| Literature DB >> 27494775 |
Heather J Bax1,2, Debra H Josephs1,2, Giulia Pellizzari1,2, James F Spicer2, Ana Montes3, Sophia N Karagiannis1.
Abstract
Antibody therapeutics against different target antigens are widely used in the treatment of different malignancies including ovarian carcinomas, but this disease still requires more effective agents. Improved understanding of the biological features, signaling pathways, and immunological escape mechanisms involved in ovarian cancer has emerged in the past few years. These advances, including an appreciation of the cross-talk between cancer cells and the patient's immune system, have led to the identification of new targets. In turn, potential antibody treatments with various mechanisms of action, including immune activation or toxin-delivery, that are directed at these targets have been developed. Here, we identify established as well as novel targets for antibodies in ovarian cancer, and discuss how they may provide fresh opportunities to identify interventions with enhanced therapeutic potential.Entities:
Keywords: Antibodies; clinical trials; immune checkpoint; immunotherapy; molecular-targeting; ovarian cancer; tumor-associated antigen; tumor-promoting molecule; vaccine
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27494775 PMCID: PMC5098446 DOI: 10.1080/19420862.2016.1219005
Source DB: PubMed Journal: MAbs ISSN: 1942-0862 Impact factor: 5.857
Figure 1.Schematic representation of the monoclonal antibody targets for ovarian cancer. Antibodies for treatment of ovarian cancer can be targeted against tumor-associated antigens, tumor-promoting molecules produced and secreted in tumor environments, or against immune checkpoint molecules to engender immune cell activation and overcome immune tolerance supported by tumors.
Monoclonal Antibodies for treatment of ovarian cancer
| Name | Antibody | Phase 3 trial design | Outcome | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Murine anti-idotypic mAb mimicking CA125 | EOC in complete remission following surgery or platinum-based chemotherapy; comparing abagovomab to placebo. | Monthly maintenance injections induced immune response. No improvement in PFS or OS measured. | ||
| MUC1-specific murine IgG1 (yttrium-90 labeled) | EOC; 90Y-muHMFG1 combined with or compared to standard therapy. | No difference in time to relapse between 2 arms. No improvement in OS with 90Y-muHMFG1. | ||
| EpCAM and CD3 bi-specific (trAb) | Combined with paracentesis in recurrent symptomatic malignant ascites resistant to conventional chemotherapy. | Prolonged puncture-free survival and time to next paracentesis, compared to paracentesis alone. | ||
| FRα-specific humanized IgG1 | Platinum-sensitive recurrent OC; comparing carboplatin/taxane treatment alone and with the addition of farletuzumab. | Improved PFS in those with lower CA125 levels. | ||
| Platinum-resistant OC; comparing paclitaxel alone, or in combination with farletuzumab. | Discontinued when the prespecified criteria for continuation were not met. | NCT00738699 | ||
| HER2-specific humanized IgG1 | Epithelial OC; comparing triple or doublet combinations of trastuzumab, paclitaxel and carboplatin | Ongoing trial | NCT00011986 | |
| HER2-specific humanized IgG1 | Platinum-resistant recurrent OC with low HER3 mRNA expression; comparing pertuzumab combined with topotecan or paclitaxel, or comparing placebo and pertuzumab combined with topotecan, paclitaxel or gemcitabine. | On going trial | NCT01684878 | |
| VEGF-A-specific humanized IgG1 | EOC, PPC and fallopian tube cancer; paclitaxel/carboplatin treatment combined with placebo, compared to concurrent bevacizumab, and concurrent plus maintenance bevacizumab. | No improvement in PFS with concurrent bevacizumab compared to chemotherapy, but increased PFS with concurrent plus maintenance bevacizumab. No difference in OS. | 126 | |
| EOC; carboplatin and paclitaxel alone or in combination with concurrent bevacizumab. | Improved PFS was observed with chemotherapy and bevacizumab combined. | |||
| Platinum-resistant EOC; paclitaxel, PLD or topotecan alone, or combined with bevacizumab. | Improved PFS with bevacizumab in combination with chemotherapy. | |||
| PD-L1-specific human IgG1 | Platinum-resistant or refractory OC; comparing avelumab alone, combined with PLD, and PLD alone. | Ongoing trial | NCT02580058 | |
EOC, epithelial ovarian cancer; PFS, progression-free survival; OS, overall survival; trAb, trifunctional antibody; OC, ovarian carcinoma; PPC, primary peritoneal cancer; PLD, pegylated liposomal doxorubicin.
Monoclonal antibodies approved for ovarian cancer treatment
| Name | Antibody | FDA approval | EMA approval | NICE approval |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| EpCAM and CD3 bispecific trAb | – | Treatment of EpCAM-positive ascites | Treatment of EpCAM-positive ascites | |
| VEGF-A-specific humanized IgG1 | Treatment of platinum-resistant OC | Treatment of ovarian neoplasms | i. In combination with carboplatin and paclitaxel for the treatment of advanced EOC ii. In combination with carboplatin and gemcitabine for first recurrence of platinum-sensitive EOC, FTC or PPC in patients not previously treated with bevacizumab or other VEGF-targeting agents. |
FDA, US Food and Drug Administration, www.fda.gov; EMA, European Medicines Agency, www.ema.europa.eu/ema; NICE, UK National Institute for Health and Care Excellence, nice.org.uk; trAb, trifunctional antibody; OC, ovarian carcinoma; EOC, epithelial ovarian cancer; FTC, fallopian tube cancer; PPC, primary peritoneal cancer.