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Myeloma Care Partners | Understanding Bispecific Antibody Therapy

What is bispecific antibody therapy? Dr. Craig Cole, a myeloma specialist, explains how bispecific antibody therapy works to kill myeloma cells, how the treatment is administered, and which patient type the therapy is most appropriate for.

Dr. Craig Cole is a multiple myeloma specialist at Karmanos Cancer Institute in Detroit, MI and in East Lansing, MI. Dr. Cole also serves as an associate professor at Wayne State University and at Michigan State University. Learn more about Dr. Craig Cole

See More from The Care Partner Toolkit: Bispecific Antibodies

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What Myeloma Care Partners Should Know About Bispecific Antibody Side Effects

What Myeloma Care Partners Should Know About Bispecific Antibody Side Effects

Proactive Steps for Supporting Your Loved One Through Bispecific Antibody Therapy

Proactive Steps for Supporting Your Loved One Through Bispecific Antibody Therapy

Bispecific Antibody Therapy | The Important Role of Care Partners

Bispecific Antibody Therapy | The Important Role of Care Partners 

Transcript:

Katherine Banwell:

Dr. Cole, let’s start with some basics. What is bispecific antibody therapy? And who is it right for? 

Dr. Craig Cole:

Yeah, in cancer medicine kind of to describe bispecific antibodies we need to really start with what T cell is.  

Because in cancer medicine the – really all of the bispecific antibodies engage T cells.   

So, T cells are a cell that’s in our bodies which help destroy cancer cells naturally. And so, the T cells, when we have any mutations in any of the cells in our body and it starts to become cancerous, the T cells come in and wipe it out before it even gets started. And so, part of the reason that people get cancer is that those cancer cells find a way to evade the T cells. And usually what they do is they hide. They’re able to masquerade as normal cells, and the T cells that should destroy them just slide right over them or check their ID and say, “Well, you’re okay,” and let them go.  

Then the cancer cells can grow. And so, what the bispecific antibodies do is that a regular antibody is shaped like a Y, and usually both ends are really sticky to stick to anything, usually bacteria, viruses. And that’s the antibody – is the way our immune system fights infection. And antibodies are sticky. They got two sticky ends. What they’re able to do in the laboratory is make one of the sticky ends to an antibody not produced by people but produced a laboratory. One sticky end is specific to the T cell. One sticky end is specific to the cancer cell. And when you give this drug, it brings the T cells that have been ignoring the cancer right up against the cancer cells. And so, all of a sudden, the T cells that destroy cancer that have been ignoring the cancer cells are suddenly made aware of the cancer cells.  

And as soon as they see those cancer cells, they begin to kill the cancer cells. And so, it brings the cancer hunting T cells together with the cancer cell so the T cells can destroy the cancer.  

Katherine Banwell:

Okay.  

Dr. Craig Cole:

And who is it right for? Most, if not all, of the bispecific antibodies that are approved now are for people that that have cancer that’s advanced, that has failed several therapies. And that’s the usual place where new drugs go is for the people who are most in need, the people who have exhausted a lot of other options. And so really it’s right for anyone who has advanced cancer, who needs new therapeutic options. 

Katherine Banwell:

How is this therapy administered and what is the frequency? 

Dr. Craig Cole:

Yeah, so usually for most by bispecific antibodies, they’re administered subcutaneously under the skin, and some are administered IV.  

Some are administered over long periods of time where people go home with infusion packs, and they get it over several days. And some of them are given once a week or every two weeks. And so, it really depends on what type of tumor is being – what the bispecific it is being used for and which tumor is directed towards. 

An Expert’s Take on Promising Myeloma Treatment and Research

An Expert’s Take on Promising Myeloma Treatment and Research from Patient Empowerment Network on Vimeo.

 Myeloma research is advancing quickly. Dr. Joshua Richter, a myeloma expert, shares his excitement about emerging treatments in development.

Dr. Joshua Richter is director of Multiple Myeloma at the Blavatnik Family – Chelsea Medical Center at Mount Sinai. He also serves as Assistant Professor of Medicine in The Tisch Cancer Institute, Division of Hematology and Medical Oncology. Learn more about Dr. Richter, here.

See More From Engage Myeloma


Related Programs:

Myeloma Treatment Decisions: What Should Be Considered?

Myeloma Treatment: When Should a Clinical Trial Be Considered?

What Standard Testing Follows a Myeloma Diagnosis?


Transcript:

Katherine:

When it comes to myeloma research and emerging treatment options, what are you most excited about, specifically?

Dr. Richter:

So, I think the big thing that I’m excited about from myeloma that we’re on the cusp of is T-cell engagers and T-cell based therapies. And, essentially, we all have T cells in our body, and T cells are a part of our immune system. They attack bacteria, viruses, and cancer.

And one of the best cancer fighters that exists is our own immune system. And the old way of treating cancer and blood cancers like myeloma was just to give medicines that suppressed all of the immune system, the good and the bad. Now, we’re trying to be more precise, and there’s certain parts of the immune system that we don’t want down, we want up. So, they help attack the cancer.

And the two biggest technologies are something called CAR T and something called bispecific antibodies. CAR T stands for chimeric antigen receptor T cells.

And, basically, what that is is we collect your T cells, we engineer them in the lab to rev them up and target the cancer. And we can put them back into you and they attack the cancer, very exciting. And then we have something called a bispecific antibody that has two arms. And as we infuse this medicine into you, one arm grabs onto the cancer cell, the other arm grabs onto your T cell and makes that T cell activate and attack the cancer cell.

And a lot of these drugs are in clinical trials as well. So, we’re very excited about moving from, you know, just lowering everything, the good and the bad, to being more precise and saying, no, no, no. There are some cells that we want way, way up.

Katherine:

Right. Right. So, you’re – you’re being much more specific now.

Dr. Richter:

Mm-hmm.