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PURPOSE: Tebentafusp is a first-in-class bispecific fusion protein designed to target gp100 (a melanoma-associated antigen) through a high affinity T cell receptor binding domain, and an anti-CD3 T cell engaging domain which redirects T cells to kill gp100-expressing tumor cells. Here we report from a multicentre Phase 1/2 trial of tebentafusp in metastatic melanoma (NCT01211262) focusing on the mechanism of action of tebentafusp Experimental Design: 84 patients with advanced melanoma received tebentafusp. Treatment efficacy, treatment-related AEs and biomarker assessments were performed for blood-derived and tumor biopsy samples obtained at baseline and on-treatment Results: Tebentafusp was generally well tolerated and active in both metastatic uveal melanoma (mUM) and metastatic cutaneous melanoma (mCM) patients. A 65% 1-year overall survival rate was achieved for both patient cohorts. On-treatment cytokine measurements were consistent with the induction of IFNg pathway-related markers in the periphery and tumor. Notably, tebentafusp induced an increase in serum CXCL10 (a T cell attractant), and a reduction in circulating CXCR3+ CD8+ T cells together with an increase in cytotoxic T cells in the tumor microenvironment. Furthermore, increased serum CXCL10 or the appearance of rash, (likely due to cytotoxic T cells targeting of gp100-expressing skin melanocytes) showed a positive association with patient survival. CONCLUSIONS: These data suggest that re-directing T cells using a gp100-targeting T cell receptor/anti-CD3 bispecific fusion protein may provide benefit to patients with metastatic melanoma. Furthermore, the activity observed in these two molecularly disparate melanoma classes hints at the broad therapeutic potential of tebentafusp.

Original publication

DOI

10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-20-1247

Type

Journal article

Journal

Clin Cancer Res

Publication Date

18/08/2020