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.

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Photorealistic illustration of long-term breast cancer vaccine trial survivors linked to CD27 immune memory, with lab research elements.
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Decades after a small breast cancer vaccine trial, researchers link lasting immune memory to CD27

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More than 20 years after a small Duke-led clinical trial tested an experimental breast cancer vaccine, Duke Health says all participating women are still alive—an outcome researchers describe as unusual for metastatic disease. Follow-up analyses found long-lived immune cells marked by CD27, and mouse experiments suggest that stimulating CD27 can boost vaccine-driven tumor control.

Researchers at the University of Southampton have created a new class of antibodies designed to strengthen the immune system's attack on cancer cells. These antibodies cluster receptors on T cells to amplify activation signals that tumors typically weaken. Early laboratory tests indicate they outperform standard antibodies in mobilizing cancer-killing immune cells.

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Scientists at Northwestern Medicine have developed an antibody that counters pancreatic cancer's sugar-based disguise, enabling the immune system to attack tumors more effectively. In mouse studies, the therapy slowed tumor growth by restoring immune activity. The team is preparing the antibody for human trials.

Researchers at Weill Cornell Medicine report that tumors exploit a CD47–thrombospondin-1 signal to push T cells into exhaustion, and that interrupting the interaction restores T cell activity and slows tumor growth in mouse models. The study was published on November 17, 2025, in Nature Immunology.

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절강대학교 연구원들이 일반적으로 알레르기에 관여하는 비만세포를 재프로그래밍하여 암 싸움 바이러스를 종양에 직접 전달하는 새로운 방법을 개발했다. 최근 《셀》 저널 연구에서 상세히 설명된 이 접근법은 면역 반응을 강화하고 동물 모델에서 유망한 결과를 보인다. 이는 개인화된 암 치료를 위한 길을 열어준다.

Scientists have created innovative nanoparticles designed to destroy harmful proteins linked to dementia and cancer. These particles can access difficult tissues like the brain and precisely eliminate problematic proteins without broad side effects. The technology shows early promise for precision medicine.

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Scientists at Oregon State University say they have engineered an iron-based nanomaterial that exploits acidic, peroxide-rich conditions inside tumors to generate two types of reactive oxygen species and kill cancer cells while largely sparing healthy cells. In mouse tests using human breast-cancer tumors, the team reports complete tumor regression without observable adverse effects, though the work remains preclinical.

 

 

 

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