Literature DB >> 33200296

Comparison of the ELISA and ECL Assay for Vedolizumab Anti-drug Antibodies: Assessing the Impact on Pharmacokinetics and Safety Outcomes of the Phase 3 GEMINI Trials.

Timothy Wyant1,2, Lili Yang3, Maria Rosario4.   

Abstract

Vedolizumab immunogenicity has been assessed using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) with a ~ 0.5 μg/mL drug interference, which may underestimate on-drug immunogenicity. We aimed to compare immunogenicity results between ELISA and the new drug-tolerant electrochemiluminescence (ECL) assay (and the two versions of neutralizing assays, drug-sensitive versus drug-tolerant). The ECL assay drug tolerance is ~ 100 times higher than that of the ELISA (≥ 50 μg/mL vs. 0.5 μg/mL with a 500 ng/mL positive control), and assay sensitivity is < 5 ng/mL for both assays. Vedolizumab immunogenicity was assessed in 2000 GEMINI 1 and 2 patients originally tested by ELISA and retested by ECL assay. Anti-drug antibody (ADA) impact on infusion-related reactions and pharmacokinetics (PK) was examined using descriptive statistics and population PK analyses. By ECL assay, 6% (86/1427) of patients treated with vedolizumab as induction and maintenance therapy tested ADA-positive. Of these, 20 patients were persistently positive and 56 had neutralizing antibodies. By ELISA, 4% (56/1434) of these patients were ADA-positive, 9 were persistently positive, and 33 had neutralizing antibodies. Among 61 patients with infusion-related reactions, 6 (10%) were ADA-positive (2 persistently positive) by ECL assay. By ELISA, 3 (5%) patients were both ADA-positive and persistently positive. Most results (96%) were similar with both assays. In the updated population PK model, ADA-positive status was estimated to increase vedolizumab linear clearance by a factor of 1.10 (95% credible interval 1.03-1.17), which is consistent with previous reports. The impact of ADA on safety and PK modeling remained generally consistent using either ELISA or ECL assay. ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT00783718 and NCT00783692.

Entities:  

Keywords:  ELISA; electrochemiluminescence; immunogenicity; vedolizumab

Year:  2020        PMID: 33200296      PMCID: PMC7669784          DOI: 10.1208/s12248-020-00518-0

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  AAPS J        ISSN: 1550-7416            Impact factor:   4.009


INTRODUCTION

Biologic therapies can trigger the formation of anti-drug antibodies (ADAs), an immune reaction identified as a contributor to loss of therapeutic response (1). As such, it is important to understand the extent to which biologic therapies induce an immunogenic response and whether immunogenicity has an adverse impact on pharmacokinetics (PK), safety, or efficacy. Vedolizumab is a humanized recombinant monoclonal antibody that specifically binds to the α4β7 integrin and prevents the recruitment of α4β7 integrin leucocytes to the gut (2). Vedolizumab safety and efficacy are well established from multiple clinical (3,4) and real-world (5) studies, and it is approved for the treatment of moderately to severely active ulcerative colitis (UC) and Crohn’s disease (CD) (6–9). Pivotal vedolizumab phase 3, randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind studies included GEMINI 1 (NCT00783718) in UC and GEMINI 2 (NCT00783692) and 3 (NCT01224171) in CD (3,4,10). Vedolizumab immunogenicity was initially assessed in patients from GEMINI 1 and GEMINI 2 using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), which was state of the art at the time (11). Fifty-six of 1434 patients evaluated (4%) demonstrated vedolizumab ADA positivity at any time during the studies. Nine patients were considered persistently ADA-positive (defined as positive ADA in 2 or more consecutive samples), and 33 patients developed neutralizing antibodies (11). However, based on the assay validation, it was known that the presence of ~ 0.5 to 1 μg/mL vedolizumab with 500 ng/mL ADA-positive control in the serum interferes with the ELISA. As a result, it is possible that the on-drug immunogenicity rates may have been underestimated. An acid dissociation electrochemiluminescence (ECL) ADA assay with a higher drug tolerance to detect ADAs in the presence of vedolizumab was developed and used to reassess vedolizumab immunogenicity in these patients. In addition, a more drug-tolerant ECL assay was developed to detect neutralizing ADAs to further characterize the confirmed positive ADA samples. Here, we present updated combined GEMINI 1 and GEMINI 2 vedolizumab immunogenicity results as assessed with improved ECL ADA assays and compare the magnitude of the impact on immunogenicity between the drug-tolerant and drug-sensitive assays.

MATERIALS AND METHODS

Immunogenicity Analyses

Vedolizumab ADAs were initially measured using an ELISA with a drug tolerance of 0.5 μg/mL vedolizumab at 500 ng/mL positive control (affinity purified rabbit anti-vedolizumab antibodies) and ≤ 20 μg/mL vedolizumab at 5 μg/mL positive control and assay sensitivity of 0.44 ng/mL. As an alternative to the traditional ELISA previously used to analyze vedolizumab immunogenicity (12,13), our team (Takeda Pharmaceuticals International Inc., Cambridge, MA) developed a new ADA assay using acid dissociation ECL. This new assay has a drug tolerance of at least 50 μg/mL vedolizumab with 500 ng/mL positive control, ≤ 25 μg/mL vedolizumab with 100 ng/mL positive control, and ≤ 5 μg/mL vedolizumab with 10 ng/mL positive control. Relative assay sensitivity using a positive control was 3.9 ng/mL, with inter- and intra-assay coefficients of variability for positive control and negative controls (a pooled human serum) < 25%. All available banked serum samples from GEMINI 1 and GEMINI 2 were tested for the presence of ADAs, followed by confirmation and titration in ECL and ELISA (Table I), and results were then compared between the two assays.
Table I

GEMINI 1 and GEMINI 2 Patients and Serum Samples Analyzed Using the ECL Assay and the ELISA

GEMINI 1GEMINI 2
ECL assay, tested/totalELISA, tested/totalECL assay, tested/totalELISA, tested/total
Patients, n/N893/895894/8951107/11151115/1115
  Maintenance study ITT, n
    Placebo (from week 6)126126152153
    Vedolizumab Q8W122122154154
    Vedolizumab Q4W125125154154
  Non-ITT, n
    Placebo (from week 0)147148148148
    Vedolizumab Q4W (week 6 nonresponders)373373499506
  Combined, n
    Continuous vedolizumab620620807814
Serum samples, n/N4326a/44544454/44545180b/54205420/5420

