| Literature DB >> 25967925 |
Sanna Rosengren1, Samuel S Dychter, Marie A Printz, Lei Huang, Richard I Schiff, Hans-Peter Schwarz, John K McVey, Fred H Drake, Dan C Maneval, Don A Kennard, Gregory I Frost, Barry J Sugarman, Douglas B Muchmore.
Abstract
Recombinant human PH20 hyaluronidase (rHuPH20) is used to facilitate dispersion of subcutaneously delivered fluids and drugs. This report summarizes rHuPH20 immunogenicity findings from clinical trials where rHuPH20 was co-administered with SC human immunoglobulin, trastuzumab, rituximab, or insulin. Plasma samples were obtained from evaluable subjects participating in ten different clinical trials as well as from healthy plasma donors. A bridging immunoassay and a modified hyaluronidase activity assay were used to determine rHuPH20-reactive antibody titers and neutralizing antibodies, respectively. rHuPH20-binding antibody populations from selected subjects with positive titers were affinity-purified and subjected to further characterization such as cross-reactivity with endogenous PH20. Among individual trials, the prevalence of pre-existing rHuPH20-reactive antibodies varied between 3 and 12%, excepting the primary immunodeficiency (PID) studies. Incidence of treatment-induced rHuPH20 antibodies was 2 to 18%, with the highest titers (81,920) observed in PID. No neutralizing antibodies were observed. Within most trials, the kinetics of antibody responses were comparable between pre-existing and treatment-induced antibody responses, although responses classified as persistent were more common in subjects with pre-existing titers. There was no association between antibody positivity and either local or systemic adverse events. Pre-existing and treatment-induced antibody populations were of similar immunoglobulin isotypes and cross-reacted to endogenous PH20 to similar extents. No cross-reactivity to PH20 paralogs was detected. rHuPH20 induces only modest immunogenicity which has no association with adverse events. In addition, antibodies purified from baseline-positive individuals are qualitatively similar to those purified from individuals developing rHuPH20-reactive antibodies following exposure to the enzyme.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25967925 PMCID: PMC4540732 DOI: 10.1208/s12248-015-9782-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AAPS J ISSN: 1550-7416 Impact factor: 4.009
Overview Over All Included Clinical Trials
| Trial | Clintrials.gov reference | Population | Co-administered therapeutic | rHuPH20 dose | rHuPH20 dosing frequency | Duration of rHuPH20 treatments | Duration of available immunogenicity data |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 117–203 | NCT00883558 | Type I diabetes mellitus | Prandial insulin | Variable | 3 times daily | 3 months | Up to 6 months |
| 117–205 | NCT01194245 | Type I diabetes mellitus | Prandial insulin analog | 75 (12–63) μg daily | 3 times daily | 12 weeks | Up to 6 months |
| 117–206 | NCT01194258 | Type II diabetes mellitus | Prandial insulin analog | 240 (22–1460) μg daily | 3 times daily | 12 weeks | Up to 6 months |
| 117–403 | NCT01848990 | Type I diabetes mellitus | Continuous SC insulin infusion | 150 U per treatment event | Every 2–3 days | Up to 21 months | 183 (30–183) days |
| HannaH | BO22227, NCT00950300 | HER2-positive breast cancer | Trastuzumab | 10,000 U per treatment event | Every 3 weeks | 18 cycles of 3 weeks each | 724 (85–944) days |
| SparkThera | BP22333, NCT00930514 | Follicular lymphoma | Rituximab | 23,400 U per treatment event | Every 2–3 months | Up to 2 years (stage 2) | 85 (17–646) days |
| SABRINA | BO22334, NCT01200758 | Follicular lymphoma | Rituximab | 23,400 U per treatment event | Every 8 weeks | Up to 2 years | 315 (116–842) days |
| SAWYER | BO25341, NCT01292603 | Chronic lymphocytic leukemia | Rituximab | 26,740 U per treatment event | Once per 5 of 6 cycles (stage 2) | Up to 2 years | 133 (28–399) days |
| 160603/902 | 160603: NCT00814320 160902: NCT01175213 | Primary immunodeficiency | Human IgG | 2800 (800–6400) U per treatment event | Every 3–4 weeks | Up to 3 years | 1414 (337–1599) days |
| Normals | n/a | Healthy plasma donors | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a | Single sample |
When applicable, data are presented as median (min–max)
Prevalence and Incidence of rHuPH20-Binding Antibodies in All Clinical Trials
| Trial | Prevalence at baseline | Treatment-induced (# subjects) | Treatment-boosted (# subjects) | Total incidence |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 117–203 | 2/46 | 1 | 0 | 1/40 (2.5%) |
| 117–205 | 13/117 | 3 | 2 | 5/113 (4.4%) |
| 117–206 | 4/120 | 2 | 0 | 2/116 (1.7%) |
| 117–403 | 38/456 | 21 | 3 | 24/335 (7.2%) |
| HannaH | 22/290 (7.6%) | 26 | 10 | 36/290 (12.4%) |
| SparkThera | 11/185 (5.9%) | 2 | 4 | 6/185 (3.2%) |
| SAWYER | 13/107 | 3 | 3 | 6/96 (6.3%) |
| SABRINA | 28/257 | 11 | 6 | 17/185 (9.2%) |
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| 160603/902 | 1 | 14 | 1 | 15/83 (18.1%) |
| Normals | 56/961 (5.8%) | n/a | n/a | n/a |
Definitions of prevalence, incidence, treatment-induced, and treatment-boosted as in (35). The italic text signifies the summation of all preceding lines
Including 6 subjects where only a baseline sample was available
