry collaboration model that serves as an “incubator” for multi-center clinical trials testing promising new cancer immunotherapy combinations. As part of the CRI Trials umbrella of clinical programs, the Clinical Accelerator powers integrative, science-driven, collaborative clinical research platforms designed to facilitate and de-risk cancer immunotherapy drug development by leveraging the global CRI Network of immuno-oncology experts and CRI’s philanthropic venture fund. To learn more about the Anna-Maria Kellen Clinical Accelerator, go to .