| Literature DB >> 28475417 |
Fiona Sewell1, Kathryn Chapman1, Jessica Couch2, Maggie Dempster3, Shawn Heidel4, Lise Loberg5, Curtis Maier3, Timothy K Maclachlan6, Marque Todd7, Jan Willem van der Laan8,9.
Abstract
The market for biotherapeutic monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) is large and is growing rapidly. However, attrition poses a significant challenge for the development of mAbs, and for biopharmaceuticals in general, with large associated costs in resource and animal use. Termination of candidate mAbs may occur due to poor translation from preclinical models to human safety. It is critical that the industry addresses this problem to maintain productivity. Though attrition poses a significant challenge for pharmaceuticals in general, there are specific challenges related to the development of antibody-based products. Due to species specificity, non-human primates (NHP) are frequently the only pharmacologically relevant species for nonclinical safety and toxicology testing for the majority of antibody-based products, and therefore, as more mAbs are developed, increased NHP use is anticipated. The integration of new and emerging in vitro and in silico technologies, e.g., cell- and tissue-based approaches, systems pharmacology and modeling, have the potential to improve the human safety prediction and the therapeutic mAb development process, while reducing and refining animal use simultaneously. In 2014, to engage in open discussion about the challenges and opportunities for the future of mAb development, a workshop was held with over 60 regulators and experts in drug development, mechanistic toxicology and emerging technologies to discuss this issue. The workshop used industry case-studies to discuss the value of the in vivo studies and identify opportunities for in vitro technologies in human safety assessment. From these and continuing discussions it is clear that there are opportunities to improve safety assessment in mAb development using non-animal technologies, potentially reducing future attrition, and there is a shared desire to reduce animal use through minimised study design and reduced numbers of studies.Entities:
Keywords: 3Rs; Attrition; in vitro technologies; monoclonal antibodies (mAbs); safety assessment
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28475417 PMCID: PMC5524158 DOI: 10.1080/19420862.2017.1324376
Source DB: PubMed Journal: MAbs ISSN: 1942-0862 Impact factor: 5.857
Figure 1.Use of animals in mAb development and change in practice over time.
Questions for case studies addressed during the breakout sessions.
| 1. Were the effects observed in the preclinical studies conducted to support the first-in-human (FIH) study predictable based on the mechanism of action (MOA)? |
| a) Which effects were predictable based on the MOA? Please describe. |
| b) Which effects were not predictable? Please describe. |
| c) Could the non-predictable effects be attributed to either a) a background lesion in the animal used or b) a consequence of immunogenicity in the animal? |
| d) Do you think the use of a wider range of |
| i. If your response is yes, please describe in further detail. |
| ii. If your response is no, please describe the knowledge and data gaps, or other issues, which make such an |
| 2. Prediction of clinical dose/exposure: Could human serum levels/PK be predicted using |
| If your response is no: |
| i. Please describe the knowledge and data gaps, or other issues, which make such an approach problematic. |
| ii. What are your reasons for requiring data from NHPs to predict the clinical dose/exposure? |
| 3. Could this product have safely entered into clinical trials on the basis of |
| 4. What additional effects were observed in longer-term general toxicity studies that were not observed in the studies conducted to support the FIH study? |
| a) Which of the additional effects were predictable based on the MOA? Please describe. |
| b) Which effects were not predictable? Please describe. |
| c) Did the additional effects impact on clinical decision making during clinical development e.g., design of clinical studies (inclusion, exclusion criteria, clinical doses, clinical monitoring)? |
| 5. Could this product have progressed through clinical development and to registration on the basis of |
| a) If your response is no, could the use of |
| 6. If studies to assess toxicity to reproduction were conducted for the product, were the observed effects predictable based on the MOA? |
| a) Which effects were predictable based on the MOA? |
| b) Which effects were not predictable? |
| c) Could |
| 7. In your view are juvenile toxicity studies warranted for this product to support pediatric indications? |
| 8. Could a biosimilar product for this case study be developed fully |
In vivo studies for anti-ADAMTS-5.
