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Safety, Tolerability, Pharmacokinetics, and Immunogenicity of mAb114: A Phase 1 Trial of a Therapeutic Monoclonal Antibody Targeting Ebola Virus Glycoprotein

Authors :
Martin R Gaudinski
Emily E Coates
Laura Novik
Alicia Widge
Katherine V Houser
Eugeania Burch
LaSonji A Holman
Ingelise J Gordon
Grace L Chen
Cristina Carter
Martha Nason
Sandra Sitar
Galina Yamshchikov
Nina Berkowitz
Charla Andrews
Sandra Vazquez
Carolyn Laurencot
John Misasi
Frank Arnold
Kevin Carlton
Heather Lawlor
Jason Gall
Robert T Bailer
Adrian McDermott
Edmund Capparelli
Richard A Koup
John R Mascola
Barney S Graham
Nancy J Sullivan
Julie E Ledgerwood
Cynthia Starr Hendel
Sarah H. Plummer
Pamela Costner
Jamie Saunders
Floreliz Mendoza
Aba Mensima Eshun
Joseph Casazza
Abidemi Ola
William Whalen
Xiaolin Wang
Jennifer Cunningham
Olga Vasilenko
Catina R. Boyd
Olga Trofymenko
Maria Claudia Burgos Florez
Somia Hickman
Ro Shauna Rothwell
Iris R Pittman
Lam Ngan Le
Brenda D Larkin
Josephine H Cox
Preeti J Apte
Renunda T Hicks
Cora Trelles Cartagena
Pernell V Williams
LaShawn Requilman
Thuy Nguyen
Colin Tran
Michelle Conan-Cibotti
Judy Stein
Tatiana Beresnev
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Summary Background mAb114 is a single monoclonal antibody that targets the receptor-binding domain of Ebola virus glycoprotein, which prevents mortality in rhesus macaques treated after lethal challenge with Zaire ebolavirus . Here we present expedited data from VRC 608, a phase 1 study to evaluate mAb114 safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics, and immunogenicity. Methods In this phase 1, dose-escalation study (VRC 608), conducted at the US National Institutes of Health (NIH) Clinical Center (Bethesda, MD, USA), healthy adults aged 18–60 years were sequentially enrolled into three mAb114 dose groups of 5 mg/kg, 25 mg/kg, and 50 mg/kg. The drug was given to participants intravenously over 30 min, and participants were followed for 24 weeks. Participants were only enrolled into increased dosing groups after interim safety assessments. Our primary endpoints were safety and tolerability, with pharmacokinetic and anti-drug antibody assessments as secondary endpoints. We assessed safety and tolerability in all participants who received study drug by monitoring clinical laboratory data and self-report and direct clinician assessment of prespecified infusion-site symptoms 3 days after infusion and systemic symptoms 7 days after infusion. Unsolicited adverse events were recorded for 28 days. Pharmacokinetic and anti-drug antibody assessments were completed in participants with at least 56 days of data. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT03478891, and is active but no longer recruiting. Findings Between May 16, and Sept 27, 2018, 19 eligible individuals were enrolled. One (5%) participant was not infused because intravenous access was not adequate. Of 18 (95%) remaining participants, three (17%) were assigned to the 5 mg/kg group, five (28%) to the 25 mg/kg group, and ten (55%) to the 50 mg/kg group, each of whom received a single infusion of mAb114 at their assigned dose. All infusions were well tolerated and completed over 30–37 min with no infusion reactions or rate adjustments. All participants who received the study drug completed the safety assessment of local and systemic reactogenicity. No participants reported infusion-site symptoms. Systemic symptoms were all mild and present only in four (22%) of 18 participants across all dosing groups. No unsolicited adverse events occurred related to mAb114 and one serious adverse event occurred that was unrelated to mAb114. mAb114 has linear pharmacokinetics and a half-life of 24·2 days (standard error of measurement 0·2) with no evidence of anti-drug antibody development. Interpretation mAb114 was well tolerated, showed linear pharmacokinetics, and was easily and rapidly infused, making it an attractive and deployable option for treatment in outbreak settings. Funding Vaccine Research Center, US National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, and NIH.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6e7717087e3d9e78889cbb491b0d98d8