ECL electrochemiluminescence, ELISA enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, ITT intent to treat, Q4W every 4 weeks, Q8W every 8 weeks

Three serum samples did not have sufficient volume for analysis

Two serum samples did not have sufficient volume for analysis

GEMINI 1 and GEMINI 2 Patients and Serum Samples Analyzed Using the ECL Assay and the ELISA ECL electrochemiluminescence, ELISA enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, ITT intent to treat, Q4W every 4 weeks, Q8W every 8 weeks Three serum samples did not have sufficient volume for analysis Two serum samples did not have sufficient volume for analysis Immunogenicity was evaluated by the ADA and neutralizing antibody status. Positive or negative ADA status was determined according to the definitions previously established to assess ELISA results, wherein samples that were positive in both the screening and confirmatory assays were designated as positive (14). ADA transient positive was defined as a patient who had tested ADA-positive at least once at any time during the treatment or post-treatment periods. ADA persistent positive was defined as a patient who had tested ADA-positive on at least two sequential time points during the treatment or post-treatment periods.

Detection of ADA by ELISA (Screening, Confirmation, and Titer Assessment)

A qualitative bridging assay format was used. The plate was pre-coated with vedolizumab, and the immobilized vedolizumab captured the ADA in serum samples, followed by biotinylated-vedolizumab and HRP-labeled streptavidin. When incubated with tetramethylbenzidine substrate, positive color development indicated the presence of ADAs in the samples.

Detection of Neutralizing ADA by a Cell-Based Assay

Samples confirmed ADA-positive by ELISA were subsequently analyzed for neutralizing ability against vedolizumab using the cell line RPM18866 (human myelogenous leukemia, lymphocyte B cell line) that expresses vedolizumab’s target α4β7 on the cell surface. In the absence of any neutralizing antibodies, addition of a biotinylated-vedolizumab resulted in specific binding of vedolizumab to the cell surface. This bound drug was detected by the addition of streptavidin-PE, which also binds to the bound biotinylated vedolizumab, and evaluated on a flow cytometer. Mean fluorescent intensity (MFI) expression correlated to the amount of bound drug on the cell surface. The presence of neutralizing antibodies in the patient serum prevented biotinylated vedolizumab from binding to the RPM18866 cell surface. A reduction of the MFI as compared to the MFI of negative control serum sample indicated neutralization.

Detection of ADA by ECL Assay (Screening, Confirmation, and Titer Assessment)

Patient serum samples, positive controls, and negative controls were first diluted and incubated with 300 mM acetic acid (pH 3), followed by a neutralization step containing 1 M TRIS buffer (pH 9.5), biotinylated vedolizumab, and SULFO-TAG-vedolizumab (SULFO-TAG is a product of Meso Scale Discovery). The samples were incubated on a polypropylene microtiter plate. During this time, ADA bound to both the biotinylated vedolizumab and SULFO-TAG-vedolizumab formed an antibody-drug complex bridge. After incubation, the mixture was added to the wells of a blocked streptavidin-coated MSD plate, which allowed biotin-drug-Ab-SULFO-TAG drug complexes to bind to the streptavidin-coated plate. After washing, tripropylamine-containing read buffer was added, and the chemiluminescent signal was measured in relative light unit by a SECTOR Imager 600/6000 instrument.

Detection of Neutralizing ADA by a Plate-Based Assay

Samples confirmed ADA-positive by ECL assay were subsequently analyzed in a new drug-tolerant neutralizing assay in which ADAs in patient serum samples were captured by biotinylated vedolizumab that was bound to a streptavidin-coated plate. After washing, the bound ADA was released with an acid dissociation step. The extracted ADAs were incubated with SULFO-TAG-vedolizumab before transferring to a α4β7-coated MSD plate. The tripropylamine-containing buffer was used for ECL signal detection. A decreased signal when compared with the negative control serum samples indicated the presence of neutralizing ADA.

Study Design

GEMINI 1 was a phase 3, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study consisting of separate induction and maintenance phases in patients with moderately to severely active UC (3). The induction phase included 2 patient cohorts: in cohort 1, patients were randomly assigned to receive vedolizumab or placebo, and cohort 2 received open-label vedolizumab. Patients from either cohort who demonstrated clinical response to vedolizumab at week 6 were re-randomized to receive vedolizumab every 8 weeks (Q8W) and every 4 weeks (Q4W) or placebo up to week 52 beginning at week 6 (maintenance intent-to-treat [ITT] population). GEMINI 2 was a similarly designed trial in patients with moderately to severely active CD (4). Efficacy and safety outcomes have been previously reported (3,4). In GEMINI 1 and GEMINI 2, patient blood samples were collected at weeks 0 (predose), 6, 14, 26, 38, 52 (or early termination), and 66 (final safety visit for patients not enrolled in the extended access program) (15). Patients were grouped based on vedolizumab treatment duration in GEMINI 1 and GEMINI 2. The first group included patients who never received vedolizumab (true placebo), that is, those who were randomized to placebo beginning at week 0 and did not receive vedolizumab in either the induction or maintenance phases (n = 297). The second group was the placebo (ITT) group, which consisted of patients who received only 2 doses of vedolizumab during the induction phase and were then randomized to receive placebo (n = 279). The third group consisted of patients who received vedolizumab up to week 52, that is, those who were maintained on open-label vedolizumab Q4W (n = 879), and from the ITT population who received vedolizumab Q8W (n = 276) or vedolizumab Q4W (n = 279) during maintenance. Overall, the combined vedolizumab group included the 1434 patients who received vedolizumab during both the induction and maintenance phases. Patients in GEMINI 1 and GEMINI 2 were monitored for acute infusion-related reactions during and after infusions. Adverse events assessed by the investigator as infusion-related reactions were recorded. Vedolizumab has a half-life of ~ 25 days, and the week 66 time point was approximately 4.5 to 5 half-lives after the last dose of vedolizumab at week 50. Therefore, vedolizumab concentration was anticipated to be below the assay interference level, and this time point provided an opportunity to determine an “off-drug” rate for immunogenicity. Among patients with samples that had been previously analyzed by ELISA, samples from 2000 out of 2009 patients were available for reanalysis using the ECL assay (Table I).

