| Literature DB >> 35886899 |
Marco Gallazzi1, Maghalie Anais Marie Ucciero1, Danilo Giuseppe Faraci1, Abdurraouf Mokhtar Mahmoud1, Wael Al Essa1, Gianluca Gaidano1, Samir Mouhssine1, Elena Crisà1.
Abstract
Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) represent an unmet clinical need whose prognosis is still dismal. Alterations of immune response play a prominent role in AML/MDS pathogenesis, revealing novel options for immunotherapy. Among immune system regulators, CD47, immune checkpoints, and toll-like receptor 2 (TLR2) are major targets. Magrolimab antagonizes CD47, which is overexpressed by AML and MDS cells, thus inducing macrophage phagocytosis with clinical activity in AML/MDS. Sabatolimab, an inhibitor of T-cell immunoglobulin and mucin domain-containing protein 3 (TIM3), which disrupts its binding to galectin-9, has shown promising results in AML/MDS, enhancing the effector functions of lymphocytes and triggering tumor cell death. Several other surface molecules, namely CD33, CD123, CD45, and CD70, can be targeted with monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) that exert different mechanisms of action and include naked and conjugated antibodies, bispecific T-cell engagers, trispecific killer engagers, and fusion proteins linked to toxins. These novel mAbs are currently under investigation for use as monotherapy or in combination with hypomethylating agents, BCL2 inhibitors, and chemotherapy in various clinical trials at different phases of development. Here, we review the main molecular targets and modes of action of novel mAb-based immunotherapies, which can represent the future of AML and higher risk MDS treatment.Entities:
Keywords: acute myeloid leukemia; molecular targets; monoclonal antibodies; myelodysplastic syndromes; therapy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35886899 PMCID: PMC9320300 DOI: 10.3390/ijms23147542
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 6.208
Figure 1Main targets and modes of action of immunotherapy in AML/MDS. Monoclonal antibodies (mAb), radioimmunotherapy (RIT), antibody-drug conjugates (ADC), bispecific T-cell engagers (BiTE), trispecific killer engagers (TriKE), fusion protein, dual affinity retargeting antibodies (DARTs), and their targets in AML/MDS are represented. Emerging mAbs for AML and MDS are directed against the macrophage mediated phagocytosis inhibitor CD47, immune checkpoint molecules (CTLA4, PD-1/PD-L1, and TIM3), and TLR2. BiTEs lead to a physical interaction between T-cells and leukemic cells. TriKE, consisting of a fusion of two scFv, one against CD33 and one against CD16, bridged by an IL15 linker that promotes NK activation, inducing a cytolytic response by targeting CD33 and CD123 on leukemic cells. DARTs are composed of a diabody backbone with a c-terminal disulfide bridge that improves stabilization and causes stronger B cell lysis and T cell activation in comparison with other types of bi-specific mAbs. ADCs, RIT, and fusion proteins, by binding to their targets, deliver the conjugated compound, which fulfills its toxic action on the tumor cells. Image created with BioRender.com (accessed on 6 June 2022).
Clinical trials with innovative mAbs in AML.
| NCT Code | Trial | Target | Study Population | Efficacy Results | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NCT03248479 | Ongoing phase Ib, magrolimab + AZA | CD47 | untreated AML unfit for induction chemotherapy. | ORR 69%: 50% CR or CRi, 13% PR and 31% SD | [ |
| NCT02678338 | Phase I, magrolimab | CD47 | R/R AML | N/A | [ |
| NCT04755244 | Ongoing phase I/II, evorpacept + venetoclax + AZA | CD47 | R/R AML ineligible for standard induction chemotherapy | N/A | N/A |
| NCT01822509 | Phase I/Ib, ipilimumab | CTLA-4 | R/R AML after allogeneic HSCT | Durable response (>1 year): 4/22 | [ |
| NCT02397720 | Ongoing phase II, nivolumab + AZA | PD-1 | R/R AML | ORR: 33% | [ |
