Pharmacokinetics, Dynamics & Metabolism (PDM-NBE), Immunogenicity Sciences, Pfizer Inc., Andover, MA, USA.
AAPS J. 2013 Jul;15(3):893-6. doi: 10.1208/s12248-013-9497-z. Epub 2013 Jun 13.
Biotherapeutic-reactive antibodies in treatment-naïve subjects (i.e., pre-existing antibodies) have been commonly detected during clinical immunogenicity assessments; however information on pre-existing antibody prevalence, physiological effects, and impact on posttreatment anti-drug antibody (ADA) induction remains limited. In this analysis, pre-existing antibody prevalence and impact on posttreatment ADA induction were determined using ADA data from 12 biotherapeutics analyzed in 32 clinical studies. Approximately half (58%) of the biotherapeutics were associated with some level of pre-existing antibodies and 67% of those were associated with posttreatment ADA induction. Across all studies, 5.6% of study subjects demonstrated presence of pre-existing antibodies, among which, 17% of the individual subjects had posttreatment increases in their ADA titers while 16% had decreased titers and 67% had no change in titers. However, in studies conducted in the rheumatoid arthritis (RA) population, 14.8% of RA patients were associated with pre-existing antibodies and 30% of those had posttreatment titer increases. The results suggest that in most study subjects, pre-existing antibodies pose a low risk for posttreatment ADA induction. That said, the high risk of induction implicated for RA patients, primarily observed in treatments evaluating novel antibody-based constructs, indicates that further understanding of the contribution of product and disease-specific factors is needed. Cross-industry efforts to collect and analyze a larger data set would enhance understanding of the prevalence, nature, and physiological consequences of pre-existing antibodies, better inform the immunogenicity risk profiles of products associated with these antibodies and lead to better fit-for-purpose immunogenicity management and mitigation strategies.
在临床免疫原性评估中,治疗初治受试者(即预先存在的抗体)中经常会检测到生物治疗反应性抗体;然而,关于预先存在的抗体流行率、生理效应以及对治疗后抗药物抗体(ADA)诱导的影响的信息仍然有限。在这项分析中,使用来自 32 项临床研究中分析的 12 种生物治疗药物的 ADA 数据确定了预先存在的抗体的流行率及其对治疗后 ADA 诱导的影响。大约一半(58%)的生物治疗药物与某种程度的预先存在的抗体相关,其中 67%的抗体与治疗后 ADA 诱导相关。在所有研究中,5.6%的研究受试者存在预先存在的抗体,其中 17%的个体受试者在治疗后 ADA 滴度增加,16%的个体受试者 ADA 滴度降低,67%的个体受试者 ADA 滴度无变化。然而,在类风湿关节炎(RA)人群中进行的研究中,14.8%的 RA 患者与预先存在的抗体相关,其中 30%的患者在治疗后 ADA 滴度增加。结果表明,在大多数研究受试者中,预先存在的抗体对治疗后 ADA 诱导的风险较低。也就是说,对于 RA 患者所观察到的高诱导风险,主要见于评估新型抗体为基础的构建体的治疗,表明需要进一步了解产品和疾病特异性因素的作用。跨行业收集和分析更大数据集的努力将增强对预先存在的抗体的流行率、性质和生理后果的理解,更好地了解与这些抗体相关的产品的免疫原性风险概况,并制定更适合目的的免疫管理和缓解策略。