新型免疫療法薬が臨床試験で侵攻性癌を消失(Immunotherapy drug eliminates aggressive cancers in clinical trial)

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2025-08-14 ロックフェラー大学

ロックフェラー大学のジェフリー・ラヴェッチ研究室による第1相臨床試験で、強力にエンジニアリングされたCD40アゴニスト抗体「2141‑V11」が、臨床の現場で有望な結果を示した。過去20年にわたり、CD40抗体は動物実験で高い効果を示してきたが、臨床では副作用(全身性炎症、血小板減少、肝毒性など)のため成果を挙げられなかった。ラヴェッチらは、抗体の構造を改変し効果を高めながら安全性を改善。12名の患者を対象とした試験で、6名に腫瘍の縮小効果が見られ、うち2名は完全寛解に至った。Juan Osorio医師(リードオーサー)によれば、このような少数例での明確な効果は非常に注目に値する成果である。詳細は『Cancer Cell』に掲載された。

新型免疫療法薬が臨床試験で侵攻性癌を消失(Immunotherapy drug eliminates aggressive cancers in clinical trial)
Histology image of a patient whose metastatic cancer went into complete remission after receiving a new immunotherapy treatment (Ravetch lab)

<関連情報>

Fc最適化CD40アゴニスト抗体は、転移性がんにおいて三次リンパ組織構造の形成と全身性抗腫瘍免疫を誘導する Fc-optimized CD40 agonistic antibody elicits tertiary lymphoid structure formation and systemic antitumor immunity in metastatic cancer

Juan C. Osorio ∙ David A. Knorr ∙ Polina Weitzenfeld ∙ … ∙ Charlotte Ariyan ∙ Mark E. Robson ∙ Jeffrey V. Ravetch
Cancer Cell  Published:August 14, 2025
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ccell.2025.07.013

Highlights

  • First-in-human phase 1 study of Fc-enhanced CD40 agonistic antibody (2141-V11)
  • Intratumoral 2141-V11 is safe and induces local and systemic antitumor responses
  • 2141-V11 induces tertiary lymphoid structures formation in mouse and human tumors
  • 2141-V11 intratumoral activity is independent of lymph node immune egress

Summary

CD40 agonism enhances antitumor immunity but is limited by systemic toxicity and poor efficacy. Here, we present a phase 1 study (NCT04059588) of intratumoral (i.t.) 2141-V11, an Fc-engineered anti-CD40 agonistic antibody with enhanced binding to the inhibitory receptor FcγRIIB. Among 12 metastatic cancer patients, 2141-V11 was well tolerated without dose-limiting toxicities. Six patients experienced tumor reduction, including two complete responses in melanoma and breast cancer. 2141-V11 induced regression in injected and non-injected lesions, correlating with systemic CD8+ T cell activation and mature tertiary lymphoid structures (TLSs) in complete responders. In CD40/FcγRs humanized mice bearing orthotopic tumors, i.t. 2141-V11 promoted de novo TLS formation, facilitating i.t. CD8+ T cell effector responses independent of lymph node priming. The resulting local immune responses by 2141-V11 mediated abscopal antitumor effects and sustained immune memory. These findings demonstrate that i.t. 2141-V11 is safe and promotes immune-privileged tumor microenvironments that promote systemic and durable antitumor immunity.

 

Fc改変抗CD40抗体の毒性は、腫瘍内投与により消失し、持続的な抗腫瘍免疫を引き起こす Toxicity of an Fc-engineered anti-CD40 antibody is abrogated by intratumoral injection and results in durable antitumor immunity

David A. Knorr, Rony Dahan, and Jeffrey V. Ravetch
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences  Published:October 8, 2018
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1810566115

Significance

Antibodies blocking inhibitory checkpoints on T cells have been a major advance in cancer treatment. However, agonistic antibodies have had less success due to toxicity concerns. Harnessing the knowledge that agonistic antibodies require the inhibitory Fc receptor (FcR), we engineered a CD40 antibody with improved in vivo activity. Because current models fail to recapitulate important dose-limiting toxicities in patients, we developed a mouse model carrying human CD40 and FcRs. This model mirrors human toxicities and allowed for the development of an in situ vaccination approach leading to durable tumor control. These results support the rational design of immune modulating antibodies as well as stress the importance, and possible reconsiderations needed, for optimal preclinical models allowing parallel efficacy and toxicity analyses.

Abstract

Immune stimulation has emerged as a promising approach to the treatment of neoplastic diseases. Currently approved therapeutics, such as anti-CTLA4 and anti-PD1, are primarily aimed at blocking inhibitory signaling by immune cells. An alternative and potentially synergistic approach would involve activation of immune pathways by agonism of stimulatory receptors, such as CD40. Agonistic antibodies, while promising in principle, have encountered significant barriers in clinical trials limited by the systemic toxicity of such approaches. Using a mouse model humanized for both Fc receptors and CD40, we previously demonstrated enhanced antitumor activity with an Fc-modified antibody. We now demonstrate that this model recapitulates the platelet and hepatic toxicities seen with anti-CD40 antibodies in patients, providing a predictive measure of the dose-limiting activity of this approach. We further show that such toxicity can be circumvented and durable systemic antitumor immunity achieved by intratumoral delivery of an Fc-engineered anti-CD40 agonistic antibody.

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