CD19
抗体
淋巴瘤
医学
免疫学
耐受性
B细胞
癌症研究
药理学
化学
不利影响
作者
Kristan Meetze,Naveen K. Mehta,Bochong Li,Hannah M Findlay,Timothy B London,Agapitos Patakas,Jennifer S. Michaelson,Patrick A. Baeuerle
标识
DOI:10.1136/jitc-2023-007398
摘要
Despite significant progress in the development of T cell-engaging therapies for various B-cell malignancies, a high medical need remains for the refractory disease setting, often characterized by suboptimal target levels.To address this issue, we have developed a 65-kDa multispecific antibody construct, CLN-978, with affinities tuned to optimize the killing of low-CD19 expressing tumor cells. CLN-978 bound to CD19 on B cells with picomolar affinity, and to CD3ε on T cells with nanomolar affinity. A serum albumin binding domain was incorporated to extend serum half-life. In this setting, we biophysically characterize and report the activities of CLN-978 in cell co-culture assays, multiple mouse models and non-human primates.Human T cells redirected by CLN-978 could eliminate target cells expressing less than 300 copies of CD19 on their surface. The half-life extension and high affinity for CD19 led to significant antitumor activity in murine lymphoma models at very low doses of CLN-978. In primates, we observed a long serum half-life, deep and sustained depletion of normal B cells, and remarkable tolerability, in particular, reduced cytokine release when CLN-978 was administered subcutaneously.CLN-978 warrants further exploration. An ongoing clinical phase 1 trial is investigating safety, pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, and the initial therapeutic potential of subcutaneously administered CLN-978 in patients with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma.
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