Literature DB >> 33037135

Selective Tumor Cell Apoptosis and Tumor Regression in CDH17-Positive Colorectal Cancer Models using BI 905711, a Novel Liver-Sparing TRAILR2 Agonist.

Juan Manuel García-Martínez1, Shirley Wang2, Cordula Weishaeupl2, Andreas Wernitznig2, Paolo Chetta2, Catarina Pinto3, Jason Ho4, Darrin Dutcher4, Philip N Gorman4, Rachel Kroe-Barrett4, Joerg Rinnenthal2, Craig Giragossian4, Maria Antonietta Impagnatiello2, Iñigo Tirapu3, Frank Hilberg2, Norbert Kraut2, Mark Pearson2, Klaus Peter Kuenkele2.   

Abstract

Activation of TRAILR2 has emerged as an important therapeutic concept in cancer treatment. TRAILR2 agonistic molecules have only had limited clinical success, to date, due either to lack of efficacy or hepatotoxicity. BI 905711 is a novel tetravalent bispecific antibody targeting both TRAILR2 and CDH17 and represents a novel liver-sparing TRAILR2 agonist specifically designed to overcome the disadvantages of previous strategies. Here, we show that BI 905711 effectively triggered apoptosis in a broad panel of CDH17-positive colorectal cancer tumor cells in vitro. Efficient induction of apoptosis was dependent on the presence of CDH17, as exemplified by the greater than 1,000-fold drop in potency in CDH17-negative cells. BI 905711 demonstrated single-agent tumor regressions in CDH17-positive colorectal cancer xenografts, an effect that was further enhanced upon combination with irinotecan. Antitumor efficacy correlated with induction of caspase activation, as measured in both the tumor and plasma. Effective tumor growth inhibition was further demonstrated across a series of different colorectal cancer PDX models. BI 905711 induced apoptosis in both a cis (same cell) as well as trans (adjacent cell) fashion, translating into significant antitumor activity even in xenograft models with heterogeneous CDH17 expression. In summary, we demonstrate that BI 905711 has potent and selective antitumor activity in CDH17-positive colorectal cancer models both in vitro and in vivo. The high prevalence of over 95% CDH17-positive tumors in patients with colorectal cancer, the molecule preclinical efficacy together with its potential for a favorable safety profile, support the ongoing BI 905711 phase I trial in colorectal cancer and additional CDH17-positive cancer types (NCT04137289). ©2020 American Association for Cancer Research.

Entities:  

Year:  2020        PMID: 33037135     DOI: 10.1158/1535-7163.MCT-20-0253

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Cancer Ther        ISSN: 1535-7163            Impact factor:   6.261


  1 in total

Review 1.  Immunotherapy in colorectal cancer: current achievements and future perspective.

Authors:  Ahui Fan; Boda Wang; Xin Wang; Yongzhan Nie; Daiming Fan; Xiaodi Zhao; Yuanyuan Lu
Journal:  Int J Biol Sci       Date:  2021-09-03       Impact factor: 6.580

  1 in total

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