| NCT02530463 | Ongoing phase II, ipilimumab + nivolumab + AZA vs. nivolumab + AZA vs. AZA | PD-1 | R/R AML | Ipilimumab + nivolumab + AZA arm: mOS 7.6 months; | [ |
| NCT03066648 | Phase Ib, sabatolimab +/− PDR001 + HMA | TIM-3 | AML | ND AML unsuitable for induction chemotherapy: ORR 41.2%, CR 8%, CRi 3%, PR 3% | [ |
| NCT02785900 | Phase III, vadastuximab talirine + AZA/decitabine vs. placebo | CD33 | Older ND AML | Terminated (due to poor safety) | [ |
| NCT02575963 | Phase II, 225 Ac-lintuzumab | CD33 | AML | 69% remission | [ |
| NCT02520427 | Ongoing phase I, AMG330 | CD33 | R/R AML | CR/CRi 11.4% | [ |
| NCT03647800 | Phase IB, APVO436 | CD123 | R/R AML | N/A | [ |
| NCT02730312 | Ongoing phase I, vibecotamab | CD123 | R/R AML | CR/CRi: 23% | [ |
| NCT03386513 | Ongoing phase I/II, IMGN632 | CD123 | R/R AML | CR: 1/12, CRi: 3/12 | [ |
| NCT03113643 | Ongoing phase I, tagraxofusp + AZA vs. AZA/venetoclax | CD123 | AML | N/A | [ |
| NCT02152956 | Ongoing phase I/II, flotetuzumab | CD123 | R/R AML | ORR 13.6%, CR 11.7% | [ |
| NCT00008177 | Phase I, iomab-B + FLU + 2 Gy TBI | CD45 | Over 50 years AML | N/A | [ |
| NCT02665065 | Ongoing phase III, iomab-B + FLU + low-dose TBI | CD45 | R/R AML | N/A | [ |
| NCT01300572 | Phase I, 90Y-BC8 + FLU/TBI | CD45 | AML ineligible for allogeneic HSCT | OS at 1.8 years: 53% | [ |
| NCT03030612 | Phase I/II, cusatuzumab monotherapy followed by cusatuzumab + AZA | CD70 | Untreated older AML | CR/CRi: 83% | [ |
AZA, azacytidine; AML, acute myeloid leukemia; ORR, overall response rate; CR, complete remission; CRi, complete response with incomplete hematologic recovery; PR, partial response; SD, stable disease; R/R, relapsed/refractory; HSCT, hematopoietic stem cells transplant; mOS, median overall survival; HMA, hypomethylating agents; ND, newly diagnosed; FLU, fludarabine; TBI, total body irradiation; OS, overall survival.
Clinical trials with innovative mAb in MDS.
| NCT Code | Trial | Target | Study Population | Efficacy Results | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NCT03248479 | Ongoing phase Ib, magrolimab + AZA | CD47 | treatment-naïve MDS from intermediate to very high | ORR 91%: | [ |
| NCT04313881 | Ongoing phase III, magrolimab + AZA vs. AZA + placebo | CD47 | Treatment-naïve HR-MDS | NA | N/A |
| NCT04417517 | Ongoing phase I/II, evorpacept + AZA | CD47 | R/R or ND HR-MDS | mCR: 3/10; | [ |
| NCT02530463 | Ongoing phase II, ipilimumab and/or nivolumab +/− AZA | CTLA-4 | HMA-failure MDS or untreated MDS | HMA-failure arm: ORR 36%, CR 9%, CRi 9%, mOS 11.4 months; | [ |
| NCT03094637 | Ongoing phase II, pembrolizumab + AZA | PD-1 | HMA-failure or untreated INT1 or HR-MDS | HMA-failure arm: ORR 25%; | [ |
| NCT03066648 | Ongoing phase Ib, sabatolimab + HMA | TIM-3 | High risk and very high risk MDS | ORR 56.9%, | [ |
| NCT02363491 | Ongoing phase I/II, tomaralimab | TLR-2 | HMA-failure and transfusion-dependent LR-MDS patients | ORR: 50% | [ |
| NCT03337451 | Ongoing phase I/II, tomaralimab | TLR-2 | HMA-failure and transfusion-dependent LR-MDS patients | ORR: 50% | [ |
| NCT03214666 | Phase I/II, GTB-3550 | CD33 | HR-MDS | N/A | [ |
| NCT03647800 | Ongoing Ib, APVO436 | CD123 | R/R MDS after HMA-failure | mCR: 50% | [ |
| NCT03113643 | Ongoing phase Ib, tagraxofusp + AZA | CD123 | MDS | CR 50%, mCR: 25% | [ |
AZA, azacytidine; MDS, myelodysplastic sindromes; ORR, overall response rate; CR, complete response; mCR, marrow CR; PR, partial response; HR, higher risk; SD, stable disease; R/R, relapsed/refractory; HMA, hypomethylating agents; INT1, intermediate 1; LR, lower risk; mDOR, median duration of response; ND, newly diagnosed.
Figure 2Mode of action of anti-CD47 antibodies. These mAbs, by binding CD47, block CD47 and SIRPα interaction, preventing the “do not eat me!” signal, and thus facilitate the killing of tumor cells by macrophages. Image created with BioRender.com (accessed on 6 June 2022).