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The Chemistry Behind ADCs

Vesela Kostova, Patrice Désos, Jérôme-Benoît Starck, András Kotschy

2021Pharmaceuticals122 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Combining the selective targeting of tumor cells through antigen-directed recognition and potent cell-killing by cytotoxic payloads, antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs) have emerged in recent years as an efficient therapeutic approach for the treatment of various cancers. Besides a number of approved drugs already on the market, there is a formidable follow-up of ADC candidates in clinical development. While selection of the appropriate antibody (A) and drug payload (D) is dictated by the pharmacology of the targeted disease, one has a broader choice of the conjugating linker (C). In the present paper, we review the chemistry of ADCs with a particular emphasis on the medicinal chemistry perspective, focusing on the chemical methods that enable the efficient assembly of the ADC from its three components and the controlled release of the drug payload.

Topics & Concepts

Payload (computing)Antibody-drug conjugateDrugLinkerComputational biologyChemistryMedicinePharmacologyNanotechnologyCancer researchComputer scienceMonoclonal antibodyAntibodyBiologyImmunologyMaterials scienceComputer networkOperating systemNetwork packetHER2/EGFR in Cancer ResearchMonoclonal and Polyclonal Antibodies ResearchClick Chemistry and Applications
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