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Co-administered antibody improves penetration of antibody-dye conjugate into human cancers with implications for antibody-drug conjugates.

Guolan LuNaoki NishioNynke S van den BergBrock A MartinShayan FakurnejadStan van KeulenAlexander D ColevasGreg M ThurberEben L Rosenthal
Published in: Nature communications (2020)
Poor tissue penetration remains a major challenge for antibody-based therapeutics of solid tumors, but proper dosing can improve the tissue penetration and thus therapeutic efficacy of these biologics. Due to dose-limiting toxicity of the small molecule payload, antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs) are administered at a much lower dose than their parent antibodies, which further reduces tissue penetration. We conducted an early-phase clinical trial (NCT02415881) and previously reported the safety of an antibody-dye conjugate (panitumumab-IRDye800CW) as primary outcome. Here, we report a retrospective exploratory analysis of the trial to evaluate whether co-administration of an unconjugated antibody could improve the intratumoral distribution of the antibody-dye conjugate in patients. By measuring the multiscale distribution of the antibody-dye conjugate, this study demonstrates improved microscopic antibody distribution without increasing uptake (toxicity) in healthy tissue when co-administered with the parent antibody, supporting further clinical investigation of the co-administration dosing strategy to improve the tumor penetration of ADCs.
Keyphrases
  • small molecule
  • clinical trial
  • cancer therapy
  • end stage renal disease
  • chronic kidney disease
  • phase ii
  • patient reported outcomes
  • placebo controlled