| Species | Study | Dose/s | Group sex and size | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cynomolgus monkey | 4 week DRF | 0 mg/kg (iv and sc) | 3F/group | Minimal focal endocardial hemorrhage in the left ventricle in 2 of 3 monkeys in 300 mg/kg/dose |
| 30 mg/kg (sc)300 mg/kg (iv) | Uncertain relationship to test article due to high background incidence | |||
| Cynomolgus monkey | 8 week GLP toxicology | 0 mg/kg (iv and sc) | 3M+3F/group | No cardiac findings (including ECG and cardiac troponin) |
| 30 mg/kg (sc) | Abnormal fecal consistency and decreased inorganic phosphorus concentrations noted in monkeys given 300 mg/kg/dose | |||
| 100mg/kg (iv) | ||||
| 300 mg/kg (iv) | ||||
| Wistar Han rat | 4 week DRF | 0 mg/kg (iv and sc) | 4M/group 3M/group for TK | No noteworthy findings |
| 10 mg/kg (iv) | ||||
| 10 mg/kg (sc) | ||||
| 300 mg/kg (iv) | ||||
| Wistar Han rat | 8 week GLP toxicology | 0 mg/kg (iv and sc) | 10M+10F/group 3M+3F/group for TK | Decreased mean body weight gain and food consumption in males given ≥100 mg/kg/week iv. |
| 30 mg/kg (sc) | ||||
| 100mg/kg (iv) | ||||
| 300 mg/kg (iv) | ||||
| Cynomolgus monkey | Single Dose GLP Cardiovascular/Respiratory | 0 mg/kg (iv and sc) | 3F/group | Dose dependent ST segment elevation at 30 and 300 mg/kg on Days 1, 7, 14 and 21 |
| Jacketed ECG and telemetry device for arterial blood pressure | 30 mg/kg (sc) 300 mg/kg (iv) | Other ECG waveform abnormalities | ||
| – 30 mg/kg – intraventricular conduction delay and increased frequency of isolated premature ventricular contractions (PVCs, including bigeminy and couplets), occurring mainly on Day 1 | ||||
| – 300 mg/kg - increased frequency of isolated PVCs and 1 occurrence of R on T PVC on Days 1 and 7 | ||||
| ↑ in mean arterial pressure (MAP) | ||||
| – 30 mg/kg - increase on Day 21 with max. increase of ∼31 mmHg or 30% vs vehicle | ||||
| – 300 mg/kg - increase on Days 14 and 21 with max. increases of ∼23 mmHg or 22% vs vehicle. This dose also produced increased Cardiac Work with increases of 39–48% | ||||
| At ∼7 months post-dose (non-GLP), ST segment elevations still present | ||||
| – In heart tissue, there were no test article-related microscopic findings or differences in IHC for Connexin 43 (gap junctions), versican proteolytic fragments (ECM) or GSK2394002 | ||||
| – MAP was not evaluated because telemetry implants were no longer operational | ||||
| No consistent effects on HR or PR, QRS or QTc interval durations | ||||
| No effects on ventilatory parameters | ||||
| Wistar Han rat | Investigative Repeat Dose Cardiovascular | 0 mg/kg (iv) 300 mg/kg (iv) | 4M/group | Single dose at 300 mg/kg in conscious rat did not produce any waveform abnormalities or arrhythmias (including ST segment changes) or arterial pressure changes on Days 1, 8 or 15 (continuous 24 hr monitoring) |
| Telemetry device for arterial pressure, heart rate, ECG (intervals and waveform abnormalities/arrhythmias), and body temperature | ||||
| Cynomolgus monkey | Repeat Dose GLP Cardiovascular study to identify NOEL | 0 mg/kg (iv) | 3M+3F/group | 0.3 mg/kg |
| 0.3 mg/kg (iv) | – Increased MAP following the 3rd dose (up to 8 mmHg) | |||
| 3 mg/kg (iv) | – One monkey had multiple episodes (31) of non-sustained ventricular tachycardia (NSVT) following the 1st dose | |||
| Three mg/kg | ||||
| – Increased MAP following 2nd dose (up to 9 mmHg or 9% of vehicle) and throughout the remainder of the study (Day 70) | ||||
| – Decreased HR between 4–16 hrs following 1st and 2nd dose (up to 19 bpm or ∼13%) | ||||
| No evidence of ST segment elevation at 0.3 or 3 mg/kg | ||||
| Cynomolgus Monkey | Vehicle Investigative Study | Veh (iv) or Veh (iv) with 10X Tween™ 80 (0.2% w/v) or 10X | 4M+4F (cross over) | No arrhythmic effects with vehicle at 10X Tween™ 80 (0.2% w/v) or 10X |
All studies were conducted in accordance with the GSK Policy on the Care, Welfare and Treatment of Laboratory Animals and were reviewed the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee either at GSK or by the ethical review process at the institution where the work was performed.
