2019年09月10日,諾獎風向標之稱的拉斯克獎揭曉,2019 拉斯克獎臨床醫(yī)學研究獎 (2019 Lasker-DeBakey Clinical Medical Research Award)授予了赫賽汀團隊 (Axel Ullrich, Dennis Slamon, and Michael Shepard)。
2019 Lasker~DeBakey Clinical Medical Research Award
HER2是一個經(jīng)典靶點,毫無疑問,羅氏深耕HER2多年,開發(fā)出曲妥珠單抗、帕妥珠單抗、恩美曲妥珠單抗重磅炸 彈級別藥物,2018年3款產(chǎn)品銷售額達到驚人的107.3億瑞士法郎,藥物給乳腺癌患者帶來巨大的臨床獲益!
HER/EGFR/ERBB family [1]
曲妥珠單抗、帕妥珠單抗、恩美曲妥珠單抗作用機制[1]
該領域內除了羅氏的多款單抗和抗體偶聯(lián)藥物外,新一代靶向HER2大分子藥物的開發(fā)從未停歇,同時仍有著極大的未滿足的臨床需求,目前值得關注的產(chǎn)品包括Trastuzumab Deruxtecan,margetuximab,BAT8001,ZW25,KN026,RC48-ADC等。新一代的HER2大分子藥物中,ADC、雙抗產(chǎn)品涌現(xiàn)出多個潛力品種,這其中,最為令人關注的便是剛剛遞交上市申請的第一三共/阿斯利康HER2-ADC藥物Trastuzumab Deruxtecan!借此機會,文章重點介紹了Trastuzumab Deruxtecan,并簡單梳理了新一代靶向HER2大分子藥物中的潛力藥物。
一.Trastuzumab Deruxtecan給HER2+腫瘤帶來突破
2019年09月09日,第一三共和阿斯利康聯(lián)合開發(fā)的HER2-ADC藥物Trastuzumab Deruxtecan (DS-8201) 率先在日本遞交上市申請,適應癥Kadcyla經(jīng)治的HER2+轉移性乳腺癌,注冊臨床試驗DESTINY-Breast01。這是該藥物一個里程碑進展,阿斯利康69億美元重金購入的腫瘤資產(chǎn)正式開始商業(yè)化。
Trastuzumab Deruxtecan (DS-8201)
Trastuzumab Deruxtecan (DS-8201) 是一款靶向HER2的抗體偶聯(lián)藥物,相比Kadcyla (首個獲批的HER2-ADC),DS-8201創(chuàng)新了偶聯(lián)的小分子,具有更強的穿透性、更高的DAR。
DS-8201 阿斯利康官網(wǎng)
Trastuzumab Deruxtecan (DS-8201):給經(jīng)治的HER2+乳腺癌患者帶來明顯臨床獲益
阿斯利康和第一三共預計2019年公布注冊臨床試驗DESTINY-Breast01關鍵臨床數(shù)據(jù),這是需要關注的一個點。
二、DS-8201的市場潛力巨大
DS-8201具有廣闊的市場前景,具有革新目前標準療法的強大實力。
2019年,DS-8201預計向FDA,NMPA遞交上市申請,另外,預計將會公布DESTINY-Breast01,DESTINY-Gastric01關鍵數(shù)據(jù)。
三.HER2靶點仍值得繼續(xù)深耕
阿斯利康官網(wǎng)
HER2是經(jīng)典靶點,市場上有著曲妥珠單抗、帕妥珠單抗、T-DM1等多款單抗和抗體偶聯(lián)藥物,但是仍有著巨大的仍未滿足的臨床需求,除了已上市產(chǎn)品外,臨床開發(fā)中的多款產(chǎn)品值得特別關注,開發(fā)中的藥物均有著潛在的更優(yōu)臨床療法,尤其是Trastuzumab Deruxtecan。
作者簡介:1°C,醫(yī)藥行業(yè)從業(yè)人員,希望自己的專業(yè)文字會越來越有溫度,醫(yī)藥知識能夠服務更多人,打破信息知識的壁壘!
