Neonatology Service, Hospital Clínic, Agrupació Sanitèria Clínic, Hospital de Sant Joan de Déu, Barcelona, Spain.
Pediatrics. 2010 Jan;125(1):e35-51. doi: 10.1542/peds.2008-1036. Epub 2009 Dec 14.
Palivizumab reduces respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) hospitalization in children at high risk by approximately 50% compared with placebo. We compared the efficacy and safety of motavizumab, an investigational monoclonal antibody with enhanced anti-RSV activity in preclinical studies, with palivizumab.
This randomized, double-blind, multinational, phase 3, noninferiority trial assessed safety and RSV hospitalization in 6635 preterm infants aged <or=6 months at enrollment or children aged <or=24 months with chronic lung disease of prematurity who received 15 mg/kg palivizumab or motavizumab monthly. Secondary end points included outpatient medically attended lower respiratory tract infections (MALRIs), RSV-specific LRIs, otitis media, antibiotic use, development of antimotavizumab antibodies, and motavizumab serum concentrations.
Motavizumab recipients had a 26% relative reduction in RSV hospitalization compared with palivizumab recipients, achieving noninferiority. Motavizumab was superior to palivizumab for reduction of RSV-specific outpatient MALRIs (50% relative reduction). Overall, adverse events (AEs) were not significantly different between groups. Cutaneous events were reported in 2 percentage points more motavizumab recipients (7.2% vs 5.1%); most were mild, but 0.3% resulted in dosing discontinuation. Antidrug antibodies (ADA) were detected in 1.8% of motavizumab recipients. Patients with anti-drug antibody reported 6 RSV events and 17 cutaneous events.
Children receiving prophylaxis with motavizumab or palivizumab had low rates of RSV hospitalization; motavizumab recipients experienced 50% fewer RSV MALRIs than palivizumab recipients. AEs were similar in both groups, although cutaneous AEs were higher for motavizumab recipients. Motavizumab may offer an improved alternative in prophylaxis for serious RSV disease in infants and children at high risk.
帕利珠单抗与安慰剂相比,可使高危儿童的呼吸道合胞病毒(RSV)住院率降低约 50%。我们比较了莫那比拉珠单抗(一种在临床前研究中具有增强抗 RSV 活性的研究用单克隆抗体)与帕利珠单抗的疗效和安全性。
这是一项随机、双盲、多中心、III 期非劣效性试验,评估了 6635 名在入组时年龄<6 个月的早产儿或患有慢性早产儿肺疾病的年龄<24 个月的儿童接受 15mg/kg 帕利珠单抗或莫那比拉珠单抗每月一次治疗的安全性和 RSV 住院情况。次要终点包括门诊下呼吸道感染(MALRI)、RSV 特异性 LRI、中耳炎、抗生素使用、抗莫那比拉珠单抗抗体的产生以及莫那比拉珠单抗的血清浓度。
莫那比拉珠单抗组 RSV 住院率相对降低 26%,达到非劣效性。莫那比拉珠单抗组 RSV 特异性门诊 MALRI 减少(相对降低 50%)优于帕利珠单抗组。总体而言,两组之间的不良事件(AE)无显著差异。莫那比拉珠单抗组报告的皮肤事件发生率高出 2 个百分点(7.2%比 5.1%);大多数为轻度,但有 0.3%的患者因停药。莫那比拉珠单抗组有 1.8%的患者检测到抗药物抗体(ADA)。有抗药物抗体的患者报告了 6 例 RSV 事件和 17 例皮肤事件。
接受莫那比拉珠单抗或帕利珠单抗预防治疗的儿童 RSV 住院率较低;莫那比拉珠单抗组 RSV MALRI 发生率比帕利珠单抗组低 50%。两组的 AE 相似,但莫那比拉珠单抗组的皮肤 AE 发生率较高。莫那比拉珠单抗可能为高危婴儿和儿童预防严重 RSV 疾病提供一种更好的替代选择。