| Literature DB >> 25904915 |
Abstract
Specific inhibition of the cytokine, tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF), has revolutionized the treatment of patients with several autoimmune diseases, and genetically engineered anti-TNF antibody constructs now constitute a heavy medicinal expenditure in many countries. Unfortunately, up to 30% of patients do not respond and about 50% of those who do loose response with time. Furthermore, safety may be compromised by immunogenicity with the induction of anti-drug-antibodies (ADA). Assessment of drug pharmacokinetics and ADA is increasingly recognized as a requirement for safe and rational use of protein drugs. The use of therapeutic strategies based on anti-TNF drug levels and ADA rather than dose-escalation has also proven to be cost-effective, as this allows individualized patient-tailored strategies rather than the current universal approach to loss of response. The objective of the present article - and the accompanying article - is to discuss the reasons for recommending assessments of circulating drug and ADA levels in patients treated with anti-TNF biopharmaceuticals and to detail some of the methodological issues that obscure cost-effective and safer therapies.Entities:
Keywords: anti-TNF-α biopharmaceuticals; anti-drug antibodies; immunogenicity; individualized medicine; pharmacodynamics; pharmacokinetics; theranostics
Year: 2015 PMID: 25904915 PMCID: PMC4389569 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2015.00152
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Temporal association of circulating drug (infliximab) and ADA levels. Trough serum levels of infliximab and anti-infliximab antibody (ADA) were measured in 106 RA patients using radioimmunoassay. Infliximab was administered at a dosage of 3 mg/kg. Note the step-by-step disappearance of infliximab when ADA develop (44% of patients were ADA-positive after 6 months). With permission from Arthritis and Rheumatism (7).
Decision algorithm for patients with LOR to anti-TNF biopharmaceuticals.
| Trough drug level | Trough anti-drug antibodies (ADA) level | |
|---|---|---|
| No | Yes | |
| Insufficient bioavailability and/or increased non-ADA-mediated clearance, see below | Insufficient bioavailability caused by ADA, including pre-existing anti-murine (Fab) IgG against IFX | |
| Intensify therapy | Shift to another TNF-antagonist | |
| Note: Test ADA for cross-reactivity if shifting to biosimilar | ||
| Pharmacodynamic issue (symptoms not driven by TNF?) | Non-functional ADA | |
| See below | False positive test | |
| Confirm inflammatory activity | Consider testing for functionally active, i.e., drug-neutralizing ADA | |
| Treat as in scenario 2 | ||
| Anti-TNF drugs are ineffective, shift to non-TNF targeting therapy (surgery?) | ||
| Treat the underlying cause | ||