1. Academic Validation
  2. Preclinical characterization of bemarituzumab, an anti-FGFR2b antibody for the treatment of cancer

Preclinical characterization of bemarituzumab, an anti-FGFR2b antibody for the treatment of cancer

  • MAbs. 2021 Jan-Dec;13(1):1981202. doi: 10.1080/19420862.2021.1981202.
Hong Xiang 1 2 Abigael G Chan 1 3 Ago Ahene 1 4 David I Bellovin 1 4 Rong Deng 5 Amy W Hsu 1 6 Ursula Jeffry 1 7 Servando Palencia 1 8 Janine Powers 1 9 James Zanghi 1 10 Helen Collins 1 11
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Five Prime Therapeutics, Inc, South San Francisco, California.
  • 2 Clinical Pharmacology, Modeling and Simulation, Amgen Inc, Thousand Oaks, California.
  • 3 Global Project Management, Zai Lab (US) LLC, Menlo Park, California.
  • 4 Bioanalytic Sciences, Amgen Inc, South San Francisco, California.
  • 5 R&D Q-Pharm Consulting LLC, Pleasanton.
  • 6 Research, Merck & Co., Inc, South San Francisco, California.
  • 7 Toxicology Department, NGM Biopharmaceuticals, Inc, San Francisco, California.
  • 8 Research, Teva Pharmaceuticals, Redwood city, California.
  • 9 Translational Medicine, Nurix Therapeutics, San Francisco, California.
  • 10 Bioanalytic Sciences, Genentech Inc., South San Francisco, California.
  • 11 Clinic, Amgen Inc., South San Francisco, California.
Abstract

Bemarituzumab (FPA144) is a first-in-class, humanized, afucosylated immunoglobulin G1 monoclonal antibody (mAb) directed against Fibroblast Growth Factor receptor 2b (FGFR2b) with two mechanisms of action against FGFR2b-overexpressing tumors: inhibition of FGFR2b signaling and enhanced antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity (ADCC). Bemarituzumab is being developed as a Cancer therapeutic, and we summarize here the key nonclinical data that supported moving it into clinical trials. Bemarituzumab displayed sub-nanomolar cross-species affinity for FGFR2b receptors, with >20-fold enhanced binding affinity to human Fc gamma receptor IIIa compared with the fucosylated version. In vitro, bemarituzumab induced potent ADCC against FGFR2b-expressing tumor cells, and inhibited FGFR2 phosphorylation and proliferation of SNU-16 gastric Cancer cells in a concentration-dependent manner. In vivo, bemarituzumab inhibited tumor growth through inhibition of the FGFR2b pathway and/or ADCC in mouse models. Bemarituzumab demonstrated enhanced anti-tumor activity in combination with chemotherapy, and due to bemarituzumab-induced natural killer cell-dependent increase in programmed death-ligand 1, also resulted in enhanced anti-tumor activity when combined with an anti-programmed death-1 antibody. Repeat-dose toxicity studies established the highest non-severely-toxic dose at 1 and 100 mg/kg in rats and cynomolgus monkeys, respectively. In pharmacokinetic (PK) studies, bemarituzumab exposure increase was greater than dose-proportional, with the linear clearance in the expected dose range for a mAb. The PK data in cynomolgus monkeys were used to project bemarituzumab linear PK in humans, which were consistent with the observed human Phase 1 data. These key nonclinical studies facilitated the successful advancement of bemarituzumab into the clinic.

Keywords

Bemarituzumab; afucosylated antibody; antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytoxicity; phosphorylation in vitro; anti-FGFR2b antibody; anti-tumor efficacy; cell proliferation in vitro; fibroblast growth factor receptor; pharmacokinetics; toxicology.

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