Abstract

Antiangiogenic therapy is a clinically validated modality in cancer treatment. To date, all approved antiangiogenic drugs primarily inhibit the VEGF pathway. Delta-like ligand 4 (DLL4) has been identified as a potential drug target in VEGF-independent angiogenesis and tumor-initiating cell (TIC) survival. A dual-specific biologic targeting both VEGF and DLL4 could be an attractive strategy to improve the effectiveness of anti-VEGF therapy. ABT-165 was uniquely engineered using a proprietary dual-variable domain immunoglobulin (DVD-Ig) technology based on its ability to bind and inhibit both DLL4 and VEGF. In vivo, ABT-165 induced significant tumor growth inhibition compared with either parental antibody treatment alone, due, in part, to the disruption of functional tumor vasculature. In combination with chemotherapy agents, ABT-165 also induced greater antitumor response and outperformed anti-VEGF treatment. ABT-165 displayed nonlinear pharmacokinetic profiles in cynomolgus monkeys, with an apparent terminal half-life > 5 days at a target saturation dose. In a GLP monkey toxicity study, ABT-165 was well-tolerated at doses up to 200 mg/kg with non-adverse treatment-related histopathology findings limited to the liver and thymus. In summary, ABT-165 represents a novel antiangiogenic strategy that potently inhibits both DLL4 and VEGF, demonstrating favorable in vivo efficacy, pharmacokinetic, and safety profiles in preclinical models. Given these preclinical attributes, ABT-165 has progressed to a phase I study. Mol Cancer Ther; 17(5); 1039-50. ©2018 AACR.

Highlights

  • Angiogenesis is one of the integral hallmarks of cancer [1]

  • ABT-165 contains the variable domain of a humanized anti-Delta-like ligand 4 (DLL4) mAb (h1A11.1) at the outer position of the dual-variable domain immunoglobulin (DVD-Ig) molecule, and the variable domain of a humanized anti-VEGF mAb (AB014) at the inner position, joined by a short heavy-chain linker (ASTKGP) and a long light-chain linker (TVAAPSVFIFPP) (Fig. 1A)

  • Solid tumor growth depends on the development of neovasculature and an effective antiangiogenesis strategy may offer significant antitumor benefits

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Summary

Introduction

Angiogenesis is one of the integral hallmarks of cancer [1]. Among which the VEGF and VEGF receptor (VEGFR) tyrosine kinase pathway have been heavily studied, leading to the development of the firstgeneration antiangiogenic drugs targeting these pathways [2]. These therapies exhibit only modest overall survival benefit when combined with chemotherapy. Note: Supplementary data for this article are available at Molecular Cancer Therapeutics Online (http://mct.aacrjournals.org/). Y. Li and J.A. Hickson contributed to this article

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