Novartis Biologicals, Translational Sciences and Safety, Basel, Switzerland.
MAbs. 2010 May-Jun;2(3):233-55. doi: 10.4161/mabs.2.3.11782. Epub 2010 May 23.
Most therapeutic monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) licensed for human use or in clinical development are indicated for treatment of patients with cancer and inflammatory/autoimmune disease and as such, are designed to directly interact with the immune system. A major hurdle for the development and early clinical investigation of many of these immunomodulatory mAbs is their inherent risk for adverse immune-mediated drug reactions in humans such as infusion reactions, cytokine storms, immunosuppression and autoimmunity. A thorough understanding of the immunopharmacology of a mAb in humans and animals is required to both anticipate the clinical risk of adverse immunotoxicological events and to select a safe starting dose for first-in-human (FIH) clinical studies. This review summarizes the most common adverse immunotoxicological events occurring in humans with immunomodulatory mAbs and outlines non-clinical strategies to define their immunopharmacology and assess their immunotoxic potential, as well as reduce the risk of immunotoxicity through rational mAb design. Tests to assess the relative risk of mAb candidates for cytokine release syndrome, innate immune system (dendritic cell) activation and immunogenicity in humans are also described. The importance of selecting a relevant and sensitive toxicity species for human safety assessment in which the immunopharmacology of the mAb is similar to that expected in humans is highlighted, as is the importance of understanding the limitations of the species selected for human safety assessment and supplementation of in vivo safety assessment with appropriate in vitro human assays. A tiered approach to assess effects on immune status, immune function and risk of infection and cancer, governed by the mechanism of action and structural features of the mAb, is described. Finally, the use of immunopharmacology and immunotoxicity data in determining a minimum anticipated biologic effect Level (MABEL) and in the selection of safe human starting dose is discussed.
大多数已获得许可用于人类使用或正在临床开发的治疗性单克隆抗体(mAbs)用于治疗癌症和炎症/自身免疫性疾病患者,因此旨在直接与免疫系统相互作用。许多这些免疫调节 mAbs 的开发和早期临床研究的主要障碍是它们在人类中固有风险的不良免疫介导的药物反应,如输注反应、细胞因子风暴、免疫抑制和自身免疫。为了在人和动物中彻底了解 mAb 的免疫药理学,需要预测不良免疫毒性事件的临床风险,并选择用于首次人体(FIH)临床研究的安全起始剂量。本综述总结了在具有免疫调节 mAb 的人类中发生的最常见的不良免疫毒性事件,并概述了非临床策略,以定义其免疫药理学和评估其免疫毒性潜力,并通过合理的 mAb 设计降低免疫毒性风险。还描述了用于评估候选 mAb 发生细胞因子释放综合征、固有免疫系统(树突状细胞)激活和免疫原性的相对风险的测试。强调了选择与人类安全性评估相关和敏感的毒性物种的重要性,其中 mAb 的免疫药理学与预期在人类中的免疫药理学相似,以及了解为人类安全性评估选择的物种的局限性并补充适当的体外人类测定的重要性。描述了一种分层方法,用于根据 mAb 的作用机制和结构特征评估对免疫状态、免疫功能和感染与癌症风险的影响。最后,讨论了免疫药理学和免疫毒性数据在确定最低预期生物学效应水平(MABEL)和选择安全的人体起始剂量中的用途。