一项随机、双盲、1期、单剂量和多剂量安慰剂对照研究in -006的安全性和药代动力学,in -006是一种吸入抗体治疗COVID-19的健康志愿者。

IF 9.7 1区 医学 Q1 MEDICINE, RESEARCH & EXPERIMENTAL
EBioMedicine Pub Date : 2025-03-01 Epub Date: 2025-02-08 DOI:10.1016/j.ebiom.2025.105582
Thomas R Moench, Lakshmi Botta, Brian Farrer, Jason D Lickliter, Hyunah Kang, Yoona Park, Cheolmin Kim, Marshall Hoke, Miles Brennan, Morgan D McSweeney, Zachary Richardson, John B Whelan, Jong Moon Cho, Soo Young Lee, Frances Faurot, Jeff Hutchins, Samuel K Lai
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:虽然COVID-19主要是呼吸道感染,但目前的抗体治疗是全身给药。我们假设单克隆抗体吸入递送可能是一种更有效和方便的途径。我们研究了IN-006的安全性、耐受性和药代动力学,IN-006是一种用于手持式雾化器雾化给药的regdanvimab的重新配方。方法:在澳大利亚墨尔本的健康志愿者(ACTRN12621001235897)中进行了一项一期研究,受试者年龄为18-55岁。除了准备研究药物的药房工作人员外,研究人员和参与者对治疗分配不知情。每个队列中随机分配的有效组和安慰剂组的比例设为3:1。主要结局是安全性和耐受性。探索性结果是in -006在鼻液和血清中的药代动力学。研究结果:23名参与者被纳入并随机分为两个单剂量和一个多剂量队列(30mg或90mg单剂量雾剂,或7次每日90mg剂量)。无严重不良事件发生。所有入组的参与者在没有中断或停止治疗的情况下完成了研究。所有治疗中出现的不良事件都是短暂的,非剂量依赖性的,严重程度从轻度到中度分级。雾化耐受良好,平均在6分钟内完成。多剂量组in -006的鼻液几何平均浓度在给药后30分钟为739.8 μg/mL, 22 h为1.2 μg/mL。多剂量组in -006的血清几何平均浓度在给药后3天达到峰值,为0.51 μg/mL。解释:in -006耐受性良好,在呼吸道中的浓度高于抗病毒单克隆抗体典型的IC50范围。这些数据支持了呼吸道传染病雾化递送抗病毒单克隆抗体的进一步发展。经费:这项工作由美国陆军医学研究与发展司令部(W81XWH-15-9-0001)资助,regdanvimab由Celltrion公司提供。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A randomized, double-blind, Phase 1, single- and multiple-dose placebo-controlled study of the safety and pharmacokinetics of IN-006, an inhaled antibody treatment for COVID-19 in healthy volunteers.

Background: Although COVID-19 is predominantly a respiratory tract infection, current antibody treatments are administered by systemic dosing. We hypothesize that inhaled delivery of a monoclonal antibody may be a more effective and convenient route. We investigated the safety, tolerability, and pharmacokinetics of IN-006, a reformulation of regdanvimab for nebulized delivery by a handheld nebulizer.

Methods: A Phase 1 study was conducted in healthy volunteers aged 18-55 a Phase 1 unit in Melbourne, Australia (ACTRN12621001235897). Study staff and participants were blinded to treatment assignment, except for pharmacy staff preparing the study drug. The ratio of active:placebo randomization to each cohort was set at 3:1. The primary outcomes were safety and tolerability. Exploratory outcomes were pharmacokinetics of IN-006 in nasal fluid and serum.

Findings: Twenty-three participants were enrolled and randomized across two single dose and one multiple dose cohorts (30 mg or 90 mg single nebulized dose, or seven daily 90 mg doses). There were no serious adverse events. All enrolled participants completed the study without treatment interruption or discontinuation. All treatment-emergent adverse events were transient, non-dose dependent, and graded mild to moderate in severity. Nebulization was well-tolerated and completed in an average of 6 min. Geometric mean nasal fluid concentrations of IN-006 in the multiple dose cohort were 739.8 μg/mL at 30 min after dosing and 1.2 μg/mL at 22 h. Geometric mean serum levels in the multiple dose cohort peaked at 0.51 μg/mL 3 days after the final dose.

Interpretation: IN-006 was well-tolerated and achieved concentrations in the respiratory tract orders of magnitude above the IC50 range typical of antiviral mAbs. These data support further development of nebulized delivery of antiviral mAbs for respiratory infectious disease.

Funding: This work was funded by the U.S. Army Medical Research and Development Command (W81XWH-15-9-0001) and regdanvimab was provided by Celltrion, Inc.

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来源期刊
EBioMedicine
EBioMedicine Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology-General Biochemistry,Genetics and Molecular Biology
CiteScore
17.70
自引率
0.90%
发文量
579
审稿时长
5 weeks
期刊介绍: eBioMedicine is a comprehensive biomedical research journal that covers a wide range of studies that are relevant to human health. Our focus is on original research that explores the fundamental factors influencing human health and disease, including the discovery of new therapeutic targets and treatments, the identification of biomarkers and diagnostic tools, and the investigation and modification of disease pathways and mechanisms. We welcome studies from any biomedical discipline that contribute to our understanding of disease and aim to improve human health.
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