Population Pharmacokinetic Model Reanalysis

The impact of ADAs as a covariate that may affect clearance of vedolizumab was assessed using a previously reported population PK model (12) that was reanalyzed with the GEMINI 1 and GEMINI 2 immunogenicity samples. The population PK analysis of the repeated measures was conducted using a qualified installation of Nonlinear Mixed Effects Modelling (NONMEM®), version 7.3 (ICON Development Solutions, Hanover, MD). The previous final population PK model was fit to the data using the full Bayesian Markov Chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) method. The same Bayesian prior probability distributions that were specified in the previous model were used. In brief, informative priors were defined for maximum elimination rate (Vmax), concentration at half-maximum elimination rate (Km), peripheral volume of distribution (Vp), and intercompartmental clearance (Q), whereas uninformative (vague) priors were defined for the remaining fixed-effect parameters (structural PK parameters and covariate coefficients) and interindividual random-effect parameters in the model. Covariates included body weight, age, sex, serum albumin, vedolizumab ADA status, fecal calprotectin, disease activity scores (Crohn’s Disease Activity Index and Mayo score, both partial and complete), prior anti-tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-α treatment, disease (CD and UC), and adjuvant therapy (methotrexate, azathioprine, 6-mercaptopurine, and aminosalicylates). Pre- and post-processing of model input/output and analysis scripting was programmed using version 3.2.3 of R (16).

RESULTS

ADA Status

Banked samples from 2000 patients treated with placebo for induction and maintenance (n = 295), vedolizumab for induction then placebo for maintenance (n = 278), or vedolizumab for both induction and maintenance (n = 1427) were reanalyzed in this study (Table I). ADA status using the new, more drug-tolerant ECL assay is presented in Table II, and the results obtained using the ELISA are presented in Table III. Among the 1427 patients who received vedolizumab continuously during induction and maintenance and had an immunogenicity sample available, 86 (6%) were ADA-positive with the ECL assay at any time during or after study treatment; 66 were transiently ADA-positive and 20 persistently ADA-positive. Fifty-six patients (4%) developed neutralizing antibodies (Table II). At week 66, 45 of 310 patients (15%) had positive ADAs.
Table II

GEMINI 1 and GEMINI 2 Patient Vedolizumab ADA Status Using the ECL Assay.

Maintenance study ITT2aNon-ITTCombined
Placebob (from week 6)Vedolizumab Q8WVedolizumab Q4WPlaceboc (from week 0)Vedolizumab Q4W (week 6 nonresponders)Continuous vedolizumabd
ADA status up to week 52, n (%)N= 278N= 276N= 279N= 295N= 872N= 1427
ADA negative218 (78)259 (94)269 (96)287 (97)813 (92)1341 (94)
ADA positive60 (22)17 (6)10 (4)8 (3)59 (7)86 (6)
  Transiently positive1212814666
  Persistently positive485271320
  Any neutralizing ADA positivee4610434256
ADA status at week 66,f n (%)N = 24N = 26N = 35N = 44N = 249N = 310
  ADA positive3 (13)5 (19)3 (9)037 (15)45 (15)

Not all patients had evaluable samples. N = total number of patients with samples tested in each treatment group. Proportions are based on nonmissing values

ADA vedolizumab anti-drug antibody, ECL electrochemiluminescence, ITT intent to treat, Q4W every 4 weeks, Q8W every 8 weeks

Patients who were responders to vedolizumab induction at week 6 and were randomized into the maintenance-phase ITT population

Patients who received vedolizumab during induction and were randomized to placebo at the maintenance phase

Patients who were randomized to placebo at both the induction and maintenance phases

All patients who received induction and maintenance vedolizumab, including week 6 responders who were randomized to vedolizumab in the maintenance phase plus patients who did not respond at week 6 and received maintenance vedolizumab Q4W

Neutralizing ADA with no reportable titer was considered missing (i.e., no detectable positive neutralizing ADA was present in the sample)

Week 66 was the final safety visit and approximately 4.5 to 5 half-lives after the last dose of vedolizumab; 310 samples were available for this analysis

Table III

GEMINI 1 and GEMINI 2 Patient Vedolizumab ADA Status Using the ELISA

Maintenance study ITTaNon-ITTCombined
Placebob (from week 6)Vedolizumab Q8WVedolizumab Q4WPlaceboc (from week 0)Vedolizumab Q4W (week 6 nonresponders)Continuous vedolizumabd
ADA status up to week 52, n (%)N = 279N = 276N = 279N = 296N = 879N = 1434
ADA negative234 (84)268 (97)276 (99)288 (97)834 (95)1378 (96)
ADA positive45 (16)8 (3)3 (1)8 (3)45 (5)56 (4)
  Transiently positive146333847
  Persistently positive3120579
  Any neutralizing ADA positivee244342633
ADA status at week 66,f n (%)N = 24N = 26N = 35N = 47N = 259N = 320
  ADA positive2 (8)4 (15)1 (3)027 (10)32 (10)

Not all patients had evaluable samples. N = total number of patients with samples tested in each treatment group. Proportions are based on nonmissing values

ADA vedolizumab anti-drug antibody, ELISA enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, ITT intent to treat, Q4W every 4 weeks, Q8W every 8 weeks

Patients who were responders to vedolizumab induction at week 6 and were randomized into the maintenance-phase ITT population

Patients who received vedolizumab during induction and were randomized to placebo at the maintenance phase

Patients who were randomized to placebo at both the induction and maintenance phases

All patients who received induction and maintenance vedolizumab, including week 6 responders who were randomized to vedolizumab in the maintenance phase plus patients who did not respond at week 6 and received maintenance vedolizumab Q4W

Samples positive for neutralizing ADAs with no reportable titer were considered missing (i.e., no detectable positive neutralizing ADA was present in the sample)

Week 66 was the final safety visit and approximately 4.5 to 5 half-lives after the last dose of vedolizumab; 320 samples were available for this analysis

