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Milatuzumab-SN-38 conjugates for the treatment of CD74+ cancers

Menée in vitro et à l'aide de xénogreffes, cette étude évalue l'activité antitumorale d'un composé anticorps-médicament (milatuzumab-SN38) pour le traitement de tumeurs solides surexprimant CD74

CD74 is an attractive target for antibody-drug conjugates (ADC), because it internalizes and recycles after antibody binding. CD74 mostly is associated with hematological tumors, but is expressed also in solid cancers. Therefore, ADCs of the humanized anti-CD74 antibody, milatuzumab, were examined for the therapy CD74-expressing solid tumors. Milatuzumab-doxorubicin, and two milatuzumab-SN-38 conjugates with cleavable linkers, differing in their stability in serum and how they release SN-38 in the lysosome, were prepared. CD74 expression was determined by flow cytometry and immunohistology. In vitro cytotoxicity and in vivo therapeutic studies were performed in the human cancer cell lines A-375 (melanoma), HuH-7 and Hep-G2 (hepatoma), Capan-1 (pancreatic), NCI-N87 (gastric), and Raji Burkitt lymphoma. The milatuzumab-SN-38 ADC was compared to SN-38 ADCs prepared with anti-Trop-2 and anti-CEACAM6 antibodies in xenografts expressing their target antigens. Milatuzumab-doxorubicin was most effective in the lymphoma model, while in A-375 and Capan-1 solid tumors, only milatuzumab-SN-38 showed a therapeutic benefit. Despite much lower surface expression of CD74 than Trop-2 or CEACAM6, milatuzumab-SN-38 had similar efficacy in Capan-1 as anti-Trop-2-SN-38, but in NCI-N87, anti-CEACAM6 and anti-Trop-2 conjugates were superior. Studies in 2 hepatoma lines at a single dose level showed significant benefit over saline controls, but not against an irrelevant IgG conjugate. CD74 is a suitable target for ADCs in some solid tumor xenografts, with efficacy largely influenced by uniformity of CD74 expression, and with SN-38 conjugates providing the best therapeutic responses; SN-38 conjugates were preferable in solid cancers, while doxorubicin ADC was better in lymphoma tested.

http://mct.aacrjournals.org/content/early/2013/02/20/1535-7163.MCT-12-1170.abstract

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