Ganson Nancy J, Kelly Susan J, Scarlett Edna, Sundy John S, Hershfield Michael S
Division of Rheumatology, Box 3049, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC 27710, USA.
Arthritis Res Ther. 2006;8(1):R12. doi: 10.1186/ar1861.
PEG-modified recombinant mammalian urate oxidase (PEG-uricase) is being developed as a treatment for patients with chronic gout who are intolerant of, or refractory to, available therapy for controlling hyperuricemia. In an open-label phase I trial, single subcutaneous injections of PEG-uricase (4 to 24 mg) were administered to 13 such subjects (11 had tophaceous gout), whose plasma uric acid concentration (pUAc) was 11.3 +/- 2.1 mg/dl (mean +/- SD). By day seven after injection of PEG-uricase, pUAc had declined by an average of 7.9 mg/dl and had normalized in 11 subjects, whose mean pUAc decreased to 2.8 +/- 2.2 mg/dl. At doses of 8, 12, and 24 mg, the mean pUAc at 21 days after injection remained no more than 6 mg/dl. In eight subjects, plasma uricase activity was still measurable at 21 days after injection (half-life 10.5 to 19.9 days). In the other five subjects, plasma uricase activity could not be detected beyond ten days after injection; this was associated with the appearance of relatively low-titer IgM and IgG antibodies against PEG-uricase. Unexpectedly, these antibodies were directed against PEG itself rather than the uricase protein. Three PEG antibody-positive subjects had injection-site reactions at 8 to 9 days after injection. Gout flares in six subjects were the only other significant adverse reactions, and PEG-uricase was otherwise well tolerated. A prolonged circulating life and the ability to normalize plasma uric acid in markedly hyperuricemic subjects suggest that PEG-uricase could be effective in depleting expanded tissue stores of uric acid in subjects with chronic or tophaceous gout. The development of anti-PEG antibodies, which may limit efficacy in some patients, is contrary to the general assumption that PEG is non-immunogenic. PEG immunogenicity deserves further investigation, because it has potential implications for other PEGylated therapeutic agents in clinical use.
聚乙二醇修饰的重组哺乳动物尿酸氧化酶(PEG - 尿酸酶)正被开发用于治疗对控制高尿酸血症的现有疗法不耐受或难治的慢性痛风患者。在一项开放标签的I期试验中,对13名此类受试者(11名患有痛风石性痛风)进行了单次皮下注射PEG - 尿酸酶(4至24毫克),这些受试者的血浆尿酸浓度(pUAc)为11.3±2.1毫克/分升(平均值±标准差)。在注射PEG - 尿酸酶后的第7天,pUAc平均下降了7.9毫克/分升,11名受试者的pUAc恢复正常,其平均pUAc降至2.8±2.2毫克/分升。在8毫克、12毫克和24毫克的剂量下,注射后21天的平均pUAc仍不超过6毫克/分升。在8名受试者中,注射后21天血浆尿酸酶活性仍可测量(半衰期为10.5至19.9天)。在其他5名受试者中,注射后10天以上无法检测到血浆尿酸酶活性;这与出现针对PEG - 尿酸酶的相对低滴度IgM和IgG抗体有关。出乎意料的是,这些抗体是针对PEG本身而非尿酸酶蛋白。3名PEG抗体阳性受试者在注射后8至9天出现注射部位反应。6名受试者出现痛风发作是唯一其他显著的不良反应,除此之外,PEG - 尿酸酶耐受性良好。在明显高尿酸血症受试者中具有延长的循环寿命和使血浆尿酸恢复正常的能力表明,PEG - 尿酸酶可能有效地消耗慢性或痛风石性痛风患者体内扩张的尿酸组织储存。抗PEG抗体的产生可能会限制某些患者的疗效,这与PEG无免疫原性的一般假设相反。PEG的免疫原性值得进一步研究,因为它对临床使用的其他聚乙二醇化治疗药物有潜在影响。