GEMINI 1 and GEMINI 2 Patient Vedolizumab ADA Status Using the ECL Assay. Not all patients had evaluable samples. N = total number of patients with samples tested in each treatment group. Proportions are based on nonmissing values ADA vedolizumab anti-drug antibody, ECL electrochemiluminescence, ITT intent to treat, Q4W every 4 weeks, Q8W every 8 weeks Patients who were responders to vedolizumab induction at week 6 and were randomized into the maintenance-phase ITT population Patients who received vedolizumab during induction and were randomized to placebo at the maintenance phase Patients who were randomized to placebo at both the induction and maintenance phases All patients who received induction and maintenance vedolizumab, including week 6 responders who were randomized to vedolizumab in the maintenance phase plus patients who did not respond at week 6 and received maintenance vedolizumab Q4W Neutralizing ADA with no reportable titer was considered missing (i.e., no detectable positive neutralizing ADA was present in the sample) Week 66 was the final safety visit and approximately 4.5 to 5 half-lives after the last dose of vedolizumab; 310 samples were available for this analysis GEMINI 1 and GEMINI 2 Patient Vedolizumab ADA Status Using the ELISA Not all patients had evaluable samples. N = total number of patients with samples tested in each treatment group. Proportions are based on nonmissing values ADA vedolizumab anti-drug antibody, ELISA enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, ITT intent to treat, Q4W every 4 weeks, Q8W every 8 weeks Patients who were responders to vedolizumab induction at week 6 and were randomized into the maintenance-phase ITT population Patients who received vedolizumab during induction and were randomized to placebo at the maintenance phase Patients who were randomized to placebo at both the induction and maintenance phases All patients who received induction and maintenance vedolizumab, including week 6 responders who were randomized to vedolizumab in the maintenance phase plus patients who did not respond at week 6 and received maintenance vedolizumab Q4W Samples positive for neutralizing ADAs with no reportable titer were considered missing (i.e., no detectable positive neutralizing ADA was present in the sample) Week 66 was the final safety visit and approximately 4.5 to 5 half-lives after the last dose of vedolizumab; 320 samples were available for this analysis In comparison, with the ELISA, 56 of 1434 patients (4%) who received vedolizumab continuously as part of GEMINI 1 or GEMINI 2 were ADA-positive. Of those 56 patients, 47 were transiently ADA-positive, 9 were persistently ADA-positive, and 33 were positive for neutralizing antibodies (Table III). At week 66, 32/320 (10%) patients with samples available for analysis were ADA-positive (15). Similar to a previous report using the ELISA for ADA detection (13), patients who only received 2 doses of vedolizumab during induction and then placebo during maintenance phase had the highest incidence of ADA-positive samples (Tables II and III). Using the ECL assay, 60 of 278 (22%) patients were ADA-positive at any time during or after study treatment; 12 patients were transiently ADA-positive, 48 were persistently ADA-positive, and 46 (17%) were positive for neutralizing antibodies (Table II). In comparison, the ELISA detected ADA-positive samples in 45 of 279 (16%) patients, among whom 14 were transiently ADA-positive, 31 were persistently ADA-positive, and 24 were positive for neutralizing antibodies (Table III). For patients (n = 1427) who had available results from both the ELISA and ECL assays, 1375 (96%) had similar ADA status, and 4% changed ADA status between the two assays (Table IV). Among the patients who showed differences in ADA status, 41 of 52 patients changed from negative by ELISA to positive by ECL assay, and 11 patients changed from positive by ELISA to negative by ECL assay. Of these 11 patients, 10 were transiently positive and only 1 was persistently positive by ELISA.
Table IV

Overall ADA Status for ELISA versus ECL Assay (continuous vedolizumab)a

ECL
ELISANegativePositive
Negative1330 (93)41 (3)
Positive11 (1)45 (3)

Only patients who had results from both the original and new assays are included

Italicized values indicate that ADA status changed between the ELISA and ECL assay

ADA anti-drug antibodies, ECL electrochemiluminescence, ELISA enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, Q4W every 4 weeks

All patients who received induction and maintenance vedolizumab, including week 6 responders who were randomized to vedolizumab in the maintenance phase plus patients who did not respond at week 6 and received maintenance vedolizumab Q4W

Overall ADA Status for ELISA versus ECL Assay (continuous vedolizumab)a Only patients who had results from both the original and new assays are included Italicized values indicate that ADA status changed between the ELISA and ECL assay ADA anti-drug antibodies, ECL electrochemiluminescence, ELISA enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, Q4W every 4 weeks All patients who received induction and maintenance vedolizumab, including week 6 responders who were randomized to vedolizumab in the maintenance phase plus patients who did not respond at week 6 and received maintenance vedolizumab Q4W Among the 1434 patients initially analyzed with ELISA and 1427 patients reanalyzed with ECL assay who were treated with vedolizumab during GEMINI 1 or GEMINI 2 induction and maintenance phases, 61 (4%) had an adverse event assessed by the investigator as an infusion-related reaction. With the ECL essay, 6 (10%) of these patients were ADA-positive, with 2 persistently ADA-positive (Table V). In comparison, with the ELISA, 3 of 61 (5%) patients were ADA-positive and all 3 were persistently ADA-positive (Table VI).
Table V

Infusion-Related Reactions and Immunogenicity Status of Patients During Vedolizumab Maintenance in GEMINI 1 and GEMINI 2 Using the ECL Assay

Maintenance study ITTaNon-ITTCombined
AEs defined by the investigator as infusion-related reactions (yes/no), n (%)Placebob (from week 6)Vedolizumab Q8WVedolizumab Q4WPlaceboc (from week 0)Vedolizumab Q4W (week 6 nonresponders)Continuous vedolizumabd
N = 278N = 276N = 279N = 295N = 872N = 1427
Yes8121893161
  ADA negative5 (63)9 (75)18 (100)9 (100)28 (90)55 (90)
  ADA positive3 (38)3 (25)003 (10)6 (10)
    Transiently positive120024
    Persistently positive210012
    Any neutralizing ADA positivee230025
No2702642612868411366
  ADA negative213 (79)250 (95)251 (96)278 (97)785 (93)1286 (94)
  ADA positive57 (21)14 (5)10 (4)8 (3)56 (7)80 (6)
    Transiently positive1110814462
    Persistently positive464271218
    Any neutralizing ADA positivee447434051

Not all patients had evaluable samples. N = total number of patients with samples tested in each treatment group. Proportions are based on nonmissing values.

