Enfortumab Vedotin Antibody–Drug Conjugate Targeting Nectin-4 Is a Highly Potent Therapeutic Agent in Multiple Preclinical Cancer Models

Pia M. Challita-Eid(University of Santa Monica), Daulet Satpayev(University of Santa Monica), Peng Yang(University of Santa Monica), Zili An(University of Santa Monica), Karen Morrison(University of Santa Monica), Yuriy Shostak(University of Santa Monica), Arthur Raitano(University of Santa Monica), Rossana Nadell(University of Santa Monica), Wendy Liu(University of Santa Monica), Dawn Ratay Lortie(University of Santa Monica), Linnette Capo(University of Santa Monica), Alla Verlinsky(University of Santa Monica), Monica Leavitt(University of Santa Monica), Faisal Malik(University of Santa Monica), Héctor Aviña(University of Santa Monica), Claudia Guevara(University of Santa Monica), Nick Dinh(University of Santa Monica), Sher Karki(University of Santa Monica), Banmeet S. Anand(University of Santa Monica), Daniel S. Pereira(University of Santa Monica), Ingrid B.J. Joseph(University of Santa Monica), Fernando Doñate(University of Santa Monica), Kendall Morrison(University of Santa Monica), David R. Stover(University of Santa Monica)
Cancer Research
March 24, 2016
Cited by 689

Abstract

The identification of optimal target antigens on tumor cells is central to the advancement of new antibody-based cancer therapies. We performed suppression subtractive hybridization and identified nectin-4 (PVRL4), a type I transmembrane protein and member of a family of related immunoglobulin-like adhesion molecules, as a potential target in epithelial cancers. We conducted immunohistochemical analysis of 2,394 patient specimens from bladder, breast, lung, pancreatic, ovarian, head/neck, and esophageal tumors and found that 69% of all specimens stained positive for nectin-4. Moderate to strong staining was especially observed in 60% of bladder and 53% of breast tumor specimens, whereas the expression of nectin-4 in normal tissue was more limited. We generated a novel antibody-drug conjugate (ADC) enfortumab vedotin comprising the human anti-nectin-4 antibody conjugated to the highly potent microtubule-disrupting agent MMAE. Hybridoma (AGS-22M6E) and CHO (ASG-22CE) versions of enfortumab vedotin (also known as ASG-22ME) ADC were able to bind to cell surface-expressed nectin-4 with high affinity and induced cell death in vitro in a dose-dependent manner. Treatment of mouse xenograft models of human breast, bladder, pancreatic, and lung cancers with enfortumab vedotin significantly inhibited the growth of all four tumor types and resulted in tumor regression of breast and bladder xenografts. Overall, these findings validate nectin-4 as an attractive therapeutic target in multiple solid tumors and support further clinical development, investigation, and application of nectin-4-targeting ADCs. Cancer Res; 76(10); 3003-13. ©2016 AACR.


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