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Multiple myeloma (MM) is characterized by an uncontrolled proliferation of plasma cells in the bone marrow and is currently incurable. Despite therapeutic advances in MM, there remains a high unmet medical need, particularly in the relapsed and refractory (R/R) setting. Clinical studies using antibody–drug conjugates (ADCs) to target epitopes, which are highly expressed on MM cells, have demonstrated significant antitumor activity in patients with R/R MM.1 Notably, belantamab mafodotin, a clinically advanced B-cell maturation antigen (BCMA)-targeted ADC, demonstrated anti-myeloma activity and a tolerable safety profile in patients with R/R MM in the DREAMM-2 study. The results were previously covered by the MM Hub —here.
ABBV-838 is an ADC that is made up of a humanized recombinant immunoglobulin G1κ directed against the CD2 subset 1 epitope (CS1) and is conjugated to a cytotoxic agent. The cell-surface glycoprotein, CS1, is expressed in ~90% of MM bone marrow cells and less in other cells, therefore it is an attractive therapeutic target.1
Ravi Vij, Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, St. Louis, US, and colleagues conducted a first-in-human study (NCT02462525) investigating the safety profile, pharmacokinetics, and preliminary activity of ABBV-838, in patients with R/R MM.1
Patients were enrolled to the study (Table 1) if they were ≥ 18 years of age, were not eligible for stem cell/bone marrow transplant or had relapsed after autologous or allogeneic stem cell/bone marrow transplant, and had received at least three prior lines of therapies. Patients must have previously received a proteasome inhibitor (PI) and an immunomodulatory drug (IMiD) or be double refractory to a PI and ImiD with disease progression on, or within, 60 days of last therapy.
Table 1. Patient characteristics1
ECOG, Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group; IMiD, immunomodulatory drug; ISS, International Staging System; PI, proteasome inhibitor |
|
|
Total (N = 75) |
---|---|
Median age, years (range) |
64 (41–87) |
Median prior lines of therapy (range) |
5 (1–12) |
Sex, n (%) Female Male |
31 (41.3) 44 (58.7) |
ECOG performance status, n (%) 0 1 2 ≥ 3 |
17 (22.7) 49 (65.3) 9 (12.0) 0 |
ISS staging at the time of study entry 1 2 3 Not evaluable |
26 (34.7) 12 (16.0) 28 (37.3) 8 (10.7) |
Refractory status to prior regimens, n (%) ≥1 IMiD ≥1 PI Both IMiD and PI |
38 (51) 27 (36) 25 (33) |
All (100%) patients discontinued from the study at the data cut-off on April 3, 2018, with the most common reason for discontinuation being progressive disease per International Myeloma Working Group definition (69.3%) and adverse events not related to progression (16.0%).
Evaluation of all 75 patients demonstrated a limited and modest efficacy:
In conclusion, the results from this phase I dose-escalation study of the ADC ABBV-838 in patients with R/R MM demonstrate that ABBV-838 has an acceptable safety profile and is well tolerated. However, ABBV-838 failed to show robust antitumor efficacy. A limitation of this study was the small cohort of patients that may skew any interpretation of data. As the defined endpoints were not reached and the set efficacy criteria were not achieved, enrolment of patients into this study (and into the combination therapy arm) was discontinued.
Currently, the difference in clinical efficacy between belantamab mafodotin and ABBV-838 is yet to be elucidated — the investigators attribute this to an array of possibilities, such as the difference in therapeutic target, exposure of the drug, or the conjugated toxin. The authors explain there is a discrepancy in membrane permeability potential between the two drugs; ABBV-838 is conjugated to a membrane-soluble cytotoxin (monomethyl auristatin E), whereas belantamab mafodotin is conjugated to a membrane-impermeable toxin (monomethyl auristatin F [MMAF]). This difference could potentially allow for greater accumulation of MMAF in MM cells and, therefore, greater exposure of belantamab mafodotin.
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