7 research outputs found

    Toxicology studies with recombinant staphylokinase and with SY 161-P5, a polyethylene glycol-derivatized cysteine-substitution mutant

    No full text
    SY 161-P5, a polyethylene glycol derivatized (PEGylated) mutant of the recombinant Staphylokinase (rSak) variant SakSTAR, exhibiting reduced antigenicity is in clinical development for treatment of acute myocardial infarction as a single bolus injection. A series of safety studies were performed in vivo as a routine toxicology program with SY 161-P5 (PEG-rSakSTAR) and with the recombinant Staphylokinase variant Sak42D (rSak42D). For both compounds, intravenous single bolus injections of up to 100-fold therapeutic equivalent, as well as repeated injections during 7 to 28 days revealed no significant pathological findings in mice, rats or hamsters. However, New Zealand white rabbits developed clinically silent, multifocal myocarditis following single or repeat doses of SY 161-P5 or of Sak42D. These findings were dose-independent and reversible. A similar species-specific cardiotoxic effect has previously been described for other proteolytic proteins, including the approved drugs Streptokinase and Acetylated Plasminogen Streptokinase Complex (APSAC). The large experience with these drugs, as well as the clinical data accumulated both with PEGylated and non-PEGylated rSak variants to date, do not indicate cardiotoxic hazards associated with the use of these drugs in humans.status: publishe

    Accurate measurement of extended half-life and unmodified factor VIII low levels with one-stage FVIII assays is dependent on the matrix of calibration curves

    No full text
    INTRODUCTION: The monitoring of factor VIII (FVIII) replacement therapy relies on the accurate measurement of FVIII activity over a large concentration range. However, unexplained overestimation of low FVIII levels has recently been reported with extended half-life recombinant FVIIIs. AIM: The objective of this study was to confirm previous publications indicating that the reagents used to generate the calibration curves determine the accuracy of the measurement of low FVIII levels. METHODS: We generated FVIII calibration curves with FVIII-deficient plasmas or a commercial diluent buffer. We then measured FVIII levels in FVIII-deficient plasma spiked with plasma FVIII, a full-length recombinant FVIII (Advate® , Shire, Brussels, Belgium) and two extended half-life recombinant FVIIIs (Elocta® , Swedish Orphan Biovitrum, Woluwe Saint-Lambert, Belgium and Afstyla® , CSL Behring, Mechelen, Belgium). FVIII levels were also analyzed in spiked samples prediluted two- and fourfold, either in diluent buffer or in FVIII-deficient plasma to evaluate parallelism. RESULTS: Coagulation times of calibration curves generated with diluent buffer were longer than those with FVIII-deficient plasmas. This resulted in an overestimation of FVIII levels lower than 25 IU/dL in spiked samples and in detection of FVIII activity (≥1 IU/dL) in FVIII-deficient plasma. Predilution of samples with diluent buffer rather than with FVIII-deficient plasma also led to discordant results. CONCLUSION: Our data confirm that the generation of calibration curves by dilution in FVIII-deficient plasma is crucial for the accurate measurement of low FVIII levels. When serial dilutions of samples are analyzed, predilution in FVIII-deficient plasma is required to respect the parallelism criteria. These methods should be more generally implemented for coagulation instruments.status: publishe

    Optimization of the detection of inhibitory autoantibodies against the VWF-cleaving protease ADAMTS13 with an automated chemiluminescent ADAMTS13 activity immunoassay

    No full text
    INTRODUCTION: Acquired thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura is a rare disease associated with the production of autoantibodies against the VWF-cleaving protease ADAMTS13. The detection of these antibodies is made difficult by the instability of ADAMTS13 in citrated plasma and the time-consuming ADAMTS13 assays. The aim of our study was to evaluate the optimal conditions for detecting anti-ADAMTS13 inhibitory antibodies with the novel automated chemiluminescent immunoassay HemosILR AcuStar ADAMTS13 Activity assay. METHODS: The parallelism between the AcuStar ADAMTS13 calibration curve and ADAMTS13 concentrations in serially diluted citrated plasma was evaluated after 2 hours incubation at 25°C, 37°C, or 37°C after addition of Ca2+ to preserve the activity of the metalloprotease. Using Bethesda assays based on the 3 incubation procedures and the HemosILR AcuStar ADAMTS13 Activity assay, the inhibitor titers were determined in patients' samples with ADAMTS13 antibodies and compared with those determined using the TechnozymR ADAMTS13 activity ELISA. RESULTS: The criterion of parallelism was respected for the 3 incubation methods over the range of ADAMTS13 concentrations relevant for the detection of ADAMTS13 inhibitor antibodies in a Bethesda assay. In agreement with this observation, all the incubation methods permitted the accurate detection and quantification of inhibitory anti-ADAMTS13 antibodies in the samples from patients with acquired thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura. CONCLUSION: Incubation of plasma samples with normal plasma at 25°C, 37°C, or 37°C after addition of Ca2+ can be used in a Bethesda assay for quantifying the inhibitory activity of antibodies interfering with ADAMTS13 in the chemiluminescent HemosILR AcuStar ADAMTS13 Activity assay.status: publishe
    corecore