1. Cel-Sci
Sometimes, one is dealt a bad hand in life and will need to bluff. However, it's a whole different story to double down on a bluff after one's cover is blown.
Take the case of
Cel-Sci (
NYSEMKT:CVM), a small-cap biotech with a single late-stage immunotherapy candidate (Multikine) for treating head and neck cancer. On June 28, Cel-Sci announced that Multikine failed to achieve the primary endpoint of boosting patient survival by 10% compared to standard-of-care treatments in a decade-long phase 3 trial. As a result, the stock lost 66% of its value within four days, to $8.65.
It's pretty hard to walk away from a giant bluff when there's just too much in the pot. In a conference call to investors on July 1, CEO Geert Kersten heralded the study as a "success," saying that a cohort of patients who received Multikine plus surgery plus radiotherapy "met the primary endpoint," and that Cel-Sci plans to file for regulatory approval. Later on in the call, chief scientific officer Taylor Eval denied all allegations the company was data-mining the study. On a side note, Kersten said he will "not be releasing the [full] data to shareholders."
The data that management is referring to is from a subgroup of patients in the Multikine cohort who did not receive chemotherapy in the study. This group of patients survived 14.3% longer after five years than the group who received no Multikine at all -- but that does not mean Multikine works on patients without chemotherapy. It has nothing to do with the study's primary endpoint (which includes both patients who did and did not receive chemotherapy). So the data-mining here is, in fact, pretty evident.
It's also very easy to see how the drug could have a placebo effect. In clinical trials, Multikine was injected in or around the tumor. In case one was wondering, injecting just about anything into a tumor causes the cancer cells to die off -- partly due to needle damage. Moreover, patients in the 9.5-year study received Multikine for just three weeks and were not treated with the drug if their cancer relapsed. So anything (such as lifestyle choices, receiving other immunotherapies post-relapse, etc.) could have been behind the survival difference in the subgroups.
Before the results came out (which took over a year), Cel-Sci bagged $31.7 million in cash by selling new stock to retail investors, resulting in heavy losses for shareholders less than three weeks after the deal closed. Overall, given the failure of its flagship candidate, the less than $50 million in assets on its books, and questionable conduct from management, this is definitely a
biotech you don't want to be holding anytime soon (if not ever).