| Literature DB >> 35316517 |
Naomi Schlesinger1, Lissa Padnick-Silver2, Brian LaMoreaux3.
Abstract
Refractory, or uncontrolled, gout is a chronic, progressive, inflammatory arthropathy resulting from continued urate deposition after failed attempts to lower serum uric acid below the therapeutic threshold with oral urate-lowering therapies such as allopurinol and febuxostat. Recombinant uricase is increasingly being used to treat refractory gout; however, the immunogenicity of uricase-based therapies has limited the use of these biologic therapies. Antidrug antibodies against biologic therapies, including uricase and PEGylated uricase, can lead to loss of urate-lowering response, increased risk of infusion reactions, and subsequent treatment failure. However, co-therapy with an immunomodulator can attenuate antidrug antibody development, potentially increasing the likelihood of sustained urate lowering, therapy course completion, and successful treatment outcomes. This review summarizes evidence surrounding the use of immunomodulation as co-therapy with recombinant uricases.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35316517 PMCID: PMC8938732 DOI: 10.1007/s40259-022-00517-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BioDrugs ISSN: 1173-8804 Impact factor: 7.744
Properties of uricase-based molecules examined in the clinical and research settings
| Uricase molecule | References | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pegloticase | Pegadricase | Rasburicase | ||
| Molecular weight | 540 kDa | 304.34 g/mol | 34 kDa | [ |
| Origin | Pig-baboon chimeric uricase cDNA amplified in | [ | ||
| Disease | Chronic refractory gout | Chronic refractory gout | Hyperuricemia in acute tumor lysis syndrome | [ |
| Dosing (route of administration) | 8 mg (IV) every 2 weeks | 0.2 or 0.4 mg/kg (IV) monthly | 0.2 mg/kg (IV) daily for up to 5–7 daysa | [ |
| Half-life | 6.4–13.8 days | 3 days | 16–22 h | [ |
IV intravenously
aDosing specific to patients with hyperuricemia secondary to tumor lysis syndrome.
Fig. 1Immunologic response to uricase-based biologics in the presence and absence of immunomodulation [40, 28, 66–68]. (a) Uricase antigen uptake facilitates dendritic cell (DC) differentiation and maturation. In response to antigen presentation by DCs, T cells facilitate B-cell antidrug antibody production, followed by neutralization and proteolysis of uricase. (b) Exposure to a co-formulated system (e.g., PEGylated uricase enzyme encapsulated with SVP-rapamycin) induces DC tolerization to PEGylated uricase antigen. Tolerogenic DCs facilitate the production of anergic (or regulatory) T cells, dampening immunogenicity and prolonging PEGylated uricase activity. (c) Exposure to a PEGylated uricase enzyme with immunomodulation (IMM) co-therapy (e.g., oral methotrexate) increases T-cell sensitivity to apoptosis, disrupting the pathway to immunogenicity. Figure adapted from Brunn et al. 2021 [55]. Molecular images of uricase and PEGylated uricase enzymes are not representative of molecule shape or structure and are for illustration purposes only
Reported treatment response rates of examined uricase-based therapies
| Pegloticase [ | Pegadricase [ | Rasburicase [ | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Underlying cause of hyperuricemia | Uncontrolled gout | Uncontrolled gout | Tumor lysis syndrome |
| FDA approval status | Approved with indication | Phase II (NCT03905512) | Approved with indication |
| Efficacy, | |||
| Monotherapy | 36/85 (42%) | N/A | 80/92 (87%) |
| With immunomodulation | 68/82 (83%)a | 115/143 (81%) | N/A |
| Patients with antidrug antibodies, | |||
| Monotherapy | 134/150 (89%) | 5/5 (100%) | 17–18/28 (61–64%)b |
| With immunomodulation | 2/14 (14%) | N/A | N/A |
FDA US Food and Drug Administration, N/A not available
aPooled response rate for immunomodulation with methotrexate, mycophenolate mofetil, leflunomide, azathioprine, and cyclosporin
bRates of binding and neutralizing antibodies examined in healthy controls, respectively
| Refractory or uncontrolled gout occurs when conventional treatment is unable to lower serum uric acid below the solubility limit and inflammation related to urate deposition continues to drive and progressively worsen signs and symptoms of gout. |
| The use of recombinant uricases can lead to antidrug antibody development, limiting both urate-lowering efficacy and therapy duration. |
| Immunomodulation co-therapy with a biologic agent like uricase is commonly used in rheumatology to mitigate immunogenicity and has been shown to increase treatment response rates in patients with uncontrolled gout treated with uricase-based therapies. |
| This review summarizes published reports on the use of recombinant uricases with immunomodulating co-therapy, finding improved treatment response and decreased antidrug antibody incidence. |