4.5 Review

How can monoclonal antibodies be harnessed against neglected tropical diseases and other infectious diseases?

Journal

EXPERT OPINION ON DRUG DISCOVERY
Volume 14, Issue 11, Pages 1103-1112

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/17460441.2019.1646723

Keywords

Neglected tropical diseases; monoclonal antibodies; infectious diseases; antibody discovery; affordable biotherapeutics; tropical pharmacology; snakebite envenoming; animal envenomings; parasitic diseases; bacterial infections

Funding

  1. Villum Foundation [00025302]

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Introduction: Monoclonal antibody-based therapies now represent the single-largest class of molecules undergoing clinical investigation. Although a handful of different monoclonal antibodies have been clinically approved for bacterial and viral indications, including rabies, therapies based on monoclonal antibodies are yet to fully enter the fields of neglected tropical diseases and other infectious diseases. Areas covered: This review presents the current state-of-the-art in the development and use of monoclonal antibodies against neglected tropical diseases and other infectious diseases, including viral, bacterial, and parasitic infections, as well as envenomings by animal bites and stings. Additionally, a short section on mushroom poisonings is included. Key challenges for developing antibody-based therapeutics are discussed for each of these fields. Expert opinion: Neglected tropical diseases and other infectious diseases represent a golden opportunity for academics and technology developers for advancing our scientific capabilities within the understanding and design of antibody cross-reactivity, use of oligoclonal antibody mixtures for multi-target neutralization, novel immunization methodologies, targeting of evasive pathogens, and development of fundamentally novel therapeutic mechanisms of action. Furthermore, a huge humanitarian and societal impact is to gain by exploiting antibody technologies for the development of biotherapies against diseases, for which current treatment options are suboptimal or non-existent.

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