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Combinatorial efficacy of anti-CS1 monoclonal antibody elotuzumab (HuLuc63) and bortezomib against multiple myeloma.
van Rhee, Frits; Szmania, Susann M; Dillon, Myles; van Abbema, Anne M; Li, Xin; Stone, Mary K; Garg, Tarun K; Shi, JuMei; Moreno-Bost, Amberly M; Yun, Rui; Balasa, Balaji; Ganguly, Bishwa; Chao, Debra; Rice, Audie G; Zhan, Fenghuang; Shaughnessy, John D; Barlogie, Bart; Yaccoby, Shmuel; Afar, Daniel E H.
Affiliation
  • van Rhee F; University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Myeloma Institute for Research and Therapy, Little Rock AR 72205, USA. vanrheefrits@uams.edu
Mol Cancer Ther ; 8(9): 2616-24, 2009 Sep.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19723891
ABSTRACT
Monoclonal antibody (mAb) therapy for multiple myeloma, a malignancy of plasma cells, has not been clinically efficacious in part due to a lack of appropriate targets. We recently reported that the cell surface glycoprotein CS1 (CD2 subset 1, CRACC, SLAMF7, CD319) was highly and universally expressed on myeloma cells while having restricted expression in normal tissues. Elotuzumab (formerly known as HuLuc63), a humanized mAb targeting CS1, is currently in a phase I clinical trial in relapsed/refractory myeloma. In this report we investigated whether the activity of elotuzumab could be enhanced by bortezomib, a reversible proteasome inhibitor with significant activity in myeloma. We first showed that elotuzumab could induce patient-derived myeloma cell killing within the bone marrow microenvironment using a SCID-hu mouse model. We next showed that CS1 gene and cell surface protein expression persisted on myeloma patient-derived plasma cells collected after bortezomib administration. In vitro bortezomib pretreatment of myeloma targets significantly enhanced elotuzumab-mediated antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity, both for OPM2 myeloma cells using natural killer or peripheral blood mononuclear cells from healthy donors and for primary myeloma cells using autologous natural killer effector cells. In an OPM2 myeloma xenograft model, elotuzumab in combination with bortezomib exhibited significantly enhanced in vivo antitumor activity. These findings provide the rationale for a clinical trial combining elotuzumab and bortezomib, which will test the hypothesis that combining both drugs would result in enhanced immune lysis of myeloma by elotuzumab and direct targeting of myeloma by bortezomib.
Subject(s)

Full text: 1 Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Pyrazines / Boronic Acids / Membrane Glycoproteins / Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols / Antibodies, Monoclonal / Multiple Myeloma Type of study: Clinical_trials / Observational_studies / Prognostic_studies / Risk_factors_studies Limits: Animals / Female / Humans Language: En Year: 2009 Type: Article

Full text: 1 Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Pyrazines / Boronic Acids / Membrane Glycoproteins / Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols / Antibodies, Monoclonal / Multiple Myeloma Type of study: Clinical_trials / Observational_studies / Prognostic_studies / Risk_factors_studies Limits: Animals / Female / Humans Language: En Year: 2009 Type: Article