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Pharmacokinetic-Pharmacodynamic Modelling of Systemic IL13 Blockade by Monoclonal Antibody Therapy: A Free Assay Disguised as Total.

John HoodIgnacio González-GarcíaNicholas WhiteLeeron MarshallVincent F S DuboisPaolo ViciniPaul G Baverel
Published in: Pharmaceutics (2021)
A sequential pharmacokinetic (PK) and pharmacodynamic (PD) model was built with Nonlinear Mixed Effects Modelling based on data from a first-in-human trial of a novel biologic, MEDI7836. MEDI7836 is a human immunoglobulin G1 lambda (IgG1λ-YTE) monoclonal antibody, with an Fc modification to reduce metabolic clearance. MEDI7836 specifically binds to, and functionally neutralizes interleukin-13. Thirty-two healthy male adults were enrolled into a dose-escalation clinical trial. Four active doses were tested (30, 105, 300, and 600 mg) with 6 volunteers enrolled per cohort. Eight volunteers received placebo as control. Following single subcutaneous administration (SC), individual time courses of serum MEDI7836 concentrations, and the resulting serum IL13 modulation in vivo, were quantified. A binding pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic (PK-PD) indirect response model was built to characterize the exposure-driven modulation of the target over time by MEDI7836. While the validated bioanalytical assay specification quantified the level of free target (i.e., a free IL13 assay), emerging clinical data suggested dose-dependent increase in systemic IL13 concentration over time, indicative of a total IL13 assay. The target time course was modelled as a linear combination of free target and a percentage of the drug-target complex to fit the clinical data. This novel PK-PD modelling approach integrates independent knowledge about the assay characteristics to successfully elucidate apparently complex observations.
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