Keipert Peter E
Keipert Corp. Life Sciences Consulting, San Diego, CA, USA, 92130.
Adv Exp Med Biol. 2017;977:343-350. doi: 10.1007/978-3-319-55231-6_45.
Historically, hemoglobin-based oxygen carriers (HBOCs) were being developed as "blood substitutes," despite their transient circulatory half-life (~ 24 h) vs. transfused red blood cells (RBCs). More recently, HBOC commercial development focused on "oxygen therapeutic" indications to provide a temporary oxygenation bridge until medical or surgical interventions (including RBC transfusion, if required) can be initiated. This included the early trauma trials with HemAssist (BAXTER), Hemopure (BIOPURE) and PolyHeme (NORTHFIELD) for resuscitating hypotensive shock. These trials all failed due to safety concerns (e.g., cardiac events, mortality) and certain protocol design limitations. In 2008 the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) put all HBOC trials in the US on clinical hold due to the unfavorable benefit:risk profile demonstrated by various HBOCs in different clinical studies in a meta-analysis published by Natanson et al. (2008). During standard resuscitation in trauma, organ dysfunction and failure can occur due to ischemia in critical tissues, which can be detected by the degree of lactic acidosis. SANGART'S Phase 2 trauma program with MP4OX therefore added lactate >5 mmol/L as an inclusion criterion to enroll patients who had lost sufficient blood to cause a tissue oxygen debt. This was key to the successful conduct of their Phase 2 program (ex-US, from 2009 to 2012) to evaluate MP4OX as an adjunct to standard fluid resuscitation and transfusion of RBCs. In 2013, SANGART shared their Phase 2b results with the FDA, and succeeded in getting the FDA to agree that a planned Phase 2c higher dose comparison study of MP4OX in trauma could include clinical sites in the US. Unfortunately, SANGART failed to secure new funding and was forced to terminate development and operations in Dec 2013, even though a regulatory path forward with FDA approval to proceed in trauma had been achieved.
从历史上看,基于血红蛋白的氧载体(HBOCs)一直被开发用作“血液替代品”,尽管它们在循环中的半衰期较短(约24小时),而输注的红细胞(RBCs)半衰期更长。最近,HBOC的商业开发集中在“氧治疗”适应症上,以提供一个临时的氧合桥梁,直到可以启动医疗或外科干预(包括必要时的RBC输血)。这包括早期使用HemAssist(百特公司)、Hemopure(生物纯公司)和PolyHeme(诺斯菲尔德公司)进行的创伤试验,用于复苏低血压休克。由于安全问题(如心脏事件、死亡率)和某些方案设计限制,这些试验均告失败。2008年,美国食品药品监督管理局(FDA)暂停了美国境内所有HBOC试验,因为纳坦森等人(2008年)发表的一项荟萃分析显示,不同临床研究中的各种HBOC的效益风险比都不理想。在创伤的标准复苏过程中,关键组织的缺血会导致器官功能障碍和衰竭,这可以通过乳酸酸中毒的程度来检测。因此,SANGART公司针对MP4OX开展的2期创伤项目将乳酸水平>5 mmol/L作为纳入标准,以招募失血过多导致组织氧债的患者。这是其2期项目(2009年至2012年在美国境外开展)成功实施的关键,该项目旨在评估MP4OX作为标准液体复苏和RBC输血辅助手段的效果。2013年,SANGART公司向FDA分享了其2b期结果,并成功促使FDA同意,计划开展的MP4OX在创伤治疗中的2c期高剂量对比研究可以在美国的临床地点进行。不幸的是,SANGART公司未能获得新的资金,尽管已经取得了FDA批准在创伤治疗中继续推进的监管途径,但仍被迫于2013年12月终止开发和运营。