Abstract

3110 Background: Solid tumors are replete with myeloid cells which, when activated, drive potent anti-tumor responses. Clinical development of systemically administered myeloid cell agonists, however, has been hindered by acute toxicities due to peripheral activation of the targeted cell types. Intratumoral administration, the route of delivery typically used for innate immune/myeloid cell agonists, is limited by tumor accessibility and a dependence on abscopal responses. A systemically delivered myeloid cell agonist with tumor-localized activity has the potential to overcome challenges encountered with other innate immune/myeloid cell agonists in clinical development. Methods: SBT6050 is a novel therapeutic comprised of a potent toll-like receptor (TLR) 8 agonist payload conjugated to a HER2-directed monoclonal antibody. Delivery of the payload into the endosome of human myeloid cells, where TLR8 resides, requires the co-engagement of HER2 on tumor cells and Fc gamma receptor on human myeloid cells. Thus, SBT6050 is designed for systemic delivery and tumor-targeted activation of human myeloid cells. Results: Studies with human immune cells show that SBT6050 potently induces, in a HER2-dependent manner, multiple anti-tumor immune activities due to its direct activation of myeloid cells and the subsequent induction of T and NK cell cytolytic activity. SBT6050 is designed to activate human myeloid cells only in the presence of HER2-positive tumor cells with moderate (2+ by IHC) or high (3+ by IHC) expression levels. Tumor-localized activity has been demonstrated in mouse models using a SBT6050 mouse surrogate. Systemic delivery results in robust single agent efficacy in multiple mouse tumor models, even those engineered to lack T cells, without accompanying peripheral cytokine production. Trastuzumab and SBT6050 bind to distinct epitopes on HER2 and enhanced activity is observed when the two agents are combined. Conclusions: SBT6050 is a systemically administered, tumor-targeted myeloid cell agonist that demonstrates single agent efficacy in multiple mouse tumor models without peripheral cytokine production. A first-in-human study with SBT6050 is expected to begin this year for patients with HER2-expressing solid tumors.

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