4.4 Article

Laboratory safety evaluation of bedinvetmab, a canine anti-nerve growth factor monoclonal antibody, in dogs

Journal

VETERINARY JOURNAL
Volume 276, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.tvjl.2021.105733

Keywords

Bedinvetmab; Canine; Nerve growth factor (NGF); Osteoarthritis pain; Safety

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The experimental results demonstrate that Bedinvetmab has good safety in laboratory Beagle dogs, with no treatment-related adverse changes observed in clinical evaluations, joints, immune morphology or function. Short-term concurrent use of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs also had no significant effects.
Nerve growth factor (NGF), a critical mediator of nociception, is a novel analgesic therapeutic target. Bedinvetmab, a canine monoclonal antibody (mAb), binds NGF and inhibits its interaction with tropomyosin receptor kinase A (trkA) and p75 neurotrophin receptor (p75NTR) receptors. The objective of three integrated laboratory studies was to demonstrate the safety of bedinvetmab in adult laboratory Beagle dogs. Daily health, veterinary, clinical pathology, systemic exposure, and anti-drug antibody evaluations were performed. Study 1 additionally included electrocardiography, neurologic, and ophthalmic assessments, and radiographic monitoring of joints of the appendicular skeleton. Study 2 evaluated T-lymphocyte-dependent immune function. Study 3 evaluated the safety of short-term concurrent administration of carprofen, a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID), with bedinvetmab. Studies 1 and 3 included terminal pathology and histopathology evaluations. Study designs and procedures included directed complementary morphologic and functional evaluations of a literature- and in vitro-based list of potential safety issues related to the NGF signaling pathway and characteristics engineered into this mAb. Screening-level general procedures evaluated effects associated with mAbs that target and inhibit soluble agonist cytokines. There were no treatment-related adverse changes in clinical evaluations, clinical neurological and ophthalmic examinations, joints, immune morphology or function, and no effects of short-term concurrent NSAID usage. Treatment-emergent immunogenicity was not observed. Bedinvetmab (1 mg/kg SC monthly; 3x and 10x dose multiples) was well tolerated in normal laboratory Beagle dogs for 6 months and with 2 weeks' concurrent NSAID administration.

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