Publication | Open Access
The antitumor activity of the human FOLR1-specific monoclonal antibody, farletuzumab, in an ovarian cancer mouse model is mediated by antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity
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Citations
33
References
2013
Year
Cisplatin SensitivityAntitumor ActivityChemoprevention StrategyImmunologyImmunotherapeuticsImmunotherapyTumor BiologyOvarian CancerMetronomic TherapyCancer Cell BiologyAdcc ActivityAntibody EngineeringAnti-cancer AgentRadiation OncologyMedicineTumor TargetingCancer TreatmentPharmacologyAntibody-dependent Cellular CytotoxicityTumor MicroenvironmentImmune Checkpoint InhibitorOncology
Because of its high mortality rate, ovarian cancer is a leading cause of death among women and a highly unmet medical need. New therapeutic agents that are effective and well tolerated are needed and cancer antigen-specific monoclonal antibodies that have direct pharmacologic effects or can stimulate immunological responses represent a promising class of agents for the treatment of this disease. The human folate receptor α (FOLR1), which is overexpressed in ovarian cancer but largely absent in normal tissues, appears to play a role in the transformed phenotype in ovarian cancer, cisplatin sensitivity, and growth in depleted folate conditions and therefore has potential as a target for passive immunotherapy. The anti-FOLR1 monoclonal antibody MORAb-003 (farletuzumab) was previously shown to elicit antibody dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) and inhibit tumor growth of human tumor xenografts in nude mice. Because of its promising preclinical profile, farletuzumab has been evaluated in clinical trials as a potential therapeutic agent for ovarian cancer. In this report, we demonstrated that farletuzumab's antitumor effect against an experimental model of ovarian cancer is mediated by its ADCC activity.
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