Get your free personalized podcast brief

We scan new podcasts and send you the top 5 insights daily.

A new wave of antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs) is transforming ovarian cancer treatment. These 'heat-seeking missiles' deliver potent chemotherapy payloads directly to tumor cells, achieving response rates from 23% to over 60% in biomarker-selected populations. This far surpasses the efficacy of conventional chemotherapy in resistant settings.

Related Insights

The introduction of ADCs into frontline ovarian cancer treatment creates a new challenge: conflicting biomarkers. A patient's tumor might be positive for both HER2 (an ADC target) and a BRCA mutation (a PARP inhibitor target), forcing clinicians to choose between two effective targeted therapies without clear guidance.

Real-world data shows that in platinum-sensitive ovarian cancer patients who have progressed on PARP inhibitors, subsequent platinum-based chemotherapy has a surprisingly low response rate of only 20%. This quantifies a significant opportunity for highly active ADCs to potentially replace platinum in this growing patient population.

Unlike early ADCs requiring high biomarker expression (e.g., mirvetuximab), next-generation agents show efficacy even in low-expressing tumors. This allows for broader, "all-comer" clinical trial inclusion criteria instead of biomarker-gated entry, potentially expanding patient access to these novel therapies.

The ADC mirvetuximab is the first drug to demonstrate an overall survival benefit for platinum-resistant ovarian cancer. This groundbreaking result establishes a higher efficacy standard that subsequent therapies will likely need to meet for regulatory approval and clinical adoption, raising the bar for future drug development.

Patients whose ovarian cancer progresses on the folate-targeted ADC mirvetuximab may still respond to a subsequent folate-targeted ADC with a different cytotoxic payload. This suggests that the folate receptor alpha target remains viable and that resistance may be payload-specific, opening new sequencing strategies.

Unlike older antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs), newer agents are designed so their chemotherapy payload can diffuse out of the target cell and kill nearby tumor cells that may not even express the target antigen. This "bystander effect" significantly enhances their anti-tumor activity.

While immunotherapy was a massive leap forward, Dr. Saav Solanki states the next innovation frontier is combining it with newer modalities. Antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs) and T-cell engagers are being used to recruit the immune system into the tumor microenvironment, helping patients who don't respond to current immunotherapies.

As multiple effective Antibody-Drug Conjugates (ADCs) become available, the primary clinical challenge is no longer *if* they work, but *how* to use them best. Key unanswered questions involve optimal sequencing, dosing for treatment versus maintenance, and overall length of therapy, mirroring issues already seen in breast cancer.

The REJOICE trial for an ADC in ovarian cancer exemplifies a critical trend: embedding multi-arm dose optimization studies. This approach identified a dose that maintained high response rates (57%) while significantly lowering rates of serious adverse events like ILD (from 6% to 3%), prioritizing patient safety.

Historically, therapies for platinum-resistant ovarian cancer were so ineffective that the order of administration was irrelevant. With the advent of multiple active ADCs, the concept of treatment sequencing and potential cross-resistance based on payloads or targets has become a critical, and entirely new, clinical consideration for this disease.

Emerging Antibody-Drug Conjugates Deliver Response Rates That 'Blow Traditional Chemotherapy Out of the Water' | RiffOn