The Bruton's tyrosine kinase inhibitor ibrutinib and the B-cell lymphoma 2 anti-apoptotic protein inhibitor venetoclax provide high response rates in chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). Our data indicate that venetoclax treatment did not significantly modify CCR7 expression pattern nor CAP-100 mechanisms of action. Together, these findings support CAP-100 as an adjuvant therapy to venetoclax that may introduce additional modes of action in CLL therapy.
ELC8-83 was used to block this signaling. These studies demonstrate the efficacy of ELC8-83 in blocking signaling in T-ALL and provide a platform for testing ELC8-83 in the mouse model of T-ALL.
Moreover, CLL cells are perfectly targetable by CAP-100 which led to a complete inhibition of CCR7-mediated migration and induced strong target cell killing through antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity, irrespective of previous or contemporary ibrutinib administration. Together, these results validate the therapeutic utility of CAP-100 as a next-line single-agent therapy for CLL patients who failed to ibrutinib and confirm that CAP-100 and ibrutinib have complementary non-overlapping mechanisms of action, potentially allowing for combination therapy.
Our results validated CAP-100 as a novel therapeutic tool to prevent the access of CLL cells, and other neoplasia with nodal-dependence, into the LN niches, thus hitting a central hub in the pathogenesis of cancer. The first-in-human clinical trial (NCT04704323), which will evaluate this novel therapeutic approach in CLL patients, is pending.