Literature DB >> 22759910

Adalimumab elicits a restricted anti-idiotypic antibody response in autoimmune patients resulting in functional neutralisation.

Pauline A van Schouwenburg1, Lotte A van de Stadt, Rob N de Jong, Esther E L van Buren, Simone Kruithof, Els de Groot, Margreet Hart, S Marieke van Ham, Theo Rispens, Lucien Aarden, Gerrit Jan Wolbink, Diana Wouters.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Millions of patients worldwide are treated with therapeutic monoclonal antibodies. These biological therapeutics can be immunogenic, resulting in anti-drug antibody formation which leads to loss of response. Fully human biological agents, such as the anti-tumour necrosis factor α (anti-TNFα) antibody adalimumab, are considered to be weakly immunogenic, but anti-adalimumab antibodies (AAA) were recently detected in more than half of treated patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) within 28 weeks of treatment. A study was undertaken to determine the mechanism by which AAA lead to loss of response.
METHODS: The specificity of the repertoire of AAA was investigated in a cohort of 50 AAA-positive RA patients. Inhibition experiments using TNFα and patient-derived anti-adalimumab monoclonal antibodies were performed.
RESULTS: The antibody response against adalimumab is highly restricted: Fab fragments of a single monoclonal antibody specific for the idiotype of adalimumab inhibited 98.65% (25th-75th percentiles: 98.25-99.90) of the total anti-adalimumab reactivity in serum from 50 AAA-positive patients. The anti-adalimumab response was confined to the TNFα binding region of adalimumab, thereby neutralising its therapeutic efficacy. In line with this restricted specificity, small immune complexes were found in the circulation of AAA-forming patients.
CONCLUSIONS: The humoral immune response against adalimumab is highly restricted and limited to the idiotype of the therapeutic antibody. All antibodies result in functional neutralisation of the drug, thereby providing a mechanism by which AAA formation leads to clinical non-response.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22759910     DOI: 10.1136/annrheumdis-2012-201445

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann Rheum Dis        ISSN: 0003-4967            Impact factor:   19.103


  48 in total

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Authors:  Pauline A van Schouwenburg; Theo Rispens; Gerrit Jan Wolbink
Journal:  Nat Rev Rheumatol       Date:  2013-02-12       Impact factor: 20.543

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