On December 6, 2025 Arvinas, Inc. (Nasdaq: ARVN), a clinical-stage biotechnology company creating a new class of drugs based on targeted protein degradation, reported preclinical data for ARV-393, a PROTAC BCL6 degrader, in combination with glofitamab, a CD20×CD3 bispecific antibody, presented in a poster at the 67th American Society of Hematology (ASH) (Free ASH Whitepaper) Annual Meeting and Exposition, held December 6–9, 2025, in Orlando, Florida. In a humanized high-grade B-cell lymphoma (HGBCL) cell line–derived xenograft (CDX) model, the combination of ARV-393 and glofitamab resulted in significantly enhanced tumor growth inhibition (TGI) and increased rates of tumor regression compared with either agent alone. These preclinical data suggest mechanistic synergies between BCL6 degradation with ARV-393 and T-cell engagement.
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"Despite advances in treatment options, many patients with diffuse large B-cell lymphoma continue to face limited options once standard therapies fail. By pursuing a chemotherapy-free combination approach, we aim to address this significant unmet need and potentially offer patients a more targeted, better-tolerated therapeutic alternative," said Noah Berkowitz, M.D., Ph.D., Chief Medical Officer, Arvinas. "The initiation of our Phase 1 combination clinical trial, planned for 2026, represents an important step toward defining the potential of ARV-393 in the treatment of this aggressive form of lymphoma."
Key highlights from the poster presentation include:
In a humanized HGBCL CDX model ARV-393 (3 mg/kg) combined with glofitamab (0.15 mg/kg) achieved 81% TGI with concomitant dosing and 91% TGI with sequential dosing (ARV-393 followed by glofitamab), versus 38% for single-agent ARV-393 and 36% for glofitamab alone.
At a higher ARV-393 dose (6 mg/kg) combined with glofitamab (0.15 mg/kg), an increase in tumor regressions was observed with concomitant (10/10 mice) and sequential dosing (7/8 mice) vs single-agent ARV-393 (5/11 mice) or glofitamab (0/11 mice).
RNA sequencing and biomarker analyses revealed that ARV-393 upregulated CD20 expression and genes that promote interferon signaling and antigen presentation, while downregulating proliferation-associated gene sets. These collective effects likely contributed to the observed synergistic antitumor activity.
"We believe these results underscore the potential for ARV-393 and provide a strong mechanistic rationale for exploring ARV-393 in combination with glofitamab as a chemotherapy-free treatment strategy for patients with diffuse large B-cell lymphoma," said Angela Cacace, Ph.D., Chief Scientific Officer, Arvinas. "These preclinical results support our belief in the clinical potential and combinability of ARV-393 and the possibility to provide real benefit to patients in need."
ARV-393 is currently being evaluated in a Phase 1 clinical trial in patients with relapsed/refractory non-Hodgkin lymphoma and Arvinas plans to share clinical data from this trial at a medical congress in 2026. Additionally, Arvinas plans to add a glofitamab combination cohort in patients with DLBCL in the ongoing Phase 1 clinical trial of ARV-393 in 2026.
About ARV-393
ARV-393 is an investigational, orally bioavailable PROTAC designed to specifically target and degrade B-cell lymphoma 6 protein (BCL6), a transcriptional repressor and major driver of B-cell lymphomas. During B-cell development, tightly controlled BCL6 protein expression regulates >600 genes to facilitate rapid B-cell proliferation and tolerance of somatic hypermutation and gene recombination for antibody generation. Deregulated BCL6 expression is common in B-cell lymphoma and promotes cancer cell survival, proliferation, and genomic instability. PROTAC-mediated degradation has the potential to address the historically undruggable nature of BCL6.
(Press release, Arvinas, DEC 6, 2025, View Source [SID1234661193])