1 HER2 and Breast Cancer - A Phenomenal Success Story
附:2019 Lasker-DeBakey Clinical Medical Research Award
Herceptin-a targeted antibody therapy for breast cancer
For their invention of Herceptin, the first monoclonal antibody that blocks a cancer-causing protein, and for its development as a life-saving therapy for women with breast cancer
The 2019 Lasker~DeBakey Clinical Medical Research Award honors three scientists—H. Michael Shepard, Dennis J. Slamon, and Axel Ullrich —who invented Herceptin, the first monoclonal antibody that blocks a cancer-causing protein, and developed it into a life-saving therapy for women with breast cancer. The innovation reduces the risk of recurrence and extends survival time for patients with metastatic as well as early-stage disease. Every year, more than 50,000 women in the US are diagnosed with the type of breast cancer that the drug attacks, and over 2.3 million individuals have received the treatment since it became available. Shepard (now at BetterOutcomes4Cancer) and Ullrich (now at Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry, Martinsried, Germany) conducted their Herceptin investigations at Genentech. Slamon did his at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), where he continues to work.
In the mid 1970s, scientists discovered that genes within our own bodies can trigger cancer. This revelation sparked the idea that stifling the activities of such oncogenes might thwart the trouble they instigate. This approach—in which a therapy would fixate on molecules that dwell specifically in cancer cells and also drive malignancy—held great appeal. Such a targeted strategy might avoid many of the harsh side effects associated with chemotherapy while striking the source of the affliction.
They saw HER standing there
Prominent among known oncogenes were several that encode overzealous versions of growth factors and the receptors that sense them. The receptors, which lie across the cell membrane, receive signals from the external environment and then relay them inside to spur proliferation. Ullrich was particularly interested in a subgroup of these proteins—the tyrosine kinase receptors—and he wanted to uncover previously unknown members of this molecular family in humans.
In 1985, Ullrich, Arthur Levinson (also at Genentech), and colleagues found a gene whose sequence resembles that of the human epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR or HER1) and the chicken oncogene v-erbB. They named it HER2—human EGF receptor 2—because of this similarity. Its sequence and location on the chromosome suggested that it might be the human version of neu, a rat oncogene discovered the year before by Robert Weinberg (Massachusetts Institute of Technology). Independently and simultaneously, two other groups, led by Stuart Aaronson (National Cancer Institute) and Tadashi Yamamoto (University of Tokyo), identified HER2 and showed that it was amplified in malignancies from a human breast and a salivary gland.
In the meantime, UCLA oncologist Slamon and, independently, the late William McGuire (University of Texas Medical Center, San Antonio), had been collecting cancer tissues that had been surgically removed for therapeutic reasons and checking whether established oncogenes were firing excessively in them. Ullrich, with his tantalizing gene, and Slamon, with his human tumor library, connected. In 1987, they reported that almost 30% of 189 breast cancer samples contained more than one copy of the HER2 gene. Analysis of health records for many of the patients represented in the study revealed that women whose tumors carried multiple copies of the gene relapsed more quickly and died sooner than did those whose tumors contained only one copy. Furthermore, the gene amplification better predicted prognosis than did most standard indicators, such as tumor size and hormone receptor status.
These associations were provocative, but numerous previously described proteins appeared on cancer cells yet did not propel tumor formation or progression. To gain candidacy as a therapeutic target, HER2 overabundance would have to cause, not just correlate with, malignancy.
To investigate this issue, Ullrich and postdoctoral fellow Robert Hudziak engineered mouse connective-tissue cells grown in laboratory culture dishes to produce extra HER2 protein. The supplemental HER2 caused the cells to keep dividing under conditions in which they’d usually stop, a sign of transformation to a cancerous state. The HER2-augmented cells also displayed other evidence of malignancy, and they formed tumors after injection into mice. Because the only difference between the corrupt and well-mannered cells was the amount of HER2, these results indicated that surplus growth factor receptor unbridles normal restraints on replication.
Simultaneously and in parallel, Shepard, in his own lab at Genentech, had landed on HER2 from a different direction. He was probing the mechanisms by which cancer cells evade destruction by a chemical called Tumor Necrosis Factor-α (TNF-α), a component of the body’s immune response. He had found that activation of some tyrosine kinases can curb TNF-α’s lethal potency. Together, he and Ullrich showed that HER2 renders mouse cells resistant to TNF-α’s toxic effects. Perhaps, they reasoned, HER2 promotes aggressive cancers not only by causing growth to run amok, but also by toughening up the cells and endowing them with ways to withstand assaults that normally would kill them.
