| Literature DB >> 29110222 |
Li Xue1, Adrienne Clements-Egan2, Lakshmi Amaravadi3, Mary Birchler4, Boris Gorovits5, Meina Liang6, Heather Myler7, Shobha Purushothama8, Marta Starcevic Manning9, Crystal Sung3.
Abstract
Anti-drug antibodies (ADA) pose a potential risk to patient safety and efficacy and are routinely monitored during clinical trials. Pre-existing drug-reactive antibodies are present in patients without prior drug exposure and are defined by their ability to bind to a component of the drug. These pre-existing drug-reactive antibodies are frequently observed and could represent an adaptive immune response of an individual who has been previously exposed to antigens with structural similarities to the biotherapeutic. Clinical consequences of these antibodies can vary from no impact to adverse effects on patient safety, exposure, and efficacy, and are highly dependent on biotherapeutic modality, disease indications, and patient demographics. This paper describes how the immunogenicity risk assessment of a biotherapeutic integrates the existence of pre-existing drug-reactive antibodies, and provides recommendations for risk-based strategies to evaluate treatment-emergent ADA responses.Entities:
Keywords: anti-drug antibodies; clinical impact; pre-existing drug-reactive antibodies; risk assessment and mitigation
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29110222 DOI: 10.1208/s12248-017-0153-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AAPS J ISSN: 1550-7416 Impact factor: 4.009