Trispecific antibodies enhance the therapeutic efficacy of tumor-directed T cells through T cell receptor co-stimulation.
Lan WuEdward SeungLing XuErcole RaoDana M LordRonnie R WeiVirna Cortez-RetamozoBeatriz OspinaValeriya PosternakGregory UlinskiPeter PiepenhagenElisa FrancesconiNizar El-MurrChristian BeilPatrick KirbyAiqun LiJennifer FretlandRita VicenteGejing DengTarik DabdoubiBeatrice CameronThomas BertrandPaul FerrariStéphanie PouzieuxCendrine LemoineCatherine PradesAnna ParkHuawei QiuZhili SongBailin ZhangFangxian SunMarielle ChironSrinivas RaoRadošević KatarinaZhi-Yong YangGary J NabelPublished in: Nature cancer (2019)
Despite the significant therapeutic advances provided by immune-checkpoint blockade and chimeric antigen receptor T cell treatments, many malignancies remain unresponsive to immunotherapy. Bispecific antibodies targeting tumor antigens and activating T cell receptor signaling have shown some clinical efficacy; however, providing co-stimulatory signals may improve T cell responses against tumors. Here, we developed a trispecific antibody that interacts with CD38, CD3 and CD28 to enhance both T cell activation and tumor targeting. The engagement of both CD3 and CD28 affords efficient T cell stimulation, whereas the anti-CD38 domain directs T cells to myeloma cells, as well as to certain lymphomas and leukemias. In vivo administration of this antibody suppressed myeloma growth in a humanized mouse model and also stimulated memory/effector T cell proliferation and reduced regulatory T cells in non-human primates at well-tolerated doses. Collectively, trispecific antibodies represent a promising platform for cancer immunotherapy.