If excessive quantities of HER2 cause runaway growth and protection from the body’s defense system, quashing receptor function might reverse these aberrant behaviors. The part of the protein that resides outside the cell was especially alluring because it was likely to be accessible to a drug. To block HER2 stimulation, the researchers wanted to develop a compound that would bind to this exposed portion and impede incoming signals. They sought monoclonal antibodies to serve that purpose.
HER promise revealed
The Genentech scientists made a collection of monoclonal antibodies in mice and zeroed in on one that inhibited growth of several breast cancer cell lines. Crucially, it had this effect only on cell lines that overproduce HER2 protein. Furthermore, it sensitized these tumor cells to killing by TNF-α. The top pick antibody, dubbed 4D5, did not bind to HER2’s relative, the human EGF receptor—an important characteristic, as a successful drug must not interfere with activities of healthy cells. These observations suggested that a 4D5-based treatment would foil only HER2-overexpressing cells.
Even if 4D5 could, in principle, crush tumor growth in people’s bodies, a significant hurdle remained. Because it came from mice, the human immune system would deem it “foreign” and destroy it. To design an antibody that would not stir such an inflammatory reaction, Paul Carter, working with Shepard, aimed to retain the bare minimum of 4D5—only the part that binds HER2—and replace the rest with human antibody sequences. In 1992, the team reported that one of these “humanized” antibodies bound HER2 three times more tightly than 4D5 and blocked proliferation of a HER2-overexpressing breast cancer cell line as efficiently.
Despite these auspicious results, hesitation lurked among Genentech’s decision makers. The company had pursued other potential cancer drugs that had not panned out. Furthermore, many experts were skeptical that monoclonal antibodies would prove therapeutically useful against cancer, especially for solid rather than blood malignancies—in part because scientists doubted that these agents would penetrate the tumors. To bolster the case for clinical pursuit, Shepard and Slamon performed numerous studies. They showed, for instance, that radioactive-tagged mouse antibody—a single dose, so it would not elicit a strong immune response—accumulated in tumors, but only in those of women with cancers that overproduced HER2. This encouraging observation energized the team, as did the patients’ willingness to participate even though they would not benefit and might suffer unknown consequences. Such generosity repeated itself at numerous steps of the enterprise.
During this period, the investigators also collected data that would help guide clinical deployment of the potential drug. Using human breast cancer cells grown in the lab, Slamon and colleagues explored how best to combine the antibody with standard chemotherapy regimens. Genentech scientists and Slamon also developed diagnostic tests to identify women with HER2-overexpressing (HER2+) breast cancers.
Troublemaker transformed into target
The company decided to move forward, and clinical trials began on women with metastatic HER2+ breast cancer. By 1998, the data were strong enough that the humanized monoclonal antibody—now called trastuzumab (brand name, Herceptin)—gained approval by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA).
In 2001, Slamon and colleagues published those results. A large, randomized study on women with progressive, HER2+ breast cancer revealed that the addition of Herceptin to chemotherapy stalled disease progression, reduced the one-year death rate from 33 percent to 22 percent, and extended overall survival. Subsequent trials on early-stage, HER2+ breast cancer showed that Herceptin also improves outcomes in that setting, for which it was FDA-approved in 2006 (see Figure).
Beating back breast cancer
Women with early-stage (left) or metastatic (right) HER2+ breast cancer were treated with either Herceptin plus chemotherapy or chemotherapy alone. The percentage of women with early-stage breast cancer who were alive and free of disease four years after beginning the trial was significantly higher if they received Herceptin (85.3 %) than if they did not (67.1 %). The percentage of women whose metastatic disease had not progressed 15 months after beginning the trial was significantly higher if they received Herceptin (~17.5%) than if they did not (~3%).
Herceptin is now a standard therapy for HER2+ breast cancers. Researchers have continued to investigate HER2, and additional antibodies that target it have reached the market. For instance, a drug called pertuzumab differs from Herceptin in the region of HER2 that it binds and its mechanism of action. A 2015 review reported that overall survival of women with metastatic HER2+ disease who received chemotherapy plus pertuzumab and Herceptin was more than 4.5 years. In 2001, life expectancy for women with that diagnosis was 1.5 years.
