Solitomab, an EpCAM/CD3 bispecific antibody construct (BiTE), is highly active against primary uterine serous papillary carcinoma cell lines in vitro

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Abstract

Background Uterine serous carcinoma is an aggressive form of endometrial cancer that carries an extremely poor prognosis. Solitomab is a novel bispecific single-chain antibody construct that targets epithelial cell adhesion molecule on tumor cells and also contains a CD3 binding region. We evaluated the expression levels of epithelial cell adhesion molecule and the in vitro activity of solitomab against primary uterine serous carcinoma cell lines in vitro and ex-vivo in the ascites of patients with uterine serous carcinoma. Objective The purpose of this study was to determine the frequency of expression of epithelial cell adhesion molecule on uterine serous carcinoma cell lines and the ability of solitomab to modulate immune responses (T-cell proliferation, activation, cytokine production, and tumor killing) to tumor cells when it is combined with lymphocytes and epithelial cell adhesion molecule-positive cell lines or epithelial cell adhesion molecule-positive ascitic fluid in vitro. Study Design Epithelial cell adhesion molecule expression was evaluated by flow cytometry in a total of 14 primary uterine serous carcinoma cell lines. Sensitivity to solitomab-dependent cellular-cytotoxicity was tested against a panel of primary uterine serous carcinoma cell lines that express different levels of epithelial cell adhesion molecule in standard 4-hour chromium release assays. The proliferative activity, activation, cytokine secretion (ie, type I vs type II), and cytotoxicity of solitomab in autologous tumor-associated T cells in the ascitic fluid of patients with uterine serous carcinoma was also evaluated by carboxyfluorescein succinimidyl ester and flow-cytometry assays. Differences in epithelial cell adhesion molecule expression, solitomab-dependent cellular-cytotoxicity levels were analyzed with the use of an unpaired t test. T-cell activation marker increase and cytokine release were analyzed by a paired t test. Results Surface expression of epithelial cell adhesion molecule was found in 85.7% (12 of 14) of the uterine serous carcinoma cell lines that were tested by flow cytometry. Epithelial cell adhesion molecule-positive cell lines were found resistant to natural killer cells or T-cell-mediated killing after exposure to peripheral blood lymphocytes in 4-hour chromium-release assays (mean killing ± standard of the mean, 2.7% ± 3.1% after incubation of epithelial cell adhesion molecule-positive cell lines with control bispecific antibody construct). In contrast, after incubation with solitomab, epithelial cell adhesion molecule-positive uterine serous carcinoma cells became highly sensitive to T-cell cytotoxicity (mean killing, 25.7% ± 4.5%; P

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Bellone, S., Black, J., English, D. P., Schwab, C. L., Lopez, S., Cocco, E., … Santin, A. D. (2016). Solitomab, an EpCAM/CD3 bispecific antibody construct (BiTE), is highly active against primary uterine serous papillary carcinoma cell lines in vitro. American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 214(1), 99.e1-99.e8. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajog.2015.08.011

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