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Antibody-exatecan conjugates with a novel self-immolative moiety overcome resistance in colon and lung cancer.

Weining WengTao MengQianqian ZhaoYi ShenGuoxiang FuJing ShiYue ZhangZhaohui WangMingqiao WangRong PanLinjie MaCaiwei ChenLijun WangBiao ZhouHui ZhangJunyi PuJianjian ZhangYi Peter HuGuoqiang HuaYu QianShu-Hui LiuWen-Hao HuXun Meng
Published in: Cancer discovery (2023)
Antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs) using DNA Topoisomerase I inhibitor DXd/SN-38 have transformed cancer treatment, yet more effective ADCs are needed for overcoming resistance. We have designed an ADC class using a novel self-immolative T moiety for traceless conjugation and release of exatecan, a more potent Topoisomerase I inhibitor with less sensitivity to multidrug (MDR) resistance. Characterized by enhanced therapeutic indices, higher stability and improved intra-tumoral pharmacodynamic response, antibody-T moiety-exatecan conjugates targeting HER2, HER3, TROP2 overcome intrinsic or treatment-resistance of equivalent DXd/SN-38 ADCs in low-target expression, large-size and MDR+ tumors. T moiety-exatecan ADCs display durable antitumor activity in PDX and organoid models representative of unmet clinical needs including EGFR-del19/T790M/C797S triple mutation lung cancer and BRAF/KRAS-TP53 double-mutant colon cancer, and show synergy with PARP/ATR inhibitor and anti-PD-1 treatment. High tolerability of T moiety-exatecan ADC class in non-human primate supports its potential to expand responding patient population and tumor types beyond current ADCs.
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