Back to Search Start Over

Anti-brolucizumab immune response as one prerequisite for rare retinal vasculitis/retinal vascular occlusion adverse events

Authors :
Anette C. Karle
Matthias B. Wrobel
Stephan Koepke
Michael Gutknecht
Sascha Gottlieb
Brigitte Christen
Tina Rubic-Schneider
Ingrid Pruimboom-Brees
Xavier Charles Leber
Meike Scharenberg
Benjamin Maciejewski
Oliver Turner
Chandra Saravanan
Francois Huet
Amanda Littlewood-Evans
Andreas Clemens
Cynthia L. Grosskreutz
Jeffrey D. Kearns
Pawan Mehan
Robert L. Schmouder
Vito Sasseville
Dominique Brees
Source :
Science Translational Medicine. 15
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), 2023.

Abstract

In October 2019, Novartis launched brolucizumab, a single-chain variable fragment molecule targeting vascular endothelial growth factor A, for the treatment of neovascular age-related macular degeneration. In 2020, rare cases of retinal vasculitis and/or retinal vascular occlusion (RV/RO) were reported, often during the first few months after treatment initiation, consistent with a possible immunologic pathobiology. This finding was inconsistent with preclinical studies in cynomolgus monkeys that demonstrated no drug-related intraocular inflammation, or RV/RO, despite the presence of preexisting and treatment-emergent antidrug antibodies (ADAs) in some animals. In this study, the immune response against brolucizumab in humans was assessed using samples from clinical trials and clinical practice. In the brolucizumab-naïve population, anti-brolucizumab ADA responses were detected before any treatment, which was supported by the finding that healthy donors can harbor brolucizumab-specific B cells. This suggested prior exposure of the immune system to proteins with structural similarity. Experiments on samples showed that naïve and brolucizumab-treated ADA-positive patients developed a class-switched, high-affinity immune response, with several linear epitopes being recognized by ADAs. Only patients with RV/RO showed a meaningful T cell response upon recall with brolucizumab. Further studies in cynomolgus monkeys preimmunized against brolucizumab with adjuvant followed by intravitreal brolucizumab challenge demonstrated that high ADA titers were required to generate ocular inflammation and vasculitis/vascular thrombosis, comparable to RV/RO in humans. Immunogenicity therefore seems to be a prerequisite to develop RV/RO. However, because only 2.1% of patients with ADA develop RV/RO, additional factors must play a role in the development of RV/RO.

Subjects

Subjects :
General Medicine

Details

ISSN :
19466242 and 19466234
Volume :
15
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Science Translational Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........b253d859f72c25188df64a4808680e73