Article
Author: Bell-McGuinn, Katherine M ; Wang, Jin ; Li, Rachel ; Wang, Xilu ; Will, Christine ; Zhang, Haichao ; Kunzer, Aaron ; Avigdor, Abraham ; Ward, James E ; Buck, Wayne ; Abraham, Linu ; Doyle, Kelly ; Besenhofer, Lauren ; Kalvass, John C ; Martin, Ruth L ; Judge, Russell A ; Alvey, Cory ; Petrich, Adam ; Judd, Andrew S ; Cojocari, Dan ; Johnson, Eric F ; Huang, Kevin ; Lam, Lloyd T ; Cheng, Dong ; Yuda, Junichiro ; Phillips, Darren C ; Wolff, Johannes E ; Hansen, T Matthew ; Souers, Andrew J ; Mitten, Mike ; Boghaert, Erwin ; Mastracchio, Anthony
Background:MCL-1 is a prosurvival B-cell lymphoma 2 family protein that plays a critical role in tumor maintenance and survival and can act as a resistance factor to multiple anticancer therapies. Herein, we describe the generation and characterization of the highly potent and selective MCL-1 inhibitor ABBV-467 and present findings from a first-in-human trial that included patients with relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma (NCT04178902).
Methods:Binding of ABBV-467 to human MCL-1 was assessed in multiple cell lines. The ability of ABBV-467 to induce tumor growth inhibition was investigated in xenograft models of human multiple myeloma and acute myelogenous leukemia. The first-in-human study was a multicenter, open-label, dose-escalation study assessing safety, pharmacokinetics, and efficacy of ABBV-467 monotherapy.
Results:Here we show that administration of ABBV-467 to MCL-1-dependent tumor cell lines triggers rapid and mechanism-based apoptosis. In vivo, intermittent dosing of ABBV-467 as monotherapy or in combination with venetoclax inhibits the growth of xenografts from human hematologic cancers. Results from a clinical trial evaluating ABBV-467 in patients with multiple myeloma based on these preclinical data indicate that treatment with ABBV-467 can result in disease control (seen in 1 patient), but may also cause increases in cardiac troponin levels in the plasma in some patients (seen in 4 of 8 patients), without other corresponding cardiac findings.
Conclusions:The selectivity of ABBV-467 suggests that treatment-induced troponin release is a consequence of MCL-1 inhibition and therefore may represent a class effect of MCL-1 inhibitors in human patients.