PO.ET01.06 · 实验与分子治疗

Preclinical efficacy of a first-in-class anti-ALCAM ADC in hard-to-treat solid and hematologic malignancies

海报缩略图:Preclinical efficacy of a first-in-class anti-ALCAM ADC in hard-to-treat solid and hematologic malignancies
编号 3167 展板 2 时间 4/20 02:00–05:00 区域 Section 19 主讲 Qinhong Ma, MD;PhD
分会场 Targeting Cell Surface Vulnerabilities to Overcome Therapeutic Resistance
查看完整资料 下载 PDF 登录后可访问当前开放资料 AACR 官方页面 ↗

作者与单位

Qinhong Ma, Daizong Li, Kewei Zhao, Mary Q. Xu, Mason Lu

MedAbome, Inc., Fremont, CA

摘要 Abstract

ALCAM (CD166) is a type I transmembrane glycoprotein that mediates cell-cell adhesion through homophilic ALCAM-ALCAM and heterophilic ALCAM-CD6 interactions. ALCAM is aberrantly overexpressed across a variety of solid and hematologic malignancies. Using our proprietary live-cell immunization (LC-I) and high-throughput screening (LC-HTS) platforms, we developed MAb52-29.1, an anti-ALCAM monoclonal antibody that selectively recognizes a tumor-restricted conformational epitope of ALCAM, exhibiting minimal or no cross-reactivity with normal cells or tissues. Both the chimeric and humanized versions of MAb52-29.1 exhibited high binding affinities to recombinant ALCAM-ECD (K D ≈ 1.1 nM). MAb52-29.1 cAb, containing two point-mutations in each Fc, was conjugated to MMAE through an MC-Vc-PAB linker to produce MAb52-29.1-ADC (DAR4). MAb52-29.1-ADC demonstrated potent antiproliferative effects in vitro , with cytotoxicity correlating with its high antibody internalization efficiency in various cancer cell lines. Anti-tumor efficacy was demonstrated by a single intraperitoneal ( i.p .) dose of MAb52-29.1-ADC at 4, 7, or 10 mg/kg using cell line-derived xenograft (CDX) mouse models of triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC), non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), gastric cancer (GC), and other tumor types, with subcutaneously inoculated tumors disappearing within 27~30 days after treatment. Preliminary toxicology studies indicated that MAb52-29.1-ADC did not raise any safety concerns. These findings support MAb52-29.1-ADC as a promising therapeutic candidate for treating solid and hematologic malignancies, and potentially mitigating toxicity concerns. Ongoing studies aiming to support further clinical investigation include MAb52-29.1-ADC in patient-derived xenograft (PDX) gastrointestinal (GI) cancer models, along with retrospective analyses of its target expression in clinical tumor samples.
利益披露 Disclosure
Q. Ma, None.. D. Li, None.. K. Zhao, None.. M. Q. Xu, None.. M. Lu, None.

在会议检索中打开