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Intratumoral aluminum hydroxide–anchored IL-12 drives potent antitumor activity by remodeling the tumor microenvironment
Sailaja Battula, Gregory Papastoitsis, Howard L. Kaufman, K. Dane Wittrup, Michael M. Schmidt
Sailaja Battula, Gregory Papastoitsis, Howard L. Kaufman, K. Dane Wittrup, Michael M. Schmidt
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Research Article Immunology Oncology

Intratumoral aluminum hydroxide–anchored IL-12 drives potent antitumor activity by remodeling the tumor microenvironment

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Abstract

IL-12 is a potent cytokine that can promote innate and adaptive anticancer immunity, but its clinical development has been limited by toxicity when delivered systemically. Intratumoral (i.t.) administration can expand the therapeutic window of IL-12 and other cytokines but is in turn limited by rapid drug clearance from the tumor, which reduces efficacy, necessitates frequent administration, and increases systemic accumulation. To address these limitations, we developed an anchored IL-12 designated ANK-101, composed of an engineered IL-12 variant that forms a stable complex with the FDA-approved vaccine adjuvant aluminum hydroxide (Alhydrogel). Following i.t. administration of murine ANK-101 (mANK-101) in early intervention syngeneic mouse tumors, the complex formed a depot that was locally retained for weeks as measured by IVIS or SPECT/CT imaging, while unanchored protein injected i.t. was cleared within hours. One or 2 i.t. injections of mANK-101 induced single-agent antitumor activity across a diverse range of syngeneic tumors, including models resistant to checkpoint blockade at doses where unanchored IL-12 had no efficacy. Local treatment with mANK-101 further induced regressions of noninjected lesions, especially when combined with systemic checkpoint blockade. Antitumor activity was associated with remodeling of the tumor microenvironment, including prolonged IFN-γ and chemokine expression, recruitment and activation of T and NK cells, M1 myeloid cell skewing, and increased antigen processing and presentation. Subcutaneous administration of ANK-101 in cynomolgus macaques was well tolerated. Together, these data demonstrate that ANK-101 has an enhanced efficacy and safety profile and warrants future clinical development.

Authors

Sailaja Battula, Gregory Papastoitsis, Howard L. Kaufman, K. Dane Wittrup, Michael M. Schmidt

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Figure 2

mANK-101 is retained in the tumor after i.t. administration, with reduced systemic exposure.

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mANK-101 is retained in the tumor after i.t. administration, with reduce...
(A) IVIS images and (B) tumor volumes from BALB/c mice bearing CT26 tumors (mean TV = 101 mm3) following a single i.t. administration of Alexa Fluor 647–conjugated mIL-12-ABP as free protein or mANK-101 complex (n = 5, mean ± SEM). (C) Representative SPECT/CT images of BALB/c mice bearing CT26 tumors after a single i.t. administration of 125I-labeled mIL-12-ABP as free protein or mANK-101 complex. (D) Percentage injected dose (%ID) in tumor or (E) percentage injected dose per gram (%ID/g) in blood of 125I-labeled mIL-12-ABP or mANK-101, as measured from SPECT/CT image analysis or ex vivo gamma counts from whole blood, respectively (mean ± SEM, n = 3 through the 216-hour time point).

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