| Literature DB >> 32581132 |
Janelle C Waite1, Bei Wang1, Lauric Haber1, Aynur Hermann1, Erica Ullman1, Xuan Ye1, Drew Dudgeon1, Rabih Slim1, Dharani K Ajithdoss1, Stephen J Godin1, Ilyssa Ramos1, Qi Wu1, Erin Oswald1, Patrick Poon1, Jacquelynn Golubov1, Devon Grote1, Jennifer Stella1, Arpita Pawashe1, Jennifer Finney1, Evan Herlihy1, Hassan Ahmed1, Vishal Kamat1, Amanda Dorvilliers1, Elizabeth Navarro1, Jenny Xiao1, Julie Kim1, Shao Ning Yang1, Jacqueline Warsaw1, Clarissa Lett1, Lauren Canova1, Teresa Schulenburg1, Randi Foster1, Pamela Krueger1, Elena Garnova1, Ashique Rafique1, Robert Babb1, Gang Chen1, Nicole Stokes Oristian1, Chia-Jen Siao1, Christopher Daly1, Cagan Gurer1, Joel Martin1, Lynn Macdonald1, Douglas MacDonald1, William Poueymirou1, Eric Smith1, Israel Lowy1, Gavin Thurston1, William Olson1, John C Lin1, Matthew A Sleeman1, George D Yancopoulos1, Andrew J Murphy2, Dimitris Skokos2.
Abstract
Monoclonal antibodies that block the programmed cell death 1 (PD-1) checkpoint have revolutionized cancer immunotherapy. However, many major tumor types remain unresponsive to anti-PD-1 therapy, and even among responsive tumor types, most of the patients do not develop durable antitumor immunity. It has been shown that bispecific antibodies activate T cells by cross-linking the TCR/CD3 complex with a tumor-specific antigen (TSA). The class of TSAxCD3 bispecific antibodies have generated exciting results in early clinical trials. We have recently described another class of "costimulatory bispecifics" that cross-link a TSA to CD28 (TSAxCD28) and cooperate with TSAxCD3 bispecifics. Here, we demonstrate that these TSAxCD28 bispecifics (one specific for prostate cancer and the other for epithelial tumors) can also synergize with the broader anti-PD-1 approach and endow responsiveness-as well as long-term immune memory-against tumors that otherwise do not respond to anti-PD-1 alone. Unlike CD28 superagonists, which broadly activate T cells and induce cytokine storm, TSAxCD28 bispecifics display little or no toxicity when used alone or in combination with a PD-1 blocker in genetically humanized immunocompetent mouse models or in primates and thus may provide a well-tolerated and "off the shelf" combination approach with PD-1 immunotherapy that can markedly enhance antitumor efficacy.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32581132 DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.aba2325
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Transl Med ISSN: 1946-6234 Impact factor: 17.956