Kondrashov Aleksei, Sapkota Surendra, Sharma Aditya, Riano Ivy, Kurzrock Razelle, Adashek Jacob J
Department of Internal Medicine, Saint Agnes Hospital, Baltimore, MD 21229, USA.
Department of Internal Medicine, Dartmouth Health, Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth, Lebanon, NH 03756, USA.
Pharmaceutics. 2023 Aug 19;15(8):2160. doi: 10.3390/pharmaceutics15082160.
Antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs) are at the forefront of the drug development revolution occurring in oncology. Formed from three main components-an antibody, a linker molecule, and a cytotoxic agent ("payload"), ADCs have the unique ability to deliver cytotoxic agents to cells expressing a specific antigen, a great leap forward from traditional chemotherapeutic approaches that cause widespread effects without specificity. A variety of payloads can be used, including most frequently microtubular inhibitors (auristatins and maytansinoids), as well as topoisomerase inhibitors and alkylating agents. Finally, linkers play a critical role in the ADCs' effect, as cleavable moieties that serve as linkers impact site-specific activation as well as bystander killing effects, an upshot that is especially important in solid tumors that often express a variety of antigens. While ADCs were initially used in hematologic malignancies, their utility has been demonstrated in multiple solid tumor malignancies, including breast, gastrointestinal, lung, cervical, ovarian, and urothelial cancers. Currently, six ADCs are FDA-approved for the treatment of solid tumors: ado-trastuzumab emtansine and trastuzumab deruxtecan, both anti-HER2; enfortumab-vedotin, targeting nectin-4; sacituzuzmab govitecan, targeting Trop2; tisotumab vedotin, targeting tissue factor; and mirvetuximab soravtansine, targeting folate receptor-alpha. Although they demonstrate utility and tolerable safety profiles, ADCs may become ineffective as tumor cells undergo evolution to avoid expressing the specific antigen being targeted. Furthermore, the current cost of ADCs can be limiting their reach. Here, we review the structure and functions of ADCs, as well as ongoing clinical investigations into novel ADCs and their potential as treatments of solid malignancies.
抗体药物偶联物(ADCs)处于肿瘤学药物开发革命的前沿。ADCs由三个主要成分组成——一种抗体、一个连接分子和一种细胞毒性剂(“载荷”),具有将细胞毒性剂递送至表达特定抗原的细胞的独特能力,这是从导致广泛非特异性效应的传统化疗方法向前迈出的一大步。可以使用多种载荷,最常用的包括微管抑制剂(奥瑞他汀和美登素类),以及拓扑异构酶抑制剂和烷化剂。最后,连接子在ADCs的作用中起着关键作用,作为可裂解部分的连接子会影响位点特异性激活以及旁观者杀伤效应,这一结果在通常表达多种抗原的实体瘤中尤为重要。虽然ADCs最初用于血液系统恶性肿瘤,但其效用已在多种实体瘤恶性肿瘤中得到证实,包括乳腺癌、胃肠道癌、肺癌、宫颈癌、卵巢癌和尿路上皮癌。目前,有六种ADCs被美国食品药品监督管理局(FDA)批准用于治疗实体瘤:ado-曲妥珠单抗恩美曲妥珠单抗和曲妥珠单抗德鲁昔单抗,两者均为抗HER2药物;安维汀,靶向nectin-4;戈沙妥珠单抗,靶向Trop2;替索单抗维布妥昔,靶向组织因子;以及mirvetuximab soravtansine,靶向叶酸受体α。尽管它们显示出效用和可耐受的安全性,但随着肿瘤细胞进化以避免表达被靶向的特定抗原,ADCs可能会失效。此外,ADCs目前的成本可能会限制其可及性。在此,我们综述了ADCs的结构和功能,以及对新型ADCs的正在进行的临床研究及其作为实体恶性肿瘤治疗方法的潜力。