AE adverse event, ADA vedolizumab anti-drug antibody, ECL electrochemiluminescence, ITT intent to treat, Q4W every 4 weeks, Q8W every 8 weeks

Patients who were responders to vedolizumab induction at week 6 and were randomized into the maintenance-phase ITT population

Patients who received vedolizumab during induction and were randomized to placebo at the maintenance phase

Patients who were randomized to placebo at both the induction and maintenance phases

All patients who received induction and maintenance vedolizumab, including week 6 responders who were randomized to vedolizumab in the maintenance phase plus patients who did not respond at week 6 and received maintenance vedolizumab Q4W

Samples positive for neutralizing ADAs with no reportable titer were considered missing (i.e., no detectable positive neutralizing ADA was present in the sample)

Table VI

Infusion-Related Reactions and Immunogenicity Status of Patients During Vedolizumab Maintenance in GEMINI 1 and GEMINI 2 Using ELISA

AEs defined by the investigator as infusion-related reactions (yes/no), n (%)Maintenance study ITTaNon-ITTCombined
Placebob (from week 6)Vedolizumab Q8WVedolizumab Q4WPlaceboc (from week 0)Vedolizumab Q4W (week 6 nonresponders)Continuous vedolizumabd
N = 279N = 276N = 279N = 296N = 879N = 1434
Yes8121893161
  ADA negative7 (88)11 (92)18 (100)9 (100)29 (94)58 (95)
  ADA positive1 (13)1 (8)002 (6)3 (5)
    Transiently positive000000
    Persistently positive110023
    Any neutralizing ADA positivee000022
No2712642612878481373
  ADA negative227 (84)257 (97)258 (99)279 (97)805 (95)1320 (96)
  ADA positive44 (16)7 (3)3 (1)8 (3)43 (5)53 (4)
    Transiently positive146333847
    Persistently positive3010556
    Any neutralizing ADA positivee244342431

Not all patients had evaluable samples. N = total number of patients with samples tested in each treatment group. Proportions are based on nonmissing values

AE adverse event, ADA vedolizumab anti-drug antibody, ELISA enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, ITT intent to treat, Q4W every 4 weeks, Q8W every 8 weeks

Patients who were responders to vedolizumab induction at week 6 and were randomized into the maintenance-phase ITT population

Patients who received vedolizumab during induction and were randomized to placebo at the maintenance phase

Patients who were randomized to placebo at both the induction and maintenance phases

All patients who received induction and maintenance vedolizumab, including week 6 responders who were randomized to vedolizumab in the maintenance phase plus patients who did not respond at week 6 and received maintenance vedolizumab Q4W

Samples positive for neutralizing ADA with no reportable titer were considered missing (i.e., no detectable positive neutralizing ADA was present in the sample)

Infusion-Related Reactions and Immunogenicity Status of Patients During Vedolizumab Maintenance in GEMINI 1 and GEMINI 2 Using the ECL Assay Not all patients had evaluable samples. N = total number of patients with samples tested in each treatment group. Proportions are based on nonmissing values. AE adverse event, ADA vedolizumab anti-drug antibody, ECL electrochemiluminescence, ITT intent to treat, Q4W every 4 weeks, Q8W every 8 weeks Patients who were responders to vedolizumab induction at week 6 and were randomized into the maintenance-phase ITT population Patients who received vedolizumab during induction and were randomized to placebo at the maintenance phase Patients who were randomized to placebo at both the induction and maintenance phases All patients who received induction and maintenance vedolizumab, including week 6 responders who were randomized to vedolizumab in the maintenance phase plus patients who did not respond at week 6 and received maintenance vedolizumab Q4W Samples positive for neutralizing ADAs with no reportable titer were considered missing (i.e., no detectable positive neutralizing ADA was present in the sample) Infusion-Related Reactions and Immunogenicity Status of Patients During Vedolizumab Maintenance in GEMINI 1 and GEMINI 2 Using ELISA Not all patients had evaluable samples. N = total number of patients with samples tested in each treatment group. Proportions are based on nonmissing values AE adverse event, ADA vedolizumab anti-drug antibody, ELISA enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, ITT intent to treat, Q4W every 4 weeks, Q8W every 8 weeks Patients who were responders to vedolizumab induction at week 6 and were randomized into the maintenance-phase ITT population Patients who received vedolizumab during induction and were randomized to placebo at the maintenance phase Patients who were randomized to placebo at both the induction and maintenance phases All patients who received induction and maintenance vedolizumab, including week 6 responders who were randomized to vedolizumab in the maintenance phase plus patients who did not respond at week 6 and received maintenance vedolizumab Q4W Samples positive for neutralizing ADA with no reportable titer were considered missing (i.e., no detectable positive neutralizing ADA was present in the sample) Of the 278 patients who received 2 doses of vedolizumab during the induction phase then placebo during the maintenance phase and tested with the ECL assay, 8 (3%) had infusion-related reactions, with 3 of the 8 (38%) ADA-positive, and 2 persistently-positive (Table V). In comparison, of the 279 patients tested with ELISA, only 1 of 8 (13%) was determined to be ADA-positive (Table VI).

Vedolizumab Pharmacokinetics

It was previously reported that the presence of ADA is associated with lower serum concentrations of vedolizumab (13). Therefore, trough serum vedolizumab concentrations were determined along with ADA status in 1713 patients who received at least 1 dose of vedolizumab in GEMINI 1 or GEMINI 2. At week 52, the median serum vedolizumab trough concentrations were 20.5 μg/mL, 18.4 μg/mL, and below the limit of quantitation for ADA-negative, transiently ADA-positive, and persistently ADA-positive patients with UC, respectively. For ADA-negative, transiently ADA-positive, and persistently ADA-positive patients with CD, the medians were 18.7 μg/mL, 9.6 μg/mL, and below the limit of quantitation, respectively. The drug tolerance of ADA ECL assay using the 100 ng/mL surrogate ADA-positive control is 25 μg/mL, which is greater than the median trough concentrations of vedolizumab observed in clinical trials. Therefore, the assay was able to detect the clinically relevant ADA as suggested by the FDA 2019 guidance (17).

