First-in-human study of ABBV-706, a seizure-related homolog protein 6 (SEZ6)–targeting antibody-drug conjugate (ADC), in patients (pts) with advanced solid tumors.
Sreenivasa R Chandana, Noura J. Choudhury, Afshin Dowlati, Anne C. Chiang, Benjamin Garmezy, Joo-Hang Kim, Lauren A. Byers, Myung‐Ju Ahn, Tae Min Kim, Young‐Chul Kim, Ji‐Youn Han, Jair Bar, Jiuhong Zha, William R. Henner, Randy Robinson, Fred Kohlhapp, Pooja Hingorani, Kyriakos P. Papadopoulos
Abstract
3001 Background: SEZ6 is a transmembrane protein expressed in small cell lung cancer (SCLC) and other neuroendocrine neoplasms (NENs), and central nervous system (CNS) tumors. These malignancies have a high unmet need for novel effective therapies. ABBV-706 is an ADC targeting SEZ6 conjugated to a topoisomerase 1 inhibitor payload at a drug-to-antibody ratio of 6, and is highly efficacious in preclinical models of SCLC, NENs, and CNS tumors. Here, results from ABBV-706 monotherapy dose escalation (DE) are presented. Methods: Phase 1, open-label, multicenter, DE and dose-expansion study (NCT05599984) of ABBV-706 as monotherapy or in combination with budigalimab (a programmed cell death 1 inhibitor), carboplatin, or cisplatin. Primary objectives are to determine the safety, PK, preliminary efficacy, and recommended phase 2 dose of ABBV-706. Exploratory objectives are to assess SEZ6 expression retrospectively and its association with safety, PK, and efficacy. DE enrolled adults (≥18 yr) with relapsed/refractory SCLC, high-grade CNS tumors, and high-grade NENs, following the Bayesian optimal interval design. ABBV-706 was administered IV at 1.3–3.5 mg/kg doses Q3W in 21-d cycles. Results: As of data cutoff on Nov 15, 2023, 49 pts (SCLC: n=22 [45%]; CNS tumors: n=5 [10%]; NEN: n=22 [45%]) were enrolled and treated with ABBV-706 in DE and backfill cohorts. Median age was 64 yr (range 32–81) and median prior lines of therapy was 2.5 (range 1–6). 2 pts had a dose-limiting toxicity: 1 G4 leukopenia and neutropenia lasting >7 d at 3.0 mg/kg and 1 G4 thrombocytopenia at 3.5 mg/kg. TEAEs occurred in 45 (92%) pts, the most frequent being anemia (51%), fatigue (41%), neutropenia (31%), and leukopenia (31%). G≥3 TEAEs occurred in 28 (57%) pts and were mainly hematologic: neutropenia (29%), anemia (27%), and leukopenia (25%). No pneumonitis/interstitial lung disease was observed. Gastrointestinal TEAEs (all G1/2) were seen in 55% of pts, with the most common being nausea (27%) and vomiting (18%). There were no ABBV-706–related deaths. The maximum tolerated dose was 3 mg/kg IV Q3W. ABBV-706 ADC showed an approximate dose-proportional increase in exposure with an elimination half-life of approximately 7 d across doses. For 33 RECIST-evaluable pts, the confirmed (c) objective response rate was overall 21% (7 partial responses [PRs]); 40% (6/15) for SCLC and 6% (1/18) for NEN. The overall response (c and unconfirmed [u]) rate without confirmation was 45% (7 cPRs/8 uPRs); 73% (6 cPRs/5 uPRs) for SCLC, and 22% (1 cPR/3 uPRs) for NEN. 8 uPRs are pending confirmation and will be reported in the final presentation. The clinical benefit rate was 91% (7 PR, 23 stable disease). No activity was observed in 3/3 pts with high-grade gliomas. Conclusions: ABBV-706 demonstrated a manageable safety profile with promising efficacy in SCLC and NENs. Further evaluation of ABBV-706 is ongoing. Clinical trial information: NCT05599984 .