| Literature DB >> 33722858 |
Natalya D Bodyak1, Rebecca Mosher1, Aleksandr V Yurkovetskiy1, Mao Yin1, Charlie Bu1, Patrick R Conlon1, Damon R Demady1, Michael J DeVit1, Dmitry R Gumerov1, Venu R Gurijala1, Winnie Lee1, Dennis McGillicuddy1, Peter U Park1, Laura L Poling1, Marina Protopova1, LiuLiang Qin1, Cheri A Stevenson1, Elena Ter-Ovanesyan1, Alex Uttard1, Dongmei Xiao1, Jian Xu1, Ling Xu1, Donald A Bergstrom1, Timothy B Lowinger2.
Abstract
Target selection for antibody-drug conjugates (ADC) frequently focuses on identifying antigens with differential expression in tumor and normal tissue, to mitigate the risk of on-target toxicity. However, this strategy restricts the possible target space. SLC34A2/NaPi2b is a sodium phosphate transporter expressed in a variety of human tumors including lung and ovarian carcinoma, as well as the normal tissues from which these tumors arise. Previous clinical trials with a NaPi2b targeting MMAE-ADCs have shown objective durable responses. However, the protein-based biomarker assay developed for use in that study was unable to discern a statistically significant relationship between NaPi2b protein expression and the probability of response. XMT-1536 is a NaPi2b targeting ADC comprised of a unique humanized antibody conjugated with 10-15 auristatin F- hydroxypropylamide (AF-HPA) payload molecules via the Dolaflexin platform. AF-HPA is a cell-permeable, antimitotic compound that is slowly metabolized intratumorally to an active, very low-permeable metabolite, auristatin F (AF), resulting in controlled bystander killing. We describe the preclinical in vitro and in vivo antitumor effects of XMT-1536 in models of ovarian and lung adenocarcinoma. Pharmacokinetic analysis showed approximately proportional increases in exposure in rat and monkey. Systemic free AF-HPA and AF concentrations were observed to be low in all animal species. Finally, we describe a unique IHC reagent, generated from a chimeric construct of the therapeutic antibody, that was used to derive a target expression and efficacy relationship in a series of ovarian primary xenograft cancer models. ©2021 American Association for Cancer Research.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33722858 DOI: 10.1158/1535-7163.MCT-20-0183
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cancer Ther ISSN: 1535-7163 Impact factor: 6.261