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the official website of the antibody society

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New antibody-drug conjugate approved in the US

June 10, 2019 by Janice Reichert

On June 10, 2019, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) granted accelerated approval to Polivy (polatuzumab vedotin-piiq), in combination with the chemotherapy bendamustine and a rituximab product (BR), to treat adult patients with diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) that has progressed or returned after at least two prior therapies. Polivy is composed of a humanized anti-CD79b IgG1 antibody conjugated to the antimitotic agent monomethyl auristatin E (MMAE). The antibody’s target is highly expressed on B cells of patients with lymphoma. The biologics license application for Polivy was granted FDA’s Breakthrough Therapy and priority review designations. The drug also has European Medicines Agency (EMA)’s PRIME designation, and US and EU Orphan Drug designations for DLBCL. EMA is reviewing a marketing authorization application for Polivy.

The drug’s efficacy was evaluated in a study of 80 patients with relapsed or refractory DLBCL who were randomized to receive Polivy with BR or BR alone. Efficacy was based on complete response rate and duration of response (DOR), defined as the time the disease stays in remission. At the end of treatment, the complete response rate was 40% with Polivy plus BR compared to 18% with BR alone. Of the 25 patients who achieved a partial or complete response to Polivy plus BR, 16 (64%) had a DOR of at least six months and 12 (48%) had a DOR of at least 12 months.

Like this post but not a member? Please join!

The Antibody Society maintains a comprehensive table of approved mAb therapeutics and those in regulatory review in the EU or US. Located in the ‘Web Resources’ section of our website, the list is updated regularly and can be downloaded in Excel format. Information about other antibody therapeutics that may enter regulatory review in 2019 can be found in ‘Antibodies to watch in 2019’.

 

Filed Under: ADC, Approvals, Food and Drug Administration Tagged With: Antibody drug conjugates, approved antibodies, Food and Drug Administration, polatuzumab vedotin

Election of new Executive Sub-committee members

June 10, 2019 by jpburckert

Members of the 2019/2020 Executive Sub-committee were elected at the AIRR C IV meeting in Genoa in May. Nina Luning Prak (Univ of Pennsylvania) was approved as the Chair of the AIRR Community, Lindsay Cowell (UT Southwestern, USA) was elected the Chair Elect, and Felix Breden (Simon Fraser U, Canada) became the Past Chair. Christian Busse (DKFZ, Germany), Victor Greiff (Univ of Oslo, Norway) also joined the SC.

Short bios of all members of the Executive Sub-committee are presented here: https://www.antibodysociety.org/the-airr-community/airr-subcomittees/executive-sub-committee/. 

Filed Under: AIRR Community, New articles Tagged With: Adaptive Immune Receptor Repertoire Community

Antibody Engineering & Therapeutics Europe: The European Meeting of The Antibody Society

June 6, 2019 by FrancesB

We look forward to seeing you June 11-13, 2019 at The Antibody Society’s 2nd annual Antibody Engineering & Therapeutics Europe meeting in Amsterdam, the Netherlands.

Please join us for the Society’s networking session at Booth #25 at 5:45pm on  Wednesday June 12th. 

At this session, you’ll connect with industry and academic scientists and executives from Europe and around the world who focus on antibody and protein therapeutic discovery and development. And you can get a free T shirt!

The keynote speakers are Jane Osbourn, Ph.D., (Vice President R&D and Site Leader of Medimmune), who will discuss  antibody therapeutic developments, pipeline and progress at Medimmune, and Hans Clevers, M.D., Ph.D., (Group Leader, Hubrecht Institute for Developmental Biology and Stem Cell Research and Professor of Molecular Genetics, University Medical Center Utrecht and Utrecht University), who will discuss Lgr5 stem cell-based organoids and their applications in cancer research.

In addition, the meeting features sessions on Turning Antibody Leads into Drugs, Recent Advances in Immuno-Oncology Approaches, Bioinformatics and Repertoires in Antibody Discovery and Development, Antibody Therapeutics for Autoimmune and Neurodegenerative Diseases, Clinical Developments in Antibody Therapeutics, and New Antibody Formats and Effector Functions.

Society members receive a 15% discount on the registration fee!

The agenda can be downloaded here.

We hope to see you at Booth #25!

