An update on B-cell maturation antigen-targeted therapies in Multiple Myeloma.
Massimo MartinoAnnalisa PaviglianitiPublished in: Expert opinion on biological therapy (2021)
Introduction: B-cell maturation antigen (BCMA) targeted therapy (BCMA-TT) has emerged as a promising treatment for Multiple Myeloma (MM). the three most common treatment modalities for targeting BCMA are antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs), bispecific antibody constructs, including BiTE (bispecific T-cell engager) immuno-oncology therapies, and chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-modified T-cell therapy.Areas covered: The review provides an overview of the main published studies on clinical and pre-clinical data from trials using BCMA-TT.Expert opinion: Despite progresses in survival outcomes and the availability of new drugs, MM remains an incurable disease. ADC is a promising antibody-based treatment and Belantamab mafodotin showed an anti-myeloma effect alone or in combination with other drugs. The major issue of ADC is the occurrence of events interfering with the efficacy and the off-target cytotoxicity. Bispecific antibody constructs are off-the-shelf therapies characterized by a potential rapid availability. The most critical limitation of bispecific antibody constructs is their short half-life necessitating prolonged intravenous infusion. CAR-T cells produced unprecedented results in heavily pretreated RRMM. The most common toxicities include neurologic toxicity and cytokine release syndrome, B-cell aplasia, cytopenias, and hypogammaglobulinemia. Further studies are needed to detect which are the eligible patients who could benefit from one treatment more than another.