Application of a MABEL Approach for a T-Cell-Bispecific Monoclonal Antibody: CEA TCB.

J Immunother

*Roche Innovation Center Basel, Roche Pharmaceutical Research and Early Development, Pharmaceutical Sciences, Basel †Roche Innovation Center Zurich, Roche Pharmaceutical Research and Early Development, Pharmaceutical Sciences, Roche Glycart AG, Schlieren, Switzerland.

Published: September 2016

AI Article Synopsis

  • CEA TCB is a new T-cell-bispecific antibody designed to target CEA on tumor cells and CD3e on T cells, currently undergoing Phase 1 clinical trials for solid tumors.
  • Due to the lack of suitable animal models for safety evaluation, alternative testing methods were explored, including a surrogate antibody and transgenic mice, but neither proved effective.
  • Ultimately, a conservative minimum anticipated biological effect level (MABEL) assay was used to determine a safe starting dose of 52 μg for initial human trials.

Article Abstract

CEA TCB is a novel T-cell-bispecific (TCB) antibody targeting the carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) expressed on tumor cells and the CD3 epsilon chain (CD3e) present on T cells, which is currently in Phase 1 clinical trials (NCT02324257) for the treatment of CEA-positive solid tumors. Because the human CEA (hCEA) binder of CEA TCB does not cross-react with cynomolgus monkey and CEA is absent in rodents, alternative nonclinical safety evaluation approaches were considered. These included the development of a cynomolgus monkey cross-reactive homologous (surrogate) antibody (cyCEA TCB) for its evaluation in cynomolgus monkey and the development of double-transgenic mice, expressing hCEA and human CD3e (hCEA/hCD3e Tg), as a potential alternative species for nonclinical safety studies. However, a battery of nonclinical in vitro/ex vivo experiments demonstrated that neither of the previous approaches provided a suitable and pharmacologically relevant model to assess the safety of CEA TCB. Therefore, an alternative approach, a minimum anticipated biological effect level (MABEL), based on an in vitro tumor lysis assay was used to determine the starting dose for the first-in-human study. Using the most conservative approach to the MABEL assessment, a dose of 52 μg was selected as a safe starting dose for clinical study.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/CJI.0000000000000132DOI Listing

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