Feedback

A mechanistic quantitative systems pharmacology model platform for translational efficacy evaluation and checkpoint combination design of bispecific immuno-modulatory antibodies

Affiliation
School of Pharmacy ,Nanjing Medical University ,Nanjing ,China
Xu, Yiyang;
Affiliation
School of Pharmacy ,Nanjing Medical University ,Nanjing ,China
Yang, Siyuan;
Affiliation
School of Pharmacy ,Nanjing Medical University ,Nanjing ,China
Rao, Qi;
Affiliation
QSPMed Technologies ,Nanjing ,China
Gao, Yuan;
Affiliation
Nanjing Sanhome Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd. ,Nanjing ,China
Zhou, Guanyue;
Affiliation
Nanjing Sanhome Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd. ,Nanjing ,China
Zhao, Dongmei;
Affiliation
Nanjing Sanhome Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd. ,Nanjing ,China
Shi, Xinsheng;
Affiliation
Phase I Clinical Trial Unit ,The First Affiliated Hospital of Nanjing Medical University ,Nanjing ,China
Chai, Yi;
Affiliation
School of Pharmacy ,Nanjing Medical University ,Nanjing ,China
Zhao, Chen

Over the past 2 decades, tumor immunotherapies have witnessed remarkable advancements, especially with the emergence of immune checkpoint-targeting bispecific antibodies. However, a quantitative understanding of the dynamic cross-talking mechanisms underlying different immune checkpoints as well as the optimal dosing and target design of checkpoint-targeting bispecific antibodies still remain challenging to researchers. To address this challenge, we have here developed a multi-scale quantitative systems pharmacology (QSP) model platform that integrates a diverse array of immune checkpoints and their interactive functions. The model has been calibrated and validated against an extensive collection of multiscale experimental datasets covering 20+ different monoclonal and bispecific antibody treatments at over 60 administered dose levels. Based on high-throughput simulations, the QSP model platform comprehensively screened and characterized the potential efficacy of different bispecific antibody target combination designs, and model-based preclinical population-level simulations revealed target-specific dose-response relationships as well as alternative dosing strategies that can maintain anti-tumor treatment efficacy while reducing dosing frequencies. Model simulations also pointed out that combining checkpoint-targeting bispecific antibodies with monoclonal antibodies can lead to significantly enhanced anti-tumor efficacy. Our mechanistic QSP model can serve as an integrated precision medicine simulation platform to guide the translational research and clinical development of checkpoint-targeting immuno-modulatory bispecific antibodies.

Cite

Citation style:
Could not load citation form.

Access Statistic

Total:
Downloads:
Abtractviews:
Last 12 Month:
Downloads:
Abtractviews:

Rights

License Holder: Copyright © 2025 Xu, Yang, Rao, Gao, Zhou, Zhao, Shi, Chai and Zhao.

Use and reproduction: