American Association for Cancer Research
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15357163mct081171-sup-mct-08-1171--suppl_fig_1.pdf (430.89 kB)

Supplementary Fig. S1 from AMG 479, a fully human anti–insulin-like growth factor receptor type I monoclonal antibody, inhibits the growth and survival of pancreatic carcinoma cells

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posted on 2023-03-31, 23:28 authored by Pedro J. Beltran, Petia Mitchell, Young-A Chung, Elaina Cajulis, John Lu, Brian Belmontes, Joanne Ho, Mei Mei Tsai, Min Zhu, Steven Vonderfecht, Renato Baserga, Richard Kendall, Robert Radinsky, Frank J. Calzone
Supplementary Fig. S1 from AMG 479, a fully human anti–insulin-like growth factor receptor type I monoclonal antibody, inhibits the growth and survival of pancreatic carcinoma cells

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ARTICLE ABSTRACT

Pancreatic carcinoma is a leading cause of cancer deaths, and recent clinical trials of a number of oncology therapeutics have not substantially improved clinical outcomes. We have evaluated the therapeutic potential of AMG 479, a fully human monoclonal antibody against insulin-like growth factor (IGF) type I receptor (IGF-IR), in two IGF-IR–expressing pancreatic carcinoma cell lines, BxPC-3 and MiaPaCa2, which also differentially express insulin receptor (INSR). AMG 479 bound to IGF-IR (KD 0.33 nmol/L) and blocked IGF-I and IGF-II binding (IC50 < 0.6 nmol/L) without cross-reacting to INSR. AMG 479 completely inhibited ligand-induced (IGF-I, IGF-II, and insulin) activation of IGF-IR homodimers and IGF-IR/INSR hybrids (but not INSR homodimers) leading to reduced cellular viability in serum-deprived cultures. AMG 479 inhibited >80% of basal IGF-IR activity in BxPC-3 and MiaPaCa2 xenografts and prevented IGF-IR and IGF-IR/INSR hybrid activation following challenge with supraphysiologic concentrations of IGF-I. As a single agent, AMG 479 inhibited (∼80%) the growth of pancreatic carcinoma xenografts, and long-term treatment was associated with reduced IGF-IR signaling activity and expression. Efficacy seemed to be the result of two distinct biological effects: proapoptotic in BxPC-3 and antimitogenic in MiaPaCa2. The combination of AMG 479 with gemcitabine resulted in additive inhibitory activity both in vitro and in vivo. These results indicate that AMG 479 is a clinical candidate, both as a single agent and in combination with gemcitabine, for the treatment of patients with pancreatic carcinoma.[Mol Cancer Ther 2009;8(5):1095–105]