Contrary to concerns about cross-resistance between HER2 antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs), retrospective data shows TDM-1 remains effective after progression on TDXD. This suggests the different cytotoxic payloads are key, allowing for effective sequencing and challenging the assumption that progression on one ADC class member precludes using another.

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The HER2CLIMB-02 trial found that adding tucatinib to TDM-1 offered only a modest 2-month PFS benefit. This came at the cost of substantially increased toxicity, including transaminitis and diarrhea, suggesting the two agents are better used sequentially for most patients.

Trastuzumab deruxtecan (TDXD) and datopotamab deruxtecan (Dato-DXd) share the same cytotoxic payload, yet Dato-DXd has a much lower rate of interstitial lung disease (ILD). This indicates the toxicity is driven by the antibody-antigen interaction, not the payload itself.

Real-world data suggests that using one antibody-drug conjugate (ADC) immediately after another is often ineffective. A potential strategy to overcome this resistance is to administer a different class of chemotherapy before starting the second ADC.

The panel reviews advanced, second-line ADC trials in China using novel targets and payloads. An expert remarks that these are the drugs and questions the US and Europe may only begin to study in two to three years, signaling a significant shift in the global oncology R&D landscape.

Experts question the efficacy of sequencing ADCs like EV (Nectin-4 target) and DV (HER2 target) because they share the same MMAE chemo payload. Since resistance is often tied to the payload, not the target antibody, switching targets may not overcome resistance, though anecdotal responses have been observed.

Rather than moving through distinct lines of therapy, a future strategy could involve an "ADC switch." When a patient progresses on an ADC-IO combination, the IO backbone would remain while the ADC is swapped for one with a different, non-cross-resistant mechanism, adapting the treatment in real-time.

Experts question if HER2 status truly predicts ADC efficacy in urothelial cancer. The benefit seen across low-expression levels suggests HER2's main role may be simply to target the chemo payload to cancer cells, rather than indicating a specific biological dependency.

Emerging data shows that a second ADC, particularly one with the same payload, often has limited efficacy. This suggests clinicians must be highly strategic in selecting the first ADC, as it may be their most impactful opportunity for this class of drugs.

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.

The differing efficacy and toxicity profiles of TROP2 ADCs like sacituzumab govitecan and Dato-DXD suggest that the drug's linker and payload metabolism are crucial determinants of clinical outcome. This indicates that focusing solely on the target antigen is an oversimplification of ADC design and performance.