AI Article Synopsis

  • Treatment options for acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) patients resistant to traditional chemotherapies are limited, highlighting the need for new therapies.
  • SGN-CD123A, an antibody-drug conjugate targeting IL3 receptor alpha (CD123), shows strong anti-cancer effects by inducing DNA damage and apoptosis in AML cells across multiple models.
  • Preclinical studies demonstrated that SGN-CD123A effectively eradicates AML in various xenograft models and can enhance the effects of existing FLT3 inhibitors, supporting further clinical trials to assess its safety and efficacy in patients.

Article Abstract

Treatment choices for acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) patients resistant to conventional chemotherapies are limited and novel therapeutic agents are needed. IL3 receptor alpha (IL3Rα, or CD123) is expressed on the majority of AML blasts, and there is evidence that its expression is increased on leukemic relative to normal hematopoietic stem cells, which makes it an attractive target for antibody-based therapy. Here, we report the generation and preclinical characterization of SGN-CD123A, an antibody-drug conjugate using the pyrrolobenzodiazepine dimer (PBD) linker and a humanized CD123 antibody with engineered cysteines for site-specific conjugation. Mechanistically, SGN-CD123A induces activation of DNA damage response pathways, cell-cycle changes, and apoptosis in AML cells. , SGN-CD123A-mediated potent cytotoxicity of 11/12 CD123 AML cell lines and 20/23 primary samples from AML patients, including those with unfavorable cytogenetic profiles or FLT3 mutations. , SGN-CD123A treatment led to AML eradication in a disseminated disease model, remission in a subcutaneous xenograft model, and significant growth delay in a multidrug resistance xenograft model. Moreover, SGN-CD123A also resulted in durable complete remission of a patient-derived xenograft AML model. When combined with a FLT3 inhibitor quizartinib, SGN-CD123A enhanced the activity of quizartinib against two FLT3-mutated xenograft models. Overall, these data demonstrate that SGN-CD123A is a potent antileukemic agent, supporting an ongoing trial to evaluate its safety and efficacy in AML patients (NCT02848248). .

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/1535-7163.MCT-17-0742DOI Listing

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