In vitro studies for anti-ADAMTS-5.
| Species | Study | Findings |
|---|---|---|
| Rabbit | Rabbit cardiac wedge assay | No arrhythmogenic activity or ST segment elevation observed at concentrations up to 500 µg/mL |
| Human | Human CV ion channel assays (hERG, NaV1.5 and CaV1.2) | No difference from vehicle at concentrations up to 500 µg/mL (note – acetate inhibited NaV1.5) |
| Selectivity profiling | Fully selective for ADAMTS-5 within class (ADAMTS family and MMPs) | |
| ProtoArray™ screen (>9400 proteins) – Only specific binding to ADAMTS5 observed | ||
| Tissue cross reactivity – no signal, anti-ADAMTS-5 not a good immunohistochemistry reagent |
Figure 2.Dose-dependent ST segment elevation with anti-ADAMTS-5 in cynomolgus monkey.
In vivo studies for anti-DLL4 IgG1 mAb.
| Species | Study | Dose/s | Group sex and size | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sprague Dawley rat | 8 week GLP toxicology | 0 mg/kg (iv) | 10M+10F/group and 5M+5F recovery/group and 6M+6F TK satellites/group | Liver findings: Hepatic centrilobular to bridging sinusoidal dilation |
| 1 mg/kg (iv) | Decreased red blood cells (monitorable) | |||
| 3 mg/kg (iv) | Proliferative vascular neoplasms | |||
| 10 mg/kg (iv) | – Skin, lung, and heart lesions seen only in rats | |||
| 30 mg/kg (iv) | ||||
| Cynomolgus monkey | 8 week GLP toxicology with 12 week recovery | 0 mg/kg (iv) | 3M+3F/group and 2M+2F recovery/group and 2M+2F for telemetry on the control and high dose group | Liver findings: Hepatic centrilobular to bridging sinusoidal dilation |
| 0.2 mg/kg (iv) | Decreased red blood cells (monitorable) | |||
| 0.8 mg/kg (iv) | ||||
| 3 mg/kg (iv) | ||||
| 12 mg/kg (iv) |
In vivo studies for anti-DLL4 Fab’2 fragment.
| Species | Study | Dose/s | Group sex and size | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sprague Dawley rat | 8 week GLP toxicology | 0 mg/kg (iv) | 10M+10F/group and 5M+5F recovery/group and 6M+6F TK satellites/group | Liver findings: Decreased severity compared with IgG, minimal changes observed at low doses (up to 10 mg/kg) |
| 3 mg/kg (iv) | Acceptable hematology profile | |||
| 10 mg/kg (iv) | Proliferative vascular neoplasms not observed | |||
| 100 mg/kg (iv) | New findings: Vascular proliferative/degenerative changes in the heart and lung potentially related to pulmonary hypertension | |||
| 30 mg/kg (iv) | ||||
| Cynomolgus monkey | 8 week GLP toxicology with 12 week recovery | 0 mg/kg (iv) | 3M+3F/group and 2M+2F recovery/group and 2M+2F for telemetry on the control and high dose group | Liver findings: Decreased severity compared with IgG |
| 5 mg/kg (iv) | Acceptable hematology profile | |||
| 15 mg/kg (iv) | New findings: Vascular proliferative/degenerative changes in the heart and lung potentially related to pulmonary hypertension | |||
| 50 mg/kg (iv) |
In vivo studies for anti-amyloid β mAb.
