1. Academic Validation
  2. Anti-EGFR antibody-drug conjugate carrying an inhibitor targeting CDK restricts triple-negative breast cancer growth

Anti-EGFR antibody-drug conjugate carrying an inhibitor targeting CDK restricts triple-negative breast cancer growth

  • Clin Cancer Res. 2024 May 21. doi: 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-23-3110.
Anthony Cheung 1 Alicia M Chenoweth 1 Annelie Johansson 1 Roman Laddach 1 Naomi Guppy 2 Jennifer Trendell 1 Benjamina Esapa 1 Antranik Mavousian 2 Blanca Navarro-Llinas 1 Syed Haider 2 Pablo Romero-Clavijo 1 Ricarda M Hoffmann 2 Paolo Andriollo 3 Khondaker Miraz Rahman 1 Paul Jackson 3 Sophia Tsoka 1 Sheeba Irshad 1 Ioannis Roxanis 2 Anita Grigoriadis 1 David E Thurston 4 Christopher J Lord 2 Andrew N J Tutt 5 Sophia N Karagiannis 1
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 King's College London, London, United Kingdom.
  • 2 Institute of Cancer Research, London, United Kingdom.
  • 3 King's College London, United Kingdom.
  • 4 King's College London.
  • 5 The Institute of Cancer Research London, London, United Kingdom.
Abstract

Purpose: Anti-EGFR Antibodies show limited response in breast Cancer, partly due to activation of compensatory pathways. Furthermore, despite clinical success of CDK4/6 inhibitors in hormone receptor-positive tumors, aggressive triple-negative breast cancers (TNBCs) are largely resistant due to CDK2/cyclin E expression, while free CDK2 inhibitors display normal tissue toxicity, limiting their therapeutic application. A cetuximab-based antibody drug conjugate (ADC) carrying a CDK Inhibitor selected based on oncogene dysregulation, alongside patient subgroup stratification, may provide EGFR-targeted delivery.

Experimental design: Expression of G1/S-phase cell cycle regulators were evaluated alongside EGFR in breast Cancer. We conjugated cetuximab with CDK Inhibitor SNS-032, for specific delivery to EGFR-expressing cells. We assessed ADC internalization, and its anti-tumor functions in vitro and in orthotopically-grown basal-like/TNBC xenografts.

Results: Transcriptomic (6173 primary, 27 baseline and matched post-chemotherapy residual tumors), scRNA-seq (150290 cells, 27 treatment-naïve tumors) and spatial transcriptomic (43 tumor sections, 22 TNBCs) analyses confirmed expression of CDK2 and its cyclin partners in basal-like/TNBCs, associated with EGFR. Spatiotemporal live-cell imaging and super-resolution confocal microscopy demonstrated ADC colocalization with late lysosomal clusters. The ADC inhibited cell cycle progression, induced cytotoxicity against high EGFR-expressing tumor cells and bystander killing of neighboring EGFR-low tumor cells, but minimal effects on immune cells. Despite carrying a small fraction of the drug, the ADC restricted EGFR-expressing spheroid and cell line/patient-derived xenograft tumor growth.

Conclusions: Exploiting EGFR overexpression, and dysregulated cell cycle in aggressive and treatment-refractory tumors, a cetuximab-CDK inhibitor ADC may provide selective and efficacious delivery of cell cycle-targeted agents to basal-like/TNBCs, including chemotherapy-resistant residual disease.

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