21 research outputs found
Immunogenicity in Clinical Practice and Drug Development: When is it Significant?
Managing immunogenicity in clinical practice and during drug development was a recent topic at the ASCPT 2019 annual meeting. This commentary expands on the discussion to facilitate a broader engagement across the community. The intent is to provide a rationale for ongoing research into the current gaps in assessing and interpreting immunogenicity in drug development and managing clinical immunogenicity for an approved drug. The following are highlighted: (i) Immunogenicity Considerations in Clinical Practice, (ii) Immunogenicity Testing and Current Limitations, (iii) Immunogenicity Risk Assessment and Mitigation, and (iv) Quantitative Systems Pharmacology (QSP) models of Immunogenicity
HuR cytoplasmic expression is associated with increased cyclin A expression and poor outcome with upper urinary tract urothelial carcinoma
BACKGROUND: HuR is an RNA-binding protein that post-transcriptionally modulates the expressions of various target genes implicated in carcinogenesis, such as CCNA2 encoding cyclin A. No prior study attempted to evaluate the significance of HuR expression in a large cohort with upper urinary tract urothelial carcinomas (UTUCs). METHODS: In total, 340 cases of primary localized UTUC without previous or concordant bladder carcinoma were selected. All of these patients received ureterectomy or radical nephroureterectomy with curative intents. Pathological slides were reviewed, and clinical findings were collected. Immunostaining for HuR and cyclin A was performed and evaluated by using H-score. The results of cytoplasmic HuR and nuclear cyclin A expressions were correlated with disease-specific survival (DSS), metastasis-free survival (MeFS), urinary bladder recurrence-free survival (UBRFS), and various clinicopathological factors. RESULTS: HuR cytoplasmic expression was significantly related to the pT status, lymph node metastasis, a higher histological grade, the pattern of invasion, vascular and perineurial invasion, and cyclin A expression (p = 0.005). Importantly, HuR cytoplasmic expression was strongly associated with a worse DSS (p < 0.0001), MeFS (p < 0.0001), and UBRFS (p = 0.0370) in the univariate analysis, and the first two results remained independently predictive of adverse outcomes (p = 0.038, relative risk [RR] = 1.996 for DSS; p = 0.027, RR = 1.880 for MeFS). Cyclin A nuclear expression was associated with a poor DSS (p = 0.0035) and MeFS (p = 0.0015) in the univariate analysis but was not prognosticatory in the multivariate analyses. High-risk patients (pT3 or pT4 with/without nodal metastasis) with high HuR cytoplasmic expression had better DSS if adjuvant chemotherapy was performed (p = 0.015). CONCLUSIONS: HuR cytoplasmic expression was correlated with adverse phenotypes and cyclin A overexpression and also independently predictive of worse DSS and MeFS, suggesting its roles in tumorigenesis or carcinogenesis and potentiality as a prognostic marker of UTUC. High HuR cytoplasmic expression might identify patients more likely to be beneficial for adjuvant chemotherapy
Individualized Dosing of Therapeutic Monoclonal Antibodies—a Changing Treatment Paradigm?
The introduction of monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) to the treatment of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) was an important medical milestone. MAbs have been demonstrated as safe and efficacious treatments of IBD. However, a large percentage of patients either fail to respond initially or lose response to therapy after a period of treatment. Although there are factors associated with poor treatment outcomes in IBD, one cause for treatment failure may be low mAb exposure. Consequently, gastroenterologists have begun using therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) to guide dose adjustment. However, while beneficial, TDM does not provide sufficient information to effectively adjust doses. The pharmacokinetics (PK) and pharmacodynamics (PD) of mAbs are complex, with numerous factors impacting on mAb PK and PD. The concept of dashboard-guided dosing based on Bayesian PK models allows physicians to combine TDM with factors influencing mAb PK to individualize therapy more effectively. One issue with TDM has been the slow turnaround of assay results, either necessitating an additional clinic visit for a sample or reacting to TDM results at a subsequent, rather than the current, dose. New point-of-care (POC) assays for mAbs are being developed that would potentially allow physicians to determine drug concentration quickly. However, work remains to understand how to determine what target exposure is needed for an individual patient, and whether the combination of POC assays and dashboards presents a safe approach with substantial outcome benefit over the current standard of care
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Subcutaneous or Intravenous Administration of Romiplostim in Thrombocytopenic Patients With Lower Risk Myelodysplastic Syndromes
BACKGROUND: Romiplostim is a peptibody protein that augments thrombopoiesis by activating the thrombopoietin receptor. METHODS: In this phase 2, multicenter, open-label study, 28 thrombocytopenic patients with lower risk myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) were assigned to receive romiplostim 750 mu g administered subcutaneously either weekly or biweekly or administered as biweekly intravenous injections for 8 weeks. Patients also could enter a 1-year study extension phase. RESULTS: At least 1 adverse event was observed in 93% of patients. The most common adverse events were fatigue and headache (18% for both, and 5 events were grade 3 or 4. There was 1 serious treatment-related adverse event in the biweekly intravenous cohort (hypersensitivity). This hypersensitivity resolved without discontinuation of study treatment. No patients developed neutralizing antibodies or bone marrow fibrosis. Of the patients who completed 8 weeks of treatment, 57% had a complete platelet response, an additional 8% had a major platelet response, and 61% did not require a platelet transfusion during this period. Weekly subcutaneous injections achieved the highest mean trough concentrations. CONCLUSIONS: The safety and efficacy profiles of romiplostim in this study suggested that weekly subcutaneous administration of 750 jig romiplostim is an appropriate starting dose for future clinical studies in patients with MDS and thrombocytopenia. Cancer 2011;117:992-1000. (C) 2010 American Cancer Society
Immunogenicity in Clinical Practice and Drug Development: When is it Significant?
Managing immunogenicity in clinical practice and during drug development was a recent topic at the ASCPT 2019 annual meeting. This commentary expands on the discussion to facilitate a broader engagement across the community. The intent is to provide a rationale for ongoing research into the current gaps in assessing and interpreting immunogenicity in drug development and managing clinical immunogenicity for an approved drug. The following are highlighted: (i) Immunogenicity Considerations in Clinical Practice, (ii) Immunogenicity Testing and Current Limitations, (iii) Immunogenicity Risk Assessment and Mitigation, and (iv) Quantitative Systems Pharmacology (QSP) models of Immunogenicity