| Literature DB >> 17709549 |
Richard Stebbings1, Lucy Findlay, Cherry Edwards, David Eastwood, Chris Bird, David North, Yogesh Mistry, Paula Dilger, Emily Liefooghe, Isabelle Cludts, Bernard Fox, Gill Tarrant, Jane Robinson, Tony Meager, Carl Dolman, Susan J Thorpe, Adrian Bristow, Meenu Wadhwa, Robin Thorpe, Stephen Poole.
Abstract
The CD28-specific mAb TGN1412 rapidly caused a life-threatening "cytokine storm" in all six healthy volunteers in the Phase I clinical trial of this superagonist, signaling a failure of preclinical safety testing. We report novel in vitro procedures in which TGN1412, immobilized in various ways, is presented to human white blood cells in a manner that stimulates the striking release of cytokines and profound lymphocyte proliferation that occurred in vivo in humans. The novel procedures would have predicted the toxicity of this superagonist and are now being applied to emerging immunotherapeutics and to other therapeutics that have the potential to act upon the immune system. Data from these novel procedures, along with data from in vitro and in vivo studies in nonhuman primates, suggest that the dose of TGN1412 given to human volunteers was close to the maximum immunostimulatory dose and that TGN1412 is not a superagonist in nonhuman primates.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17709549 DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.179.5.3325
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol ISSN: 0022-1767 Impact factor: 5.422