Population PK Model Reanalysis

Samples from all patients who received vedolizumab at any time during GEMINI 1 or GEMINI 2 were used to update the vedolizumab population PK model (12). The median age of the reanalysis patient population was 35.9 years of age (range, 17.7–77.7 years) and 48% were female. Patients had a median body weight of 68.3 kg (range, 28.0–172 kg), median albumin concentrations of 3.70 g/dL (range, 1.40–5.30 g/dL), and median fecal calprotectin concentrations of 731 mg/kg (range, 23.8–2.00e4 mg/kg). The median partial Mayo score of the 743 (43%) patients with UC was 6.0 (range, 1.0–9.0), and the median Crohn’s Disease Activity Index score for the 966 (57%) patients with CD was 321 (range, 93.0–548.0). As previously reported, body weight and serum albumin had an effect on vedolizumab linear clearance (CLL) variability with the potential to be clinically relevant (12). Also consistent with previous results obtained with ELISA showing an increase in CLL of 1.12 (95% credible interval (CDI), 1.05–1.20), the presence of ADA detected by the ECL assay was estimated to increase vedolizumab CLL by a factor of 1.10 (95% CDI, 1.03–1.17) (Table VII). With both models, the 95% CDI was statistically different from the null effect of 1. Further evaluation of covariate effects on CLL was conducted via simulation given Bayesian joint posterior distribution (or uncertainty) of the model parameters.
Table VII

Covariate Parameters Estimated from the Final Population Pharmacokinetic Model Using Data from Both the ECL Assay and the ELISA

ParameterECLELISA
EstimateBayesian 95% CDIEstimateBayesian 95% CDI
Continuous covariatesa
  CLL~weight0.339(0.264 to 0.406)0.368(0.306 to 0.433)
  CLL~albumin− 1.03(− 1.12 to − 0.940)− 1.18(− 1.24 to − 1.13)
  CLL~fecal calprotectin0.0279(0.0204 to 0.0349)0.0312(0.0257 to 0.0368)
  CD CLL~CDAI− 0.0582(− 0.151 to 0.0337)− 0.0558(− 0.144 to 0.0311)
  UC CLL~partial Mayo score0.0543(− 0.0227 to 0.132)0.0406(− 0.0339 to 0.115)
  CLL~age− 0.0190(− 0.0673 to 0.0294)− 0.0339(− 0.0778 to 0.0103)
  Vc~weight0.456(0.409 to 0.502)0.469(0.427 to 0.511)
  Vp~weight1.00 fixed1.00 fixed(1.00 to 1.00)
  Vmax~weight0.750 fixed0.75 fixed(0.75 to 0.75)
  Q~weight0.750 fixed0.75 fixed(0.75 to 0.72)
Categorical covariatesb
  CLL~TNF1.05(1.01 to 1.09)1.04(1.01 to 1.07)
  CLL~ADASUB1.10(1.03 to 1.17)1.12(1.05 to 1.2)
  CLL~AZA full duration0.998(0.960 to 1.04)0.992(0.958 to 1.03)
  CLL~AZA unknown duration0.963(0.876 to 1.05)0.965(0.886 to 1.05)
  CLL~MP full duration1.05(0.949 to 1.17)1.07(0.97 to 1.18)
  CLL~MP unknown duration1.12(0.989 to 1.26)1.09(0.974 to 1.22)
  CLL~MTX full duration1.02(0.923 to 1.12)1.02(0.933 to 1.11)
  CLL~MTX unknown duration1.02(0.871 to 1.20)0.951(0.825 to 1.09)
  CLL~AMINO full duration1.01(0.969 to 1.05)1.02(0.984 to 1.06)
  CLL~AMINO unknown duration0.959(0.903 to 1.02)0.972(0.922 to 1.02)
  Vc~diagnosis (CD or UC)1.01(0.985 to 1.04)1.01(0.989 to 1.03)

AMINO aminosalicylate adjuvant therapy, ADA vedolizumab anti-drug antibody, ADASUB patient-level ADA incidence indicator, AZA azathioprine adjuvant therapy, CD Crohn’s disease, CDAI Crohn’s Disease Activity Index, CDI credible interval, CL linear clearance, ECL electrochemiluminescence, ELISA enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, MP mercaptopurine adjuvant therapy, MTX methotrexate adjuvant therapy, Q intercompartmental clearance, TNF tumor necrosis factor, UC, ulcerative colitis, V central compartment volume, V peripheral compartment volume, V maximum elimination rate

Null effect = 0

Null effect = 1

Covariate Parameters Estimated from the Final Population Pharmacokinetic Model Using Data from Both the ECL Assay and the ELISA AMINO aminosalicylate adjuvant therapy, ADA vedolizumab anti-drug antibody, ADASUB patient-level ADA incidence indicator, AZA azathioprine adjuvant therapy, CD Crohn’s disease, CDAI Crohn’s Disease Activity Index, CDI credible interval, CL linear clearance, ECL electrochemiluminescence, ELISA enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, MP mercaptopurine adjuvant therapy, MTX methotrexate adjuvant therapy, Q intercompartmental clearance, TNF tumor necrosis factor, UC, ulcerative colitis, V central compartment volume, V peripheral compartment volume, V maximum elimination rate Null effect = 0 Null effect = 1 The effect of covariates on vedolizumab CLL by disease state is shown in Fig. 1. Covariate sizes of ± 25% from the typical reference subject were used as a limit for clinically meaningful changes (12). Although there was a trend toward greater CLL with increased body weight for both the UC and CD cohorts, there was no clinically meaningful impact across the range of values evaluated. Similar observations were made for albumin except at the lowest value (median CLL, 1.5 [range, 1.41–1.59] and median CLL, 1.5 [range, 1.42–1.58] for both UC and CD, respectively). ADA positivity was not associated with a clinically significant change in CLL in either UC or CD patients, (the entire 95% CDI for the covariate effect fell within the ± 25% limits).
Fig. 1

Modeled effect of covariates on vedolizumab linear clearance (CLL) using the ECL assay data. CLL for a patients with UC and b patients with CD relative to a typical reference patient (UC referent 70 kg, albumin 4 g/dL, fecal calprotectin 700 mg/kg, partial Mayo score 6, 40 years old, naive anti-TNFα therapy, ADASUB-negative, and no adjuvant azathioprine, mercaptopurine, methotrexate, or aminosalicylate therapy; CD referent 70 kg, albumin 4 g/dL, fecal calprotectin 700 mg/kg, CDAI score 300, 40 years old, anti-TNF therapy naive, ADA-negative, and no adjuvant azathioprine, mercaptopurine, methotrexate, or aminosalicylate therapy) is plotted by covariate value. Covariates were fixed to the reference values except when they were the subject of perturbation. Body weight and albumin were evaluated at the observed 5th, 25th, 75th, and 95th percentiles in the data set. The closed circles represent the median and the horizontal lines represent the derived 95% CDI. The vertical dashed line at x = 1 represents the typical reference patient, and the grey-shaded region represents a parameter change of ± 25% from the reference value of 1 (null effect). ADA vedolizumab anti-drug antibody, ADASUB patient-level vedolizumab ADA incidence indicator, CD Crohn’s disease, CDAI Crohn’s Disease Activity Index, CDI credible interval, ECL electrochemiluminescence, TNF tumor necrosis factor alpha, UC ulcerative colitis

