Engineered antibody shrinks tumors body-wide in early cancer trial

Researchers tested a redesigned CD40 agonist antibody, 2141-V11, by injecting it directly into tumors of 12 patients with metastatic cancers. Six patients saw tumor shrinkage, with two achieving complete remission, including effects on untreated tumors elsewhere in the body. The trial reported only mild side effects, unlike prior CD40 therapies.

For over two decades, CD40 agonist antibodies have shown promise in lab settings by activating the immune system against cancer but disappointed in human trials due to modest benefits and severe side effects like inflammation and liver damage, even at low doses. In 2018, Jeffrey V. Ravetch's team at Rockefeller University engineered antibody 2141-V11 to bind tightly to human CD40 receptors and improve crosslinking via a specific Fc receptor, making it about 10 times more effective in lab studies using engineered mice. Supported by Rockefeller's Therapeutic Development Fund, they shifted delivery from intravenous to direct tumor injection to minimize toxicity on healthy cells. A phase 1 clinical trial tested this in 12 patients with metastatic cancers including melanoma, renal cell carcinoma, and breast cancer. Results, published in Cancer Cell, showed tumors shrank in six patients, with complete remission—no detectable cancer—in two: one with melanoma and one with breast cancer. Notably, injecting a single tumor triggered immune responses that shrank or eliminated distant tumors. As Ravetch described, the melanoma patient had dozens of metastatic tumors on her leg and foot; after injecting one on her thigh, all others disappeared. Similarly, the breast cancer patient's skin, liver, and lung tumors vanished after skin tumor injection. Juan Osorio, first author and oncologist at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, noted: “Seeing these significant shrinkages and even complete remission in such a small subset of patients is quite remarkable.” Tumor samples revealed infiltration by dendritic cells, T cells, B cells, and tertiary lymphoid structures (TLS), mimicking lymph nodes, even in non-injected sites. Ravetch highlighted the rarity: “This effect—where you inject locally but see a systemic response—that's not something seen very often.” No severe side effects occurred, only mild toxicity. Larger phase 1 and 2 trials with nearly 200 patients are underway at Memorial Sloan Kettering and Duke University for cancers like bladder, prostate, and glioblastoma to identify response predictors, such as high T-cell clonality.

ተያያዥ ጽሁፎች

PET scan of mouse tumors glowing from University of Missouri's anti-EphA2 antibody research, with lab scientist viewing results.
በ AI የተሰራ ምስል

University of Missouri team tests anti-EphA2 antibody fragment to light up tumors on PET scans

በAI የተዘገበ በ AI የተሰራ ምስል እውነት ተፈትሸ

University of Missouri researchers report that a small antibody fragment targeting the EphA2 protein can be tagged with a radioactive marker to make EphA2-positive tumors stand out on PET scans in mouse experiments, a step they say could help match patients to EphA2-targeted therapies.

Researchers at Fred Hutch Cancer Center have created human-like monoclonal antibodies that prevent Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) from infecting immune cells. Using mice engineered with human antibody genes, the team identified antibodies targeting viral proteins gp350 and gp42, with one fully blocking infection in lab models. The findings, published in Cell Reports Medicine, could lead to therapies for transplant patients at risk of EBV-related complications.

በAI የተዘገበ

A 47-year-old woman bedridden with autoimmune hemolytic anemia, immune thrombocytopenia, and antiphospholipid syndrome has achieved complete remission after CAR-T cell therapy at University Hospital Erlangen in Germany. Treated by Fabian Müller after nine failed therapies, she recovered rapidly and remains healthy over a year later without medication—the first simultaneous treatment of multiple autoimmune diseases with this method.

Researchers at Oregon Health & Science University have created a molecule called SU212 that blocks a key enzyme in triple-negative breast cancer cells. In mouse models, the compound reduced tumor growth and metastasis. The findings offer potential new treatment options for this hard-to-treat form of the disease.

በAI የተዘገበ

A study published on Monday in Nature Microbiology confirms long-term HIV remission in the «Oslo patient», a 62-year-old man treated for myelodysplasia via stem cell transplant from his brother carrying the CCR5 Delta 32 mutation. He has been off antiretrovirals for four years with no detectable virus. This brings the total to ten patients deemed cured this way.

ይህ ድረ-ገጽ ኩኪዎችን ይጠቀማል

የእኛን ጣቢያ ለማሻሻል ለትንታኔ ኩኪዎችን እንጠቀማለን። የእኛን የሚስጥር ፖሊሲ አንብቡ የሚስጥር ፖሊሲ ለተጨማሪ መረጃ።
ውድቅ አድርግ