Moreland L W, Bucy R P, Tilden A, Pratt P W, LoBuglio A F, Khazaeli M, Everson M P, Daddona P, Ghrayeb J, Kilgarriff C
Division of Clinical Immunology and Rheumatology, University of Alabama, Birmingham 35294-0012.
Arthritis Rheum. 1993 Mar;36(3):307-18. doi: 10.1002/art.1780360304.
To evaluate the safety, immunogenicity, and biologic effects of chimeric monoclonal anti-CD4 (cM-T412) in patients with refractory rheumatoid arthritis (RA), and to obtain preliminary data on the clinical response to this treatment.
Twenty-five patients with active refractory RA were treated with incremental doses (10 to 700 mg) of cM-T412 in an open-label, escalating-dose phase I trial.
Infusion with cM-T412 was followed by an immediate, rapid decline in CD4+ T cells. The level of circulating CD4+ T cells remained depressed in most patients even at 6 months posttreatment. Following antibody infusion, proliferative responses of peripheral blood lymphocytes to mitogens and antigens were determined; mitogen and antigen responses were decreased compared with pretreatment responses. Mitogen responses tended to return to baseline values more rapidly than did responses to antigen. Adverse events included fever (19 patients), which was associated with myalgias, malaise, and asymptomatic hypotension; these symptoms were self-limited and appeared to correlate with transient elevations in interleukin-6. No significant human antibody response to the cM-T412 variable region was detected; only 2 patients developed transiently low levels of antibodies reactive with cM-T412. Significant clinical improvement, defined as > or = 50% decrease in tender joint counts compared with baseline, was noted in 43% of patients at 5 weeks and 33% at 6 months following cM-T412 infusion.
Treatment of refractory RA with cM-T412 appears to be safe and is associated with sustained decreases in circulating CD4+ T cell counts and depressed in vitro T cell responses. No significant human antichimeric antibody response was detected. Nonblinded assessment of clinical end points suggests that treatment with cM-T412 may have beneficial effects in these patients with refractory RA. A double-blind clinical trial is warranted to determine its clinical efficacy in treating RA.
评估嵌合单克隆抗CD4(cM-T412)在难治性类风湿关节炎(RA)患者中的安全性、免疫原性和生物学效应,并获取该治疗临床反应的初步数据。
在一项开放标签、剂量递增的I期试验中,25例活动性难治性RA患者接受递增剂量(10至700mg)的cM-T412治疗。
输注cM-T412后,CD4+T细胞立即快速下降。即使在治疗后6个月,大多数患者循环CD4+T细胞水平仍处于抑制状态。输注抗体后,测定外周血淋巴细胞对丝裂原和抗原的增殖反应;与治疗前反应相比,丝裂原和抗原反应降低。丝裂原反应比抗原反应更快地趋于恢复到基线值。不良事件包括发热(19例患者),伴有肌痛、不适和无症状性低血压;这些症状为自限性,似乎与白细胞介素-6的短暂升高相关。未检测到对cM-T412可变区的显著人抗体反应;仅2例患者出现与cM-T412反应性的短暂低水平抗体。在输注cM-T412后5周,43%的患者出现显著临床改善,定义为压痛关节计数较基线减少≥50%,6个月时为33%。
用cM-T412治疗难治性RA似乎是安全的,与循环CD4+T细胞计数持续下降和体外T细胞反应受抑制有关。未检测到显著的人抗嵌合抗体反应。对临床终点的非盲法评估表明,cM-T412治疗可能对这些难治性RA患者有有益作用。有必要进行双盲临床试验以确定其治疗RA的临床疗效。