학술논문

Antibody Co-Administration Can Improve Systemic and Local Distribution of Antibody-Drug Conjugates to Increase In Vivo Efficacy.
Document Type
Academic Journal
Author
Ponte JF; ImmunoGen, Waltham, Massachusetts.; Lanieri L; ImmunoGen, Waltham, Massachusetts.; Khera E; Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan.; Laleau R; ImmunoGen, Waltham, Massachusetts.; Ab O; ImmunoGen, Waltham, Massachusetts.; Espelin C; ImmunoGen, Waltham, Massachusetts.; Kohli N; ImmunoGen, Waltham, Massachusetts.; Matin B; ImmunoGen, Waltham, Massachusetts.; Setiady Y; ImmunoGen, Waltham, Massachusetts.; Miller ML; ImmunoGen, Waltham, Massachusetts.; Keating TA; ImmunoGen, Waltham, Massachusetts.; Chari R; ImmunoGen, Waltham, Massachusetts.; Pinkas J; ImmunoGen, Waltham, Massachusetts.; Gregory R; ImmunoGen, Waltham, Massachusetts.; Thurber GM; Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan. gthurber@umich.edu.; Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan.
Source
Publisher: American Association for Cancer Research, Inc Country of Publication: United States NLM ID: 101132535 Publication Model: Print-Electronic Cited Medium: Internet ISSN: 1538-8514 (Electronic) Linking ISSN: 15357163 NLM ISO Abbreviation: Mol Cancer Ther Subsets: MEDLINE
Subject
Language
English
Abstract
Several antibody-drug conjugates (ADC) showing strong clinical responses in solid tumors target high expression antigens (HER2, TROP2, Nectin-4, and folate receptor alpha/FRα). Highly expressed tumor antigens often have significant low-level expression in normal tissues, resulting in the potential for target-mediated drug disposition (TMDD) and increased clearance. However, ADCs often do not cross-react with normal tissue in animal models used to test efficacy (typically mice), and the impact of ADC binding to normal tissue antigens on tumor response remains unclear. An antibody that cross-reacts with human and murine FRα was generated and tested in an animal model where the antibody/ADC bind both human tumor FRα and mouse FRα in normal tissue. Previous work has demonstrated that a "carrier" dose of unconjugated antibody can improve the tumor penetration of ADCs with high expression target-antigens. A carrier dose was employed to study the impact on cross-reactive ADC clearance, distribution, and efficacy. Co-administration of unconjugated anti-FRα antibody with the ADC-improved efficacy, even in low expression models where co-administration normally lowers efficacy. By reducing target-antigen-mediated clearance in normal tissue, the co-administered antibody increased systemic exposure, improved tumor tissue penetration, reduced target-antigen-mediated uptake in normal tissue, and increased ADC efficacy. However, payload potency and tumor antigen saturation are also critical to efficacy, as shown with reduced efficacy using too high of a carrier dose. The judicious use of higher antibody doses, either through lower DAR or carrier doses, can improve the therapeutic window by increasing efficacy while lowering target-mediated toxicity in normal tissue.
(©2020 American Association for Cancer Research.)