| Literature DB >> 30026135 |
Frank R Brennan1, Laura Andrews2, Antonio R Arulanandam3, Jorg Blumel4, Jim Fikes5, Christine Grimaldi6, Janice Lansita7, Lise I Loberg2, Tim MacLachlan8, Mark Milton8, Suezanne Parker9, Jay Tibbitts2, Jayanthi Wolf10, Krishna P Allamneni11.
Abstract
Nonclinical safety testing of biopharmaceuticals can present significant challenges to human risk assessment with these innovative and often complex drugs. Emerging topics in this field were discussed recently at the 2016 Annual US BioSafe General Membership meeting. The presentations and subsequent discussions from the main sessions are summarized. The topics covered included: (i) specialty biologics (oncolytic virus, gene therapy, and gene editing-based technologies), (ii) the value of non-human primates (NHPs) for safety assessment, (iii) challenges in the safety assessment of immuno-oncology drugs (T cell-dependent bispecifics, checkpoint inhibitors, and costimulatory agonists), (iv) emerging therapeutic approaches and modalities focused on microbiome, oligonucleotide, messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA) therapeutics, (v) first in human (FIH) dose selection and the minimum anticipated biological effect level (MABEL), (vi) an update on current regulatory guidelines, International Council for Harmonization (ICH) S1, S3a, S5, S9 and S11 and (vii) breakout sessions that focused on bioanalytical and PK/PD challenges with bispecific antibodies, cytokine release in nonclinical studies, determining adversity and NOAEL for biologics, the value of second species for toxicology assessment and what to do if there is no relevant toxicology species.Entities:
Keywords: Adversity; Biopharmaceuticals; Bispecifics; Cytokine release; Emerging therapies; Gene and cell therapies; Gene editing; Immune-oncology; Immunomodulation; Microbiome; Minimum anticipated biological effect level (MABEL); Monoclonal antibodies; No observed adverse effect level (NOAEL); Nonclinical safety; Nonclinical species selection; Oligonucleotide; Orphan drug; Pharmacodynamics (PD); Pharmacokinetics (PK); Recombinant proteins
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30026135 DOI: 10.1016/j.yrtph.2018.07.009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Regul Toxicol Pharmacol ISSN: 0273-2300 Impact factor: 3.271