ARX788, a Site-specific Anti-HER2 Antibody–Drug Conjugate, Demonstrates Potent and Selective Activity in HER2-low and T-DM1–resistant Breast and Gastric Cancers

Lillian Skidmore(Ambrx (United States)), Sukumar Sakamuri(Ambrx (United States)), Nick Knudsen(Ambrx (United States)), Amha Gebre Hewet(Ambrx (United States)), Snezana Milutinovic(Ambrx (United States)), Wisam Barkho(Ambrx (United States)), Sandra L. Biroc(Ambrx (United States)), Jessica Kirtley(Ambrx (United States)), Robin Marsden(Ambrx (United States)), Kristine Storey(Ambrx (United States)), Ianina Lopez(Ambrx (United States)), Wayne Yu(Ambrx (United States)), Shiao-Yan Fang(Ambrx (United States)), Sulan Yao(Ambrx (United States)), Yi Gu(Ambrx (United States)), Feng Tian(Ambrx (United States))
Molecular Cancer Therapeutics
July 15, 2020
Cited by 158

Abstract

Abstract First-generation antibody–drug conjugates (ADC) are heterogeneous mixtures that have shown clinical benefit, but generally exhibited safety issues and a narrow therapeutic window due, in part, to off-target toxicity caused by ADC instability. ARX788 is a next-generation, site-specific anti-HER2 ADC that utilizes a unique nonnatural amino acid–enabled conjugation technology and a noncleavable Amberstatin (AS269) drug-linker to generate a homogeneous ADC with a drug-to-antibody ratio of 1.9. ARX788 exhibits high serum stability in mice and a relatively long ADC half-life of 12.5 days. When compared in vitro against T-DM1 across a panel of cancer cell lines, ARX788 showed superior activity in the lower HER2-expressing cell lines and no activity in normal cardiomyocyte cells. Similarly, ARX788 significantly inhibited tumor growth, and generally outperformed T-DM1 in HER2-high and HER2-low expression xenograft models. Breast and gastric cancer patient-derived xenograft studies confirmed strong antitumor activity of ARX788 in HER2-positive and HER2-low expression tumors, as well as in a T-DM1-resistant model. The encouraging preclinical data support the further development of ARX788 for treatment of patients with HER2-positive breast and gastric cancer, including those who have developed T-DM1 resistance, and patients with HER2-low expression tumors who are currently ineligible to receive HER2-targeted therapy.


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