Safety profile and clinical activity of multiple subcutaneous doses of MEDI-528, a humanized anti-interleukin-9 monoclonal antibody, in two randomized phase 2a studies in subjects with asthma

Joseph M Parker, Chad K Oh, Craig LaForce, S David Miller, David S Pearlman, Chenxiong Le, Gabriel J Robbie, Wendy I White, Barbara White, Nestor A Molfino, MEDI-528 Clinical Trials Group, Louis-Philippe Boulet, Charles Fogarty, Gail Gauvreau, Harold Kaiser, Catherine Lemiere, Shari Brazinsky, Anjuli Nayak, Phillip Korenblat, Joseph M Parker, Chad K Oh, Craig LaForce, S David Miller, David S Pearlman, Chenxiong Le, Gabriel J Robbie, Wendy I White, Barbara White, Nestor A Molfino, MEDI-528 Clinical Trials Group, Louis-Philippe Boulet, Charles Fogarty, Gail Gauvreau, Harold Kaiser, Catherine Lemiere, Shari Brazinsky, Anjuli Nayak, Phillip Korenblat

Abstract

Background: Interleukin-9 (IL-9)-targeted therapies may offer a novel approach for treating asthmatics. Two randomized placebo-controlled studies were conducted to assess the safety profile and potential efficacy of multiple subcutaneous doses of MEDI-528, a humanized anti-IL-9 monoclonal antibody, in asthmatics.

Methods: Study 1: adults (18-65 years) with mild asthma received MEDI-528 (0.3, 1, 3 mg/kg) or placebo subcutaneously twice weekly for 4 weeks. Study 2: adults (18-50 years) with stable, mild to moderate asthma and exercise-induced bronchoconstriction received 50 mg MEDI-528 or placebo subcutaneously twice weekly for 4 weeks. Adverse events (AEs), pharmacokinetics (PK), immunogenicity, asthma control (including asthma exacerbations), and exercise challenge test were evaluated in study 1, study 2, or both.

Results: In study 1 (N = 36), MEDI-528 showed linear serum PK; no anti-MEDI-528 antibodies were detected. Asthma control: 1/27 MEDI-528-treated subjects had 1 asthma exacerbation, and 2/9 placebo-treated subjects had a total of 4 asthma exacerbations (one considered a serious AE). In study 2, MEDI-528 (n = 7) elicited a trend in the reduction in mean maximum decrease in FEV1 post-exercise compared to placebo (n = 2) (-6.49% MEDI-528 vs -12.60% placebo; -1.40% vs -20.10%; -5.04% vs -15.20% at study days 28, 56, and 150, respectively). Study 2 was halted prematurely due to a serious AE in an asymptomatic MEDI-528-treated subject who had an abnormal brain magnetic resonance imaging that was found to be an artifact on further evaluation.

Conclusions: In these studies, MEDI-528 showed an acceptable safety profile and findings suggestive of clinical activity that support continued study in subjects with mild to moderate asthma.

Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00507130 NCT00590720.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Flow diagram for subjects in studies 1 (A) and 2 (B).
Figure 2
Figure 2
MEDI-528 mean serum concentrations in study 1. Mean maximum concentration after the last dose of 0.3 mg/kg to 3 mg/kg, respectively, mean half-life, trough concentrations after the first and last doses were measured. Mean concentrations of MEDI-528 increased in a dose-proportional manner and peaked after the last dose of the study drug.
Figure 3
Figure 3
Mean maximum percentage decline in FEV1 after exercise for each individual subject in study 2. Multiple doses of MEDI-528 resulted in a reduction in the mean maximum percentage decrease in FEV1 after exercise as compared to placebo.

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Source: PubMed

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