Once yearly cell-based therapy for sustained and dose tunable delivery of monoclonal antibodies
Fell, C.; Davis, A. E.; Pandey, S.; Guinn, M. T.; Wang, Z.; DeBonis, J.; Smith, C.; Brown, N.; Murungi, D.; Kim, Y.; Mohandessi, I.; Bednarz, P.; Ardeshir, A.; Haupt, E. M.; Cuevas, S. I.; Lavine, C. L.; Seaman, M. S.; Igoshin, O.; Ghanta, R. K.; Diehl, M.; Veiseh, O.
Show abstract
Over 200 monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) are approved for clinical use, yet their therapeutic potential is constrained by dependence on repeated injections or infusions that drive non-adherence, limit access in low-resource settings, and generate peak-trough pharmacokinetics linked to adverse effects and reduced efficacy. Here, we developed an immunomodulatory encapsulated cell-based biologics factory that overcomes mAb instability, immunogenicity, and the fibrotic foreign body response that have limited previous approaches, enabling continuous in situ production of therapeutic antibodies from a single administration. Screening chemically modified alginate biomaterials in immunocompetent mice identified a lead immunomodulatory alginate formulation that sustains stable serum titers of the HIV-neutralizing mAb 3BNC117 for one year. Single-cell RNA sequencing revealed that this formulation promotes a local anti-inflammatory, pro-resolving immune niche that attenuates fibrosis. The platforms versatility was demonstrated by production of thirteen diverse mAbs from an allogeneic cell chassis, with sustained in vivo delivery of a subset including ipilimumab, pembrolizumab, adalimumab, and PGT121. Integration into a retrievable macrodevice enabled on-demand therapeutic termination and re-implantation for dose-proportional tuning. In a non-human primates, subcutaneous implantation maintained stable ipilimumab titers for over six months with no detectable toxicity, anti-drug antibodies, or adverse events, and dose-dependent exposure was confirmed across a three-dose escalation. These results demonstrate a clinically translatable platform offering a practical strategy to replace frequent injections with single-administration therapy.
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