Antibody–drug conjugates (ADC) achieve targeted drug delivery to a tumor and have demonstrated clinical success in many tumor types. The activity and safety profile of an ADC depends on its construction: antibody, payload, linker, and conjugation method, as well as the number of payload drugs per antibody [drug-to-antibody ratio (DAR)]. To allow for ADC optimization for a given target antigen, we developed Dolasynthen (DS), a novel ADC platform based on the payload auristatin hydroxypropylamide, that enables precise DAR-ranging and site-specific conjugation. We used the new platform to optimize an ADC that targets B7-H4 (VTCN1), an immune-suppressive protein that is overexpressed in breast, ovarian, and endometrial cancers. XMT-1660 is a site-specific DS DAR 6 ADC that induced complete tumor regressions in xenograft models of breast and ovarian cancer as well as in a syngeneic breast cancer model that is refractory to PD-1 immune checkpoint inhibition. In a panel of 28 breast cancer PDXs, XMT-1660 demonstrated activity that correlated with B7-H4 expression. XMT-1660 has recently entered clinical development in a phase I study (NCT05377996) in patients with cancer.
CITATION STYLE
Toader, D., Fessler, S. P., Collins, S. D., Conlon, P. R., Bollu, R., Catcott, K. C., … Lowinger, T. B. (2023). Discovery and Preclinical Characterization of XMT-1660, an Optimized B7-H4-Targeted Antibody–Drug Conjugate for the Treatment of Cancer. Molecular Cancer Therapeutics, 22(9), 999–1012. https://doi.org/10.1158/1535-7163.MCT-22-0786
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