Including 4 subjects where only a baseline sample was available
Including 114 subjects randomized to receive standard continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion treatment, without rHuPH20, for the period studied; as well as 7 subjects randomized to receive a treatment regimen containing rHuPH20 but where only baseline and early termination samples were available
Including 11 subjects where only a baseline sample was available
Including 65 subjects randomized to the IV arm, as well as 7 subjects where only a baseline sample was available
Note that this subject had previously participated in a trial of rHuPH20 and human IgG; however, during this previous trial immunogenicity monitoring was not performed. Hence, whether this subject was positive prior to any treatment with rHuPH20 is not known
Fig. 1a Maximum rHuPH20-reactive antibody titers observed prior to rHuPH20 exposure (“Baseline”) and in subjects first testing positive following rHuPH20 exposure (“Induced”). Observations for individual subjects with median and interquartile range are indicated. b Maximum fold titer increase in baseline-positive subjects following rHuPH20 exposure. Individual subject observations are indicated. Subjects with more than a 2-fold titer increase following rHuPH20 exposure were considered treatment-boosted (threshold indicated by gray line). Ten baseline-positive subjects that were never positive following rHuPH20 exposure are not included in this figure
Fig. 2Individual rHuPH20-binding antibody titers over time in the five subjects from trial 160603/902 who had maximum titers in excess of 5000. The shaded area in each panel indicates the period of rHuPH20 exposure. The titers of the single subject with a positive titer (of 160) prior to participating in this study are shown in panel a
Fig. 3a Onset of rHuPH20-reactive antibody boosting (see definition in legend for Fig. 1) in subjects testing positive for antibodies prior to treatment with rHuPH20 (“Baseline Boosted”) and in subjects first testing positive following rHuPH20 exposure (“Induced”). b Timing of maximum rHuPH20-reactive antibody titers in subjects testing positive for antibodies prior to treatment with rHuPH20 (“Baseline”) and subjects first testing positive following rHuPH20 exposure (“Induced”). Individual observations with median and interquartile range are indicated
Fig. 4Persistence of rHuPH20-reactive antibodies in subjects testing positive for antibodies prior to treatment with rHuPH20 (“Baseline”) and subjects first testing positive following rHuPH20 exposure (“Induced”). a Individual observations with median and interquartile range are indicated. b Percentage of subjects with “Persistent” antibodies according to the definition in (35) (first and last antibody-positive samples, irrespective of any negative samples in between, are separated by a period of 16 weeks or longer, or first antibody-positive sample is obtained less than 16 weeks before last sample obtained or end of study)
Summary of Adverse Events in Baxter Trials in Subjects Who Developed Anti-rHuPH20 Antibodies
| Adverse events data set | Severity | Before first positive anti-rHuPH20 titer | After first positive anti-rHuPH20 titer | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of events | Rate | Number of events | Rate | ||
| Total adverse events | Mild | 72 | 7.14 | 202 | 8.73 |
| Moderate | 56 | 5.55 | 55 | 2.38 | |
| Severe | 10 | 0.99 | 9 | 0.39 | |
| Total | 138 | 13.69 | 266 | 11.50 | |
| Systemic adverse events | Mild | 49 | 4.86 | 135 | 5.84 |
| Moderate | 35 | 3.47 | 51 | 2.20 | |
| Severe | 7 | 0.69 | 9 | 0.39 | |
| Total | 91 | 9.02 | 195 | 8.43 | |
| Local adverse events | Mild | 23 | 2.28 | 67 | 2.90 |
| Moderate | 21 | 2.08 | 4 | 0.17 | |
| Severe | 3 | 0.30 | 0 | 0.00 | |
| Total | 47 | 4.66 | 71 | 3.07 | |
Adverse events excluding infections
Rate = number of adverse events divided by number of years in the respective observation period, which includes 3683 and 8449 total cumulative subject days (10.08 and 23.13 total cumulative subject years) of observation prior to and following the first exposure to rHuPH20, respectively
Fig. 5Purification and characterization of rHuPH20-reactive antibodies from PID subjects with de novo positive antibody titers following exposure to rHuPH20 (treatment-induced, “TI”) as well as from the baseline-positive population with pre-existing rHuPH20 antibodies (baseline, “BL”). a Plasma titers at the time of antibody purification. b Lowest detectable concentration of purified rHuPH20-reactive antibodies in the ECL bridging assay. c Isotypes. d IgG subclasses. Observations from individual antibody preparations from four individuals each are indicated
Fig. 6Antibody cross-reactivity to endogenous PH20. a Representative example of results obtained in the ECL bridging competition assay with an individual rHuPH20-reactive antibody preparation when increasing concentrations of rHuPH20 or PH20 isolated from human sperm were included. b Resulting IC50 values calculated from individual antibody preparations. Open circles, rHuPH20-reactive antibodies from PID subjects with de novo positive antibody titers following exposure to rHuPH20. Closed circles, rHuPH20-reactive antibodies from the baseline-positive population