4.4 Article

Safety and Stability of Antibody-Dye Conjugate in Optical Molecular Imaging

Journal

MOLECULAR IMAGING AND BIOLOGY
Volume 23, Issue 1, Pages 109-116

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11307-020-01536-2

Keywords

Antibody-dye complex; Safety; Stability; Pharmacokinetics; Oncology

Funding

  1. NCI NExT Program
  2. NIH [R01 CA190306-01]
  3. Stanford Molecular Imaging Scholars (SMIS) program [NIH T32CA118681]
  4. Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (Rubicon) [019.171LW.022]

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The study demonstrated that Panitumumab-IRDye800CW was safe and stable to administer over a 54-month window with a low rate of adverse events (7.4%), which is consistent with the rate associated with Panitumumab alone. This data supports re-purposing therapeutic antibodies as diagnostic imaging agents with limited preclinical toxicology studies.
Purpose The development of molecularly targeted tracers is likely to improve the accuracy of diagnostic, screening, and therapeutic tools. Despite the many therapeutic antibodies that are FDA-approved with known toxicity, only a limited number of antibody-dye conjugates have been introduced to the clinic. Thorough evaluation of the safety, stability, and pharmacokinetics of antibody conjugates in the clinical setting compared with their parental components could accelerate the clinical approval of antibodies as agents for molecular imaging. Here we investigate the safety and stability of a near-infrared fluorescent dye (IRDye800CW) conjugated panitumumab, an approved therapeutic antibody, and report on the product stability, pharmacokinetics, adverse events, and QTc interval changes in patients. Procedures Panitumumab-IRDye800CW was made under good manufacturing practice (GMP) conditions in a single batch on March 26, 2014, and then evaluated over 4.5 years at 0, 3, and 6 months, and then at 6-month intervals thereafter. We conducted early phase trials in head and neck, lung, pancreas, and brain cancers with panitumumab-IRDye800CW. Eighty-one patients scheduled to undergo standard-of-care surgery were infused with doses between 0.06 to 2.83 mg/kg of antibody. Patient ECGs, blood samples, and adverse events were collected over 30-day post-infusion for analysis. Results Eighty-one patients underwent infusion of the study drug at a range of doses. Six patients (7.4 %) experienced an adverse event that was considered potentially related to the drug. The most common event was a prolonged QTc interval which occurred in three patients (3.7 %). Panitumumab-IRDye800CW had two OOS results at 42 and 54 months while meeting all other stability testing criteria. Conclusions Panitumumab-IRDye800CW was safe and stable to administer over a 54-month window with a low rate of adverse events (7.4 %) which is consistent with the rate associated with panitumumab alone. This data supports re-purposing therapeutic antibodies as diagnostic imaging agents with limited preclinical toxicology studies.

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