close Icon

Stellabody® technology in cancer therapy

Stellabody® is a powerful and versatile technology that directs the immune system to destroy target cells. We are evaluating Stellabody® with a range of anti-cancer antibodies. Stellabody® technology makes existing cancer medicines more potent and extends their potential use to cancers that were not previously susceptible to them. 

Our aim is to apply Stellabody® technology to a broad range of antibodies and bring these to clinical trials for cancer treatment.

Using Stellabody® technology we can transform the actions of antibodies into potent killers of cancer, potentiating them to be as much as 100 times more effective at killing. We can modify existing antibody medicines to make them kill more cancers or take antibodies that cannot kill and transform them into potent killers of cancer cells. We are applying our multifaceted Stellabody® hexamer technology to direct the human immune system to destroy cancer cells either by activation of the complement system and Fc receptors on inflammatory cells, or by apoptosis through the activation of death receptors.

In blood cancers we are evaluating the Stellabody® hexamer technology in existing antibody medicines that bind to known targets in lymphoma, leukaemia and multiple myeloma. We have shown the Stellabody™ modification of anti-cancer monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) – such as isatuximab and daratumumab (CD38 mAbs) in multiple myeloma and CD20 mAbs in lymphoma makes them potent killers of cancer cells. We are also evaluating Stellabody® antibodies to new targets for treatment. 
 
In solid tumours such as colon, ovarian and breast cancers we apply our Stellabody® hexamer technology to induce the death of cancer cells by a process called apoptosis or programmed cell death. Applying the Stellabody® technology to mAbs that target ‘death receptors’ on cancer cells induces extremely potent death signals that kill only the target cells. The on-target hexamerisation by Stellabody® death receptor-specific mAbs increases death receptor clustering on the cell. This clustering amplifies the death receptor signals leading to apoptosis-induced cell death and the elimination of the cancer cells. 

Square Mark Hogarth 210X210

Professor Mark Hogarth

Contact Professor Mark Hogarth for more information about this project.

CALL

Stellabody® – Improving the efficacy of cancer treatments,
inflammation and infectious disease treatments

Learn more

Funding
Partners

  • NHMRC
  • Walkom Bequest
  • Janina and Bill Amiet Foundation
  • Pat & Helen La Manna Cancer/Stroke Research Legacy
  • Percy Baxter Charitable Trust
  • Harry Secomb Foundation
  • Margaret and John Crutch Bequest

Partners +
Collaborators

  • Prof Andrew Wei (WEHI)
  • Prof Ross Baker (Perth Blood Institute)
  • Prof Joe Trapani (Peter McCallum Cancer Centre)
  • Prof Andrew Spencer (Alfred Health)
  • Prof John Cambier (University of Colorado)
  • Dr Alicia Chenoweth (King’s College London)