4.7 Article

Significantly lower antigenicity of incobotulinumtoxin than abo- or onabotulinumtoxin

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGY
Volume 270, Issue 2, Pages 788-796

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00415-022-11395-2

Keywords

Difference in antigenicity; Neutralizing antibodies; IncobotulinumtoxinA; Complex proteins; Botulinum toxin type A preparations

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The study found that frequent injections of a complex protein-containing BoNT/A preparation are associated with a significantly higher risk of developing neutralizing antibodies (NABs) compared to injections with a complex protein-free BoNT/A preparation.
Background For many indications, BoNT/A is repetitively injected with the risk of developing neutralizing antibodies (NABs). Therefore, it is important to analyze whether there is a difference in antigenicity between the different licensed BoNT/A preparations. Methods In this cross-sectional study, the prevalence of NABs was tested by means of the sensitive mouse hemidiaphragm assay (MHDA) in 645 patients. Patients were split into those having exclusively been treated with the complex protein-free incoBoNT/A preparation (CF-MON group) and those having started BoNT/A therapy with a complex protein-containing BoNT/A preparation (CC-I group). This CC-I group was split into those patients who remained either on abo- or onaBoNT/A (CC-MON group) and those who had been treated with at least two BoNT/A preparations (CC-SWI group). To balance treatment duration, only CC-MON patients who did not start their BoNT/A therapy more than 10 years before recruitment (CC-MON-10 group) were further analyzed. The log-rank test was used to compare the prevalence of NABs in the CF-MON and CC-MON-10 group. Results In the CF-MON subgroup, no patient developed NABs. In the CC-I group, 84 patients were NAB-positive. NABs were found in 33.3% of those who switched preparations (CC-SWI) and in 5.9% of the CC-MON-10 group. Kaplan-Meier curves for remaining NAB-negative under continuous BoNT/A therapy were significantly different (p < 0.035) between the CF-MON and CC-MON-10 group. Conclusion Frequent injections of a complex protein-containing BoNT/A preparation are associated with significantly higher risks of developing NABs than injections with the same frequency using the complex protein-free incoBoNT/A preparation.

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