Filed Under: Antibody discovery, Antibody therapeutic, Meetings, Uncategorized Tagged With: antibody therapeutics

Ratification of the Communications Sub-committee

May 31, 2019 by jpburckert

At the AIRR C IV meeting in Genoa, the Communications Sub-committee was ratified. Its current members are Jean-Philippe Bürckert (BISC Global, Inc., USA, Co-Leader), Victor Greiff (Univ of Oslo, Norway, Co-Leader), Jamie Scott (Simon Fraser Univ, CA), Susanna Marquez (Yale, USA), and Pam Borghardt (SFU, CA).

The Sub-committee’s mission statement can be found here: https://www.antibodysociety.org/the-airr-community/airr-subcomittees/communications-sub-committee/. 

 

Filed Under: AIRR Community, New articles Tagged With: Adaptive Immune Receptor Repertoire Community

Most read from mAbs, May-June 2019

May 23, 2019 by Janice Reichert

The Antibody Society is pleased  to be affiliated with mAbs, a multi-disciplinary journal dedicated to advancing the art and science of antibody research and development. We hope you enjoy these summaries based on the abstracts of the most read papers published in a recent issue.

All the articles are open access; PDFs can be freely downloaded by following the links below.

Issue 11.4 (May-June 2019)

Combining the best of two worlds: highly flexible chimeric antigen receptor adaptor molecules (CAR-adaptors) for the recruitment of chimeric antigen receptor T cells.

In this review, Darowski et al. summarize emerging approaches that aim to further evolve CAR-T cell therapy based on combinations of so-called universal or modular CAR-(modCAR-)T cells, and their respective adaptor molecules (CAR-adaptors), which mediate the crosslinking between target and effector cells. The activity of such modCAR-T cells is entirely dependent on binding of the respective CAR-adaptor to both a tumor antigen and to the CAR-expressing T cell. Contrary to conventional CAR-T cells, where the immunological synapse is established by direct interaction of CAR and membrane-bound target, modCAR-T cells provide a highly flexible and customizable development of the CAR-T cell concept and offer an additional possibility to control T cell activity.

Efficient tumor killing and minimal cytokine release with novel T-cell agonist bispecific antibodies.

Using a sequence-based discovery platform, Trinklein et al. identified new anti-CD3 antibodies from humanized rats that bind to multiple epitopes and elicit varying levels of T-cell activation. In T-BsAb format, 12 different anti-CD3 arms induce equivalent levels of tumor cell lysis by primary T-cells, but potency varies by a thousand-fold. The lead CD3-targeting arm stimulates very low levels of cytokine release, but drives robust tumor antigen-specific killing in vitro and in a mouse xenograft model. This new CD3-targeting antibody underpins a next-generation T-BsAb platform in which potent cytotoxicity is uncoupled from high levels of cytokine release, which may lead to a wider therapeutic window in the clinic.

Sym021, a promising anti-PD1 clinical candidate antibody derived from a new chicken antibody discovery platform.

In this study by Gjetting et al., the Symplex antibody discovery platform was adapted to chicken immunoglobulin genes and combined with high-throughput humanization of antibody frameworks by “mass complementarity-determining region grafting”. Wild type chickens were immunized with an immune checkpoint inhibitor programmed cell death 1 (PD1) antigen, and a repertoire of 144 antibodies was generated. The PD1 antibody repertoire was successfully humanized, and the authors found that most humanized antibodies retained affinity largely similar to that of the parental chicken antibodies. The lead antibody Sym021 blocked PD-L1 and PD-L2 ligand binding, resulting in elevated T-cell cytokine production in vitro. Detailed epitope mapping showed that the epitope recognized by Sym021 was unique compared to the clinically approved PD1 antibodies pembrolizumab and nivolumab. Moreover, Sym021 bound human PD1 with a stronger affinity (30 pM) compared to nivolumab and pembrolizumab, while also cross-reacting with cynomolgus and mouse PD1. This enabled direct testing of Sym021 in the syngeneic mouse in vivo cancer models and evaluation of preclinical toxicology in cynomolgus monkeys. Preclinical in vivo evaluation in various murine and human tumor models demonstrated a pronounced anti-tumor effect of Sym021, supporting its current evaluation in a Phase 1 clinical trial.

Filed Under: Antibody discovery, Antibody therapeutic, Bispecific antibodies, Immune checkpoint modulators, New articles Tagged With: antibody engineering, antibody therapeutics, bispecific, immune checkpoints, T cells

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The Adaptive Immune Receptor Repertoire Community is a research-driven group organizing around the use of high-throughput sequencing technologies to study antibody/B-cell and T-cell receptor repertoires.

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