Anti-LYPD1/CD3 T-Cell-Dependent Bispecific Antibody for the Treatment of Ovarian Cancer

Ovarian cancer is a diverse class of tumors with very few effective treatment options and suboptimal response rates in early clinical studies using immunotherapies. Here we describe LY6/PLAUR domain containing 1 (LYPD1) as a novel target for therapeutic antibodies for the treatment of ovarian cancer...

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Veröffentlicht in:Molecular cancer therapeutics 2021-04, Vol.20 (4), p.716-725
Hauptverfasser: Lo, Amy A, Johnston, Jennifer, Li, Ji, Mandikian, Danielle, Hristopoulos, Maria, Clark, Robyn, Nickles, Dorothee, Liang, Wei-Ching, Hötzel, Kathy, Dunlap, Debra, Pham, Thinh, Cai, Hao, Ovacik, Meric, Bravo-Perez, Daniel, Mai, Elaine, Slaga, Dionysos, Ellerman, Diego, Ziai, James, Totpal, Klara, Lee, Genee, Boswell, C Andrew, Payandeh, Jian, Wu, Yan, Junttila, Teemu T
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Ovarian cancer is a diverse class of tumors with very few effective treatment options and suboptimal response rates in early clinical studies using immunotherapies. Here we describe LY6/PLAUR domain containing 1 (LYPD1) as a novel target for therapeutic antibodies for the treatment of ovarian cancer. LYPD1 is broadly expressed in both primary and metastatic ovarian cancer with ∼70% prevalence in the serous cancer subset. Bispecific antibodies targeting CD3 on T cells and a tumor antigen on cancer cells have demonstrated significant clinical activity in hematologic cancers. We have developed an anti-LYPD1/CD3 T-cell-dependent bispecific antibody (TDB) to redirect T-cell responses to LYPD1 expressing ovarian cancer. Here we characterize the nonclinical pharmacology of anti-LYPD1/CD3 TDB and show induction of a robust polyclonal T-cell activation and target dependent killing of LYPD1 expressing ovarian cancer cells resulting in efficient antitumor responses in PBMC reconstituted immune-deficient mice and human CD3 transgenic mouse models. Anti-LYPD1/CD3 TDB is generally well tolerated at high-dose levels in mice, a pharmacologically relevant species, and showed no evidence of toxicity or damage to LYPD1 expressing tissues.
ISSN:1535-7163
1538-8514
DOI:10.1158/1535-7163.MCT-20-0490