The impact of Herceptin’s development reaches beyond breast cancer by establishing that monoclonal antibodies can indeed combat solid tumors. Furthermore, the innovation offers a new model for personalized medicine by deploying a diagnostic test that identifies the most appropriate patients to treat with a particular intervention. By uncovering and exploiting the molecular pathology of a devastating disease, Shepard, Slamon, and Ullrich conceived and executed a new blueprint for drug discovery that has already bestowed tens of thousands of women with time and quality of life.
by Evelyn Strauss
Key Publications on Herceptin – Its Invention and Clinical Development
Coussens, L., Yang-Feng, T.L., Liao, Y.-C., Chen, E., Gray, A., McGrath, J., Seeburg, P.H., Libermann, T.A., Schlessinger J., Francke, U., Levinson, A., and Ullrich, A. (1985). Tyrosine kinase receptor with extensive homology to EGF receptor shares chromosomal location with neu oncogene. Science. 230, 1132-1139.
Hudziak, R.M., Schlessinger, J., and Ullrich, A. (1987). Increased expression of the putative growth factor receptor p185-HER2 causes transformation and tumorigenesis in NIH 3T3 cells. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 84, 7159-7163.
Slamon, D.J., Clark, G.M., Wong, S.G., Levin, W.J., Ullrich, A., and McGuire, W.L. (1987). Human breast cancer: correlation of relapse and survival with amplification of the HER2 protooncogene. Science. 235, 177-182.
Hudziak, R.M., Lewis, G.D., Shalaby, M.R., Eessalu, T.E., Aggarwal, B.B., Ullrich, A., and Shepard, H.M. (1988). Amplified expression of the HER2/ERBB2 oncogene induces resistance to tumor necrosis factor-alpha in NIH 3T3 cells. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. 85, 5102-5106.
Slamon, D.J., Godolphin, W., Jones, L.A., Holt, J.A., Wong, S.G., Keith, D.E., Levin, W.J., Stuart, S.G., Udove, J., Ullrich, A., and Press, M.F. (1989). Studies of the HER-2/neu proto-oncogene in human breast and ovarian cancer. Science, 244, 707-712.
Hudziak, R.M., Lewis, G.D., Winget, M., Fendly, B.M., Shepard, H.M., and Ullrich, A. (1989). p185HER2Monoclonal antibody has antiproliferative effects in vitro and sensitizes human breast tumor cells to tumor necrosis factor. Mol. Cell. Biol. 9, 1165-1172.
Shepard, H.M., Lewis, G.D., Sarup, J.C., Fendly, B.M., Maneval, D., Mordenti, J., Figari, I., Kotts, C.F., Palladino, Jr., M.A., Ullrich, A., and Slamon, D. (1991). Monoclonal antibody therapy of human cancer: taking the HER2 protooncogene to the clinic. J. Clin. Immunol. 11, 117-127.
Carter, P., Presta, L., Gorman, C.M., Ridgeway, J.B., Henner, D., Wong, W.L., Rowland, A.M., Kotts, C., Carver, M.E., and Shepard, H.M. (1992). Humanization of an anti-p185HER2 antibody for human cancer therapy. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. 89, 4285-4289.
Pegram, M.D., Lipton, A., Hayes, D.F., Weber, B.L., Baselga, J.M., Tripathy, D., Baly, D., Baughman, S.A., Twaddell, T., Glaspy, J.A., and Slamon, D.J. (1998). Phase II study of receptor-enhanced chemosensitivity using recombinant humanized anti-p185 HER2/neu monoclonal antibody plus cisplatin in patients with HER2/neu-overexpressing metastatic breast cancer refractory to chemotherapy treatment. J. Clin. Oncol. 16, 2659-2671.
Slamon, D.J., Leyland-Jones, B., Shak, S., Fuchs, H., Paton, V., Bajamonde, A., Fleming, T., Eiermann, W., Woldter, J., Pegram, M., Baselga, J., and Norton, L. (2001). Use of chemotherapy plus a monoclonal antibody against HER2 for metastatic breast cancer that overexpresses HER2. N. Engl. J. Med. 344, 783-792.
Shepard, H.M., Jin, P., Slamon, D.J., Pirot, Z., and Maneval, D.C. (2008). Herceptin. In Therapeutic Antibodies. Handbook of Experimental Pharmacology. Edited by Y. Chernajovsky and A. Nissim, Springer-Verlag, Berlin, Heidelberg. pp. 183-219.
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