Zai Lab-Supported Study Published in Cell Provides New Insights with Potential to Improve Treatment of HRD-Positive Ovarian Cancers, Including Through Combination PARP Inhibitor and CCR8 Therapy

In This Article:

Manuscript represents the first publication from China’s gynecology oncology field to be published in Cell

Publication highlights first-time learnings about the landscape of ovarian cancer microenvironment stratified by HRD and how a PARP inhibitor perturbs it

Data suggest combination of niraparib and ZL-1218, an investigational CCR8 antibody, may decrease tumor burden, offering synergistic potential for improving efficacy in treatment of HRD tumors

SHANGHAI & CAMBRIDGE, Mass., July 15, 2024--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Zai Lab Limited (NASDAQ: ZLAB; HKEX: 9688) today announced that data published in the journal Cell demonstrate that neoadjuvant monotherapy with the poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) inhibitor niraparib results in a high response rate and reshapes the tumor microenvironment (TME), providing new targets for immunotherapy and combination regimens in patients with homologous recombination deficiency (HRD) positive ovarian cancer. The study revealed niraparib preferentially suppresses certain immune cells that support the growth of HRD-positive ovarian tumors.

This Zai Lab-supported study also showed that targeted clearance of infiltrating regulatory T cells (eTregs) using Zai Lab’s investigational CCR8 antibody, ZL-1218, significantly sensitized niraparib against HRD tumors, resulting in decreased tumor burden in pre-clinical models.

"Given the prevalence of HRD in cancer and its role in rendering tumors vulnerable to PARP inhibition, this study fills the knowledge gap regarding the impact of HRD and related therapies on the tumor microenvironment," said Professor Qinglei Gao, Chief of Gynecologic Oncology Department, Tongji Hospital, Tongji Medical College, Huazhong University of Science and Technology. "By decoding the tumor-reactive T cells in the HRD-positive TME that are regulated by eTregs, these findings have profound implications for future oncology research and therapeutic development for HRD-positive ovarian cancer and other HRD-related cancers."

To investigate the effects of HRD, neoadjuvant therapies, and their interactions on the TME, investigators utilized tumor tissues from a clinical study (NCT04507841) evaluating niraparib for the neoadjuvant treatment of unresectable ovarian cancer. In parallel, tissue samples from patients receiving neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NACT) were also collected.

Profiling of these samples yielded valuable data delineating the divergence in TME between HRD-positive vs. homologous recombination-proficient (HRP) tumors, as well as their respective phenotypic evolution following the introduction of neoadjuvant therapies.