Neonatal Fc Receptor Inhibitor Therapeutics in Neuromuscular Disease.

Q3 Medicine
Mustafa Jaffry, Daniel L Menkes, Anam Shaikh, Kranthi Mandava, Om Kothari, Kazim Jaffry, Nizar Souayah
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Abstract: The Neonatal Fc Receptor (FcRn) is integral to a wide variety of processes including IgG recycling, serum albumin turnover, and bacterial opsonization. Thus, targeting FcRn will increase antibody degradation including pathogenic IgGs. FcRn inhibition provides a novel therapeutic mechanism by which autoantibody titers are reduced resulting in clinical improvement and disease abatement. The FcRn targeting mechanism is similar to that of intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIg) in which saturated FcRn facilitates accelerated pathogenic IgG degradation. Recently, the FcRn inhibitor efgartigimod was approved for the treatment of myasthenia gravis. Subsequently, clinical trials of this agent have been conducted for numerous inflammatory conditions involving pathogenic autoantibodies. These disorders include the Guillain-Barre syndrome, chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy, and inflammatory myositis. Other disorders traditionally treated with IVIg may also benefit from FcRn inhibition in certain contexts. This manuscript discusses the mechanism of FcRn inhibition, preclinical data, and the results of clinical trials of this agent for a wide range of neuromuscular diseases.

新生儿Fc受体抑制剂治疗神经肌肉疾病。
摘要:新生儿Fc受体(FcRn)在包括IgG再循环、血清白蛋白转换和细菌调理在内的多种过程中不可或缺。因此,靶向FcRn将增加包括致病性igg在内的抗体降解。抑制FcRn提供了一种新的治疗机制,通过这种机制降低自身抗体滴度,从而改善临床和减轻疾病。FcRn的靶向机制与静脉注射免疫球蛋白(IVIg)相似,饱和的FcRn促进致病性IgG的加速降解。最近,FcRn抑制剂efgartigimod被批准用于治疗重症肌无力。随后,该药物的临床试验已进行了许多炎症条件涉及致病性自身抗体。这些疾病包括格林-巴利综合征、慢性炎症性脱髓鞘性多神经病变和炎症性肌炎。在某些情况下,传统上用IVIg治疗的其他疾病也可能受益于FcRn抑制。本文讨论了FcRn抑制的机制,临床前数据,以及该药物治疗多种神经肌肉疾病的临床试验结果。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
64
期刊介绍: Journal of Clinical Neuromuscular Disease provides original articles of interest to physicians who treat patients with neuromuscular diseases, including disorders of the motor neuron, peripheral nerves, neuromuscular junction, muscle, and autonomic nervous system. Each issue highlights the most advanced and successful approaches to diagnosis, functional assessment, surgical intervention, pharmacologic treatment, rehabilitation, and more.
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