| Species | Study | Dose/s | Group sex and size | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| APP-transgenic mouse model | Histopathological evaluation of select tissues in a pharmacology study. | 0.5 mg/mouse/ week (ip) | 15M/group; 7-11 animals/group available for histopathological evaluation | Histological changes (neoplasia, renal changes, degenerative joint disease, skeletal muscle de/re-generation) were considered due to aging or potential background changes in mouse strain and not due to antibody treatment. |
| APP-transgenic mouse model | 4 week GLP toxicology | 0 mg/kg (iv and sc) | 12M+12F/group and 6M+6F recovery/group and 18M+18F TK satellites/group. Plus additional TK groups for control and 200 mg/kg (iv) with 12 weeks treatment. | Up to 200 mg/kg for 4 weeks was well tolerated. 200 mg/kg for 12 weeks was well tolerated in animals for TK analysis. Anti-drug antibodies were detected in 62% of antibody-dosed animals. |
| 60 mg/kg (iv) | NOAEL = 200 mg/kg. | |||
| 200 mg/kg (sc) | ||||
| 200 mg/kg (iv) | ||||
| Cynomolgus monkey | PK study | 5 mg/kg single dose (iv and sc) | t ½ ∼8 d. Low clearance and volume of distribution. No adverse or notable effects observed. | |
| Cynomolgus monkey | 13 week GLP toxicology | 0 mg/kg (iv and sc) | 5M+5F | Low doses (20 and 60 mg/kg): Thrombocytopenia (decreased platelets), pulmonary vasculature changes (medial hypertrophy, thrombosis), lung findings (multifocal hemorrhages, interstitial fibrosis). |
| 20 mg/kg (iv) | 120 mg/kg (iv) 1M | High doses (120 and 200 mg/kg): Acute infusion reaction (5-10 min post-dose) with lethal consequence at 200 mg/kg. | ||
| 60 mg/kg (iv and sc) | 200 mg/kg (iv) 4M | |||
| 120 mg/kg (iv) | ||||
| 200 mg/kg (iv) | ||||
| Cynomolgus monkey | Exploratory toxicity study | 0 mg/kg (iv bolus) | 1M+1F | IV infusion (1 hour) produced a less severe acute infusion reaction compared with iv bolus administration at the same dose level. Acute infusion reaction ≥ 60 mg/kg included complement activation. No effects on cytokines, coagulation factors or ECG's. Histopathologic effects observable after 4 weeks of dosing (thrombotic and/or arterial changes in brain, lung and injection sites). |
| 2 mg/kg (iv bolus) | NOAEL = 2 mg/kg | |||
| 60 mg/kg (iv bolus) | ||||
| 120 mg/kg (iv infusion or bolus) | ||||
| 200 mg/kg (iv infusion) |
In vitro studies for anti-amyloid β mAb.
| Species | Study | Findings |
|---|---|---|
| Human | Cytokine release | Cytokine release assay in whole human blood (IL-1ra, IL-1b, IL-6, hTNFa, IL-8) was positive for IL-8 release at ≥ 10 µg/mL. |
| Human | PBMC binding | No PBMC staining at 10 or 30 µg/mL. |
| Human, cynomolgus monkey, Tg mice (3 donors each) | Tissue cross-reactivity with FITC-labeled Ab (GLP) | No noticeable binding. |
| Human and cynomolgus monkey | Platelet binding (FACS) | No binding to platelets in human blood (Fc mutation and wt alike). |
| Human, cynomolgus monkey, mouse and rat | Serum binding (ELISA) | Concentration-dependent binding to serum component of species tested (Fc mutation and wt alike). No binding of murine Ab to any species. Binding to serum component is not CDR/target mediated; suggests that binding is not Fc mediated. |
Summary of case-study data and the ability of existing in vitro and in silico technologies to detect or predict toxicities observed in the in vivo studies.
| Anti-ADAMTS-5 mAb | Anti-DLL4 mAb | Anti-amyloid β mAb | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Were findings based on the mechanism of action of the mAb? | Yes | Yes | No |
| Were findings predictable? | Although cardiovascular binding was detected the toxicological effects were not predictable | Some findings were predictable but additional clinically relevant findings were detected that were not predictable | No |
| Is an | Not for hemodynamics or secondary effects (e.g., extracellular matrix interactions) | Generally no, due to the need to model paracrine effects between multiple cell types | After off-target binding was identified, |
| What was the impact of the | Clinically relevant toxicity was only identified in the stand alone safety pharmacology study | Data from | Data from the NHP study identified cross-reactivity that would not have been identified in mouse, rat or dog. Clinical studies in humans were not conducted with this antibody. |