| Literature DB >> 35794296 |
Abstract
In the past two decades, monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) have revolutionized the treatment of multiple sclerosis (MS). However, a remarkable number of mAbs failed due to negative study results were withdrawn because of unexpected serious adverse events (SAEs) or due to studies being halted for other reasons. While trials with positive outcomes are usually published in prestigious journals, negative trials are merely published as abstracts or not at all. This review summarizes MS mAbs that have either failed in phase II-III trials, have been interrupted for various reasons, or withdrawn from the market since 2015. The main conclusions that can be drawn from these 'negative' experiences are as follows. mAbs that have been proven to be safe in other autoimmune conditions, will not have the same safety profile in MS due to immunopathogenetic differences in these diseases (e.g., daclizumab). Identification of SAEs in clinical trials is difficult highlighting the importance of phase IV studies. Memory B cells are central players in MS immunopathogenesis (e.g., tabalumab). The pathophysiological mechanisms of disease progression are independent of leukocyte 'outside-in' traffic which drives relapses in MS. Therefore, therapies for progressive MS must be able to sufficiently cross the blood-brain barrier. Sufficiently long trial duration and multicomponent outcome measures are important for clinical studies in progressive MS. The success of trials on remyelination-promoting therapies mainly depends on the sufficient high dose of mAb, the optimal readout for 'proof of concept', time of treatment initiation, and appropriate selection of patients. Failed strategies are highly important to better understand assumed immunopathophysiological mechanisms and optimizing future trial designs.Entities:
Keywords: Antibody therapy; Clinical trials; Drug development; Failure; Monoclonal antibodies; Multiple sclerosis
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35794296 PMCID: PMC9294122 DOI: 10.1007/s13311-022-01246-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurotherapeutics ISSN: 1878-7479 Impact factor: 6.088
Overview of failed phase II and III trials in multiple sclerosis therapy over the last 5 years
| Tabalumab (LY2127399) | Depletion of naïve/mature B cells and antibody formation | II | Double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled, parallel-group, dose-ranging | 245 RRMS | GELs | 73 wk | 2018 | The missing treatment effect is probably due to missing depletion of memory B cells by tabalumab | NCT00882999 [ |
| Lanalumab (VAY736) | II | Partially-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled, parallel-group | 96 RRMS | GELs | 16 wk | 2018 | Study recruitment was terminated based on strategic considerations after enrolment of 8 patients | NCT02038049 * | |
| Belimumab | II | Open-label, randomized, parallel-group | 40 RRMS | Pneumococcal vaccine antibody response; AEs; SAEs | 36 mo | Ongoing | NCT04767698 | ||
| Secukinumab (AIN457) | Prevention of production of pro-inflammatory mediators; Prevention of microglial and neutrophil recruitment; Promotion of remyelination and neural repair | II | Double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled | 73 RRMS | CUAL | 24 wk | 2012 | Imbalances at baseline between groups and a subgroup of highly active patients in the secukinumab group; Evidence for a ‘delayed’ therapeutic effect | NCT01051817 [ |
| II | Open-label extension, randomized, placebo-controlled, parallel-group | 39 RRMS | AEs | 97 wk | 2014 | Further enrolment was stopped. This decision was not related to safety or tolerability concerns | NCT01433250 * | ||
| II | Double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled, parallel-group, dose-ranging | 380 RMS | GELs | 24 wk | 2014 | Early termination after inclusion of 28 patients based on development of CJM112 | NCT01874340 [ | ||
| CJM112 | II | Double-blind, randomized | 360 RRMS | GELs | 24 wk | Not executed | |||
| Temelimab (GnbAC1) | Inhibition of immune activation, inflammation, and neurodegeneration, and promotion of remyelination | IIb | Double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled | 270 RRMS | GELs | 48 wk | 2018 | No significant anti-inflammatory effect but a possible dose-dependent neuroprotective effect at the highest dose of 18 mg/kg | NCT02782858 [ |
| II | Long-term extension study | 220 RRMS | Long term safety | 48 wk | 2018 | NCT03239860 [ | |||
| IIa | Double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled | 41 RMS | AEs | 48 wk | Active, not recruiting | NCT04480307 | |||
| Vatelizumab | Preventing activated lymphocytes from binding to collagen fibres that build up in inflammatory sites | IIa/b | Double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled | 112 RRMS | GELs | 108 wk | 2016 | Study discontinued based on planned interim analysis of the primary endpoint. Not linked to any safety concern | NCT02222948 [ |
| Opicinumab (anti LINGO-1) | Facilitation of oligodendrocyte differentiation and survival, axonal regeneration, and neuronal survival and regeneration, remyelination and functional recovery | II | Double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled | 82 AON | P100 latency using FF-VEP | 32 wk | 2014 | Opicinumab treatment significantly ameliorated P100 latency at week 32 compared to placebo | NCT01721161 [ |
| II | Double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled | 330 RRMS 89 SPMS | CDI measured by EDSS, T25FW, 9HPT, PASAT-3 | 72 wk | 2016 | Weak evidence for CDI with 10 mg/kg and some improvement with 30 mg/kg opicinumab | NCT01864148 [ | ||
| II | Double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled with optional open-label extension | 263 RRMS/SPMS | Overall response score, an integrated assessment of CDI and CDP based on EDSS, T25FW, 9HPT / AEs, SAEs | 72 wk/96 wk | 2021 | The decision to discontinue the open-label extension study was not based on safety concerns | NCT03222973 [ | ||
ADCC antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity, AE adverse events, 9HPT 9-hole peg test, ARR annualized relapse rate, CDC complement-dependent cytotoxicity, CDI confirmed disability improvement, CDP confirmed disability progression, CUAL combined unique active lesions defined as new gadolinium-enhancing lesions and new/enlarging T2-weighted lesions without double counting, EDSS Expanded Disability Status Scale, FF-VEP full-field visual evoked potential, GELs gadolinium-enhancing lesions, mo months, pSE primary study endpoint, PMS progressive multiple sclerosis, PPMS primary progressive multiple sclerosis, RMS relapsing multiple sclerosis, RRMS relapsing–remitting multiple sclerosis, SAEs serious adverse events, SPMS secondary progressive multiple sclerosis, T25FWT timed 25-foot walking test, wk weeks
*For studies marked with an asterisk, full publication is pending (last check 18.01.2021) and preliminary results from conferences or announcement press releases are reported. Clinical trials have been searched on https://clinicaltrials.gov, last accessed date 18.01.2021