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  2. T cell margination: investigating the detour of T cells following forimtamig treatment in humanized mice

T cell margination: investigating the detour of T cells following forimtamig treatment in humanized mice

  • MAbs. 2025 Dec;17(1):2440578. doi: 10.1080/19420862.2024.2440578.
Nils O'Brien 1 Joerg P J Mueller 1 Ann-Marie E Bröske 1 Jan Attig 1 Franz Osl 1 Cylia Crisand 1 Ann-Katrin Wolf 1 Richard Rae 1 Stefanie Lechner 1 Thomas Pöschinger 1 Christian Klein 2 Pablo Umaña 2 Sara Colombetti 2 Andreas Beilhack 3 Jan Eckmann 1
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Roche Innovation Center Munich, Roche Pharma Research and Early Development, Penzberg, Germany.
  • 2 Roche Innovation Center Zurich, Roche Pharma Research and Early Development, Schlieren, Switzerland.
  • 3 Interdisciplinary Center for Clinical Research Laboratory (IZKF) Würzburg, Department of Internal Medicine II, Center for Experimental Molecular Medicine, Würzburg University Hospital, Würzburg, Germany.
Abstract

T cell bispecific Antibodies (TCBs) are a promising new class of therapeutics for relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma. A frequently observed, yet incompletely understood effect of this treatment is the transient reduction of circulating T cell counts, also known as T cell margination (TCM). After administration of the GPRC5D-targeting TCB forimtamig (RG6234), TCM occurred in patients and correlated with cytokine release and soluble B cell maturation antigen decrease. We demonstrate that TCM is accurately represented in the humanized NSG mouse model and occurs at a lower threshold of target expression than systemic cytokine release. Application of whole-mouse tissue clearing and 3D imaging revealed that T cells accumulate in the bone marrow after treatment. We hypothesize that low amounts of targets are sufficient to rapidly redirect T cells upon TCB engagement. Therefore, we propose TCM as a beneficial, highly sensitive and early effect of forimtamig that leads T cells to likely sites of bone marrow tumor lesions.

Keywords

BsAb; LSFM; T cell engager; TCB; cytokines; margination; multiple myeloma.

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