Modeled effect of covariates on vedolizumab linear clearance (CLL) using the ECL assay data. CLL for a patients with UC and b patients with CD relative to a typical reference patient (UC referent 70 kg, albumin 4 g/dL, fecal calprotectin 700 mg/kg, partial Mayo score 6, 40 years old, naive anti-TNFα therapy, ADASUB-negative, and no adjuvant azathioprine, mercaptopurine, methotrexate, or aminosalicylate therapy; CD referent 70 kg, albumin 4 g/dL, fecal calprotectin 700 mg/kg, CDAI score 300, 40 years old, anti-TNF therapy naive, ADA-negative, and no adjuvant azathioprine, mercaptopurine, methotrexate, or aminosalicylate therapy) is plotted by covariate value. Covariates were fixed to the reference values except when they were the subject of perturbation. Body weight and albumin were evaluated at the observed 5th, 25th, 75th, and 95th percentiles in the data set. The closed circles represent the median and the horizontal lines represent the derived 95% CDI. The vertical dashed line at x = 1 represents the typical reference patient, and the grey-shaded region represents a parameter change of ± 25% from the reference value of 1 (null effect). ADA vedolizumab anti-drug antibody, ADASUB patient-level vedolizumab ADA incidence indicator, CD Crohn’s disease, CDAI Crohn’s Disease Activity Index, CDI credible interval, ECL electrochemiluminescence, TNF tumor necrosis factor alpha, UC ulcerative colitis

DISCUSSION

We report the results of a reanalysis of vedolizumab immunogenicity using new, more drug-tolerant, ECL-based assays for detection of anti-drug and neutralizing anti-drug antibodies. The availability of banked patient serum samples from the GEMINI 1 and GEMINI 2 trials offered a valuable opportunity to evaluate the new ECL assays on a large scale, compare the ECL results with those obtained using the traditional ELISA method, and reevaluate the effect of immunogenicity on vedolizumab PK and safety in inflammatory bowel disease. The acid dissociation ECL assay used in this study has a drug tolerance at least 100 times higher than the previous ELISA when using a 500 ng/mL surrogate ADA-positive control, thus allowing for detection of low-titer ADA. One limitation of this ECL assay is that due to its drug tolerance of ≤ 25 μg/mL of vedolizumab using a 100 ng/mL positive control, the presence of vedolizumab trough concentrations higher than 25 μg/mL may interfere with the detection of low-titer ADA (10 ng/mL). Patients may have a drug trough concentrations of > 25 μg/mL during the induction phase of vedolizumab treatment. However, with the approved vedolizumab Q8W IV maintenance dosing schedule, patients are not expected to exceed drug trough concentrations of 25 μg/mL (6). Furthermore, the low positive control ADA concentration is 10-fold below the FDA-recommended levels of sensitivity and is likely not clinically relevant (17,18). Since vedolizumab is a humanized monoclonal antibody with no endogenous counterpart and it is not agonistic in function (14,19), this concentration poses a minimal risk to patient safety. The presence of ADAs and neutralizing ADAs was assessed in a cohort of 1427 patients with UC and CD treated with vedolizumab for up to 52 weeks. In this reanalysis of vedolizumab immunogenicity, the rate of ADAs in patients who received maintenance vedolizumab remained low with the ECL assay (6%) and with the ELISA (4%). With the new ECL assay, the rate of ADA positivity continued to be generally low across all subgroups. Rates ranged from 3% in patients who were randomized to placebo at both the induction and maintenance phases to 22% in patients who received vedolizumab during induction and were randomized to placebo at the maintenance phase, which was slightly higher than what was detected with the ELISA (range, 3%–16%). Of interest, the “off-drug” rate of immunogenicity at week 66 was 15% in the vedolizumab combined group by the ECL assay compared with 10% using the ELISA (15), suggesting the increased drug tolerance of the ECL assay was able to identify additional positive samples. The ECL assay also detected a higher proportion of samples with neutralizing ADAs. Both the ECL assay and the ELISA showed the highest incidence of ADA-positive individuals among patients who received vedolizumab at induction and then switched to placebo for maintenance. The reason for this observation is currently unknown. An elevated ADA-positivity rate following a drug holiday has been consistently observed with vedolizumab and other biologics used to treat inflammatory bowel disease (3,4,20,21). It has been suggested that this may be a result of the presence of less drug to interfere with ADA assays resulting in a better detection rate. However, the observed similar ADA incident rate by the more drug-tolerant ECL assay suggests factors other than drug interference might have contributed to this observation. Previous reports showed that higher ADA levels with episodic or interrupted biologic treatment as compared with continuous treatment are accompanied by decreased treatment benefit (21–24). Some reports suggested lower immunogenicity in the continuous treatment groups due to the induction of immunotolerance by maintaining a trough vedolizumab concentration, or the paradoxical suppression of the immune response (25,26). The ADA status of most (96%) patients remained unchanged between ELISA and the ECL assay. Changing from ADA-negative by ELISA to ADA-positive by ECL assay was most likely due to improved assay drug tolerance, while changing from positive by ELISA to negative by ECL was most likely due to bioanalytical assay variation in detecting lower levels of antibody titers near the assay cut point. These results demonstrate that the two assays have general agreement but may differ in the presence of low levels of ADA. Infusion-related reactions were infrequent in the GEMINI studies and were reported in only 61 out of 1434 patients initially analyzed with ELISA and 1427 patients reanalyzed with ECL assay who received vedolizumab maintenance treatment. While ADAs were detected in more patients with infusion reactions using the ECL assay than with the ELISA, the overall rate remained low (10% versus 5%), suggesting that immunogenicity is not a large driver of infusion reactions with vedolizumab. Based on week 52 median vedolizumab trough concentrations, persistent ADA-positive antibodies as detected using both the ECL assay and the ELISA were associated with decreased vedolizumab serum concentrations. The results of vedolizumab CLL covariate analyses were consistent with previous reports (12) and showed a trend for body weight and serum albumin to affect CLL, although the difference only reached clinical relevance (± 25%) at the lowest albumin concentration. Similar to ADA outcomes generated with the ELISA, the presence of ADAs as detected using the ECL assay was determined to be not clinically relevant, as the entire 95% CDI fell within the predetermined ± 25% limits.

CONCLUSION

In conclusion, this re-analysis of vedolizumab immunogenicity in serum samples from a very large cohort of patients with UC or CD confirmed that immunogenicity results obtained using new, drug-tolerant ECL assays remain generally consistent with those obtained using ELISA. While the ECL assays detected slightly more ADA-positive patients than did the ELISA, these new ECL results support the conclusions established with ELISA that vedolizumab immunogenicity is low and has a minimal effect on vedolizumab PK or safety in patients with inflammatory bowel disease.
  21 in total

1.  Incidence and importance of antibody responses to infliximab after maintenance or episodic treatment in Crohn's disease.

Authors:  Stephen B Hanauer; Carrie L Wagner; Mohan Bala; Lloyd Mayer; Suzanne Travers; Robert H Diamond; Allan Olson; Warren Bao; Paul Rutgeerts
Journal:  Clin Gastroenterol Hepatol       Date:  2004-07       Impact factor: 11.382

2.  Feedback from the European Bioanalysis Forum: focus workshop on current analysis of immunogenicity: best practices and regulatory hurdles.

Authors:  Joanne Goodman; Simon Cowen; Viswanath Devanarayan; David Egging; Thomas Emrich; Michaela Golob; Daniel Kramer; Jim McNally; James Munday; Robert Nelson; João A Pedras-Vasconcelos; Timo Piironen; Denise Sickert; Venke Skibeli; Marianne Scheel Fjording; Philip Timmerman
Journal:  Bioanalysis       Date:  2018-01-18       Impact factor: 2.681

3.  Early trough levels and antibodies to infliximab predict safety and success of reinitiation of infliximab therapy.

Authors:  Filip Baert; David Drobne; Ann Gils; Niels Vande Casteele; Scott Hauenstein; Sharat Singh; Steve Lockton; Paul Rutgeerts; Séverine Vermeire
Journal:  Clin Gastroenterol Hepatol       Date:  2014-01-29       Impact factor: 11.382

4.  Impact of prior irregular infliximab dosing on performance of long-term infliximab maintenance therapy in Crohn's disease.

Authors:  Daniel J Stein; Ashwin N Ananthakrishnan; Mazen Issa; John B Williams; Dawn B Beaulieu; Yelena Zadvornova; Anita Ward; Kathryn Johnson; Josh F Knox; Sue Skaros; David G Binion
Journal:  Inflamm Bowel Dis       Date:  2010-07       Impact factor: 5.325

5.  Vedolizumab as induction and maintenance therapy for ulcerative colitis.

Authors:  Brian G Feagan; Paul Rutgeerts; Bruce E Sands; Stephen Hanauer; Jean-Frédéric Colombel; William J Sandborn; Gert Van Assche; Jeffrey Axler; Hyo-Jong Kim; Silvio Danese; Irving Fox; Catherine Milch; Serap Sankoh; Tim Wyant; Jing Xu; Asit Parikh
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2013-08-22       Impact factor: 91.245

6.  Vedolizumab as induction and maintenance therapy for Crohn's disease.

Authors:  William J Sandborn; Brian G Feagan; Paul Rutgeerts; Stephen Hanauer; Jean-Frédéric Colombel; Bruce E Sands; Milan Lukas; Richard N Fedorak; Scott Lee; Brian Bressler; Irving Fox; Maria Rosario; Serap Sankoh; Jing Xu; Kristin Stephens; Catherine Milch; Asit Parikh
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2013-08-22       Impact factor: 91.245

Review 7.  Pharmacodynamic assessment of vedolizumab for the treatment of ulcerative colitis.

Authors:  Leon P McLean; Raymond K Cross
Journal:  Expert Opin Drug Metab Toxicol       Date:  2016-05-12       Impact factor: 4.481

8.  The binding specificity and selective antagonism of vedolizumab, an anti-alpha4beta7 integrin therapeutic antibody in development for inflammatory bowel diseases.

Authors:  Dulce Soler; Tobias Chapman; Li-Li Yang; Tim Wyant; Robert Egan; Eric R Fedyk
Journal:  J Pharmacol Exp Ther       Date:  2009-06-09       Impact factor: 4.030

9.  Risk of hospitalized bacterial infections associated with biologic treatment among US veterans with rheumatoid arthritis.

Authors:  J R Curtis; S Yang; N M Patkar; L Chen; J A Singh; G W Cannon; T R Mikuls; E Delzell; K G Saag; M M Safford; S DuVall; K Alexander; P Napalkov; Kevin L Winthrop; M J Burton; A Kamauu; J W Baddley
Journal:  Arthritis Care Res (Hoboken)       Date:  2014-07       Impact factor: 4.794

10.  Immunogenicity of biologics in inflammatory bowel disease.

Authors:  Séverine Vermeire; Ann Gils; Paola Accossato; Sadiq Lula; Amy Marren
Journal:  Therap Adv Gastroenterol       Date:  2018-01-21       Impact factor: 4.409

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Authors:  Islam Osama Nassar; Jonathan Cheesbrough; Mohammed Nabil Quraishi; Naveen Sharma
Journal:  Frontline Gastroenterol       Date:  2022-01-24

2.  Low immunogenicity of vedolizumab determined by a simple drug-tolerant assay in patients with ulcerative colitis.

Authors:  Noriaki Yamashita; Takayuki Imai; Masahiro Kawahara; Osamu Inatomi; Akira Andoh
Journal:  J Clin Biochem Nutr       Date:  2021-10-02       Impact factor: 3.114

3.  Vedolizumab Immunogenicity With Long-Term or Interrupted Treatment of Patients With Inflammatory Bowel Disease.

Authors:  Timothy Wyant; Lili Yang; Richard A Lirio; Maria Rosario
Journal:  J Clin Pharmacol       Date:  2021-07-14       Impact factor: 3.126

4.  Pharmacokinetic-Pharmacodynamic Model of Vedolizumab for Targeting Endoscopic Remission in Patients With Crohn Disease: Posthoc Analysis of the LOVE-CD Study.

Authors:  Jurij Hanzel; Erwin Dreesen; Séverine Vermeire; Mark Löwenberg; Frank Hoentjen; Peter Bossuyt; Esmé Clasquin; Filip J Baert; Geert R D'Haens; Ron Mathôt
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