American Journal of Transplantation | 2019

A randomized, phase 1b study of the pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, safety, and tolerability of bleselumab, a fully human, anti‐CD40 monoclonal antibody, in kidney transplantation

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


This study evaluated the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics, and pharmacodynamics of various doses of the anti‐CD40 monoclonal antibody bleselumab (ASKP1240) in de novo kidney transplant recipients receiving concomitant standard immunosuppression over 90 days posttransplant. Transplant recipients were randomized (1:1:1:1:1) to bleselumab 50 mg, 100 mg, 200 mg, or 500 mg, or placebo, in addition to standard maintenance immunosuppression. The primary pharmacokinetic endpoints were AUCinf, Cmax, and AUClast. The primary pharmacodynamic endpoint was B cell CD40 receptor occupancy over time. Overall, 50 kidney transplant recipients were randomized; 45 received their randomized treatment (bleselumab [n = 37] or placebo [n = 8]). AUCinf and AUClast demonstrated a more than dose‐proportional increase in the range of 50‐500 mg, and Cmax increased linearly with increasing dose. Maximal receptor occupancy for B cell CD40 was reached at all dose levels and was prolonged as dose increased. No kidney transplant recipients experienced cytokine release syndrome or a thromboembolic event. Treatment‐emergent anti‐bleselumab antibodies were found in one kidney transplant recipient in the bleselumab 50 mg group; these were detected only at Day 7. Overall, bleselumab demonstrated nonlinear pharmacokinetics and dose‐dependent prolonged B cell CD40 receptor occupancy and was well tolerated at all doses (ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT01279538).

Volume 20
Pages 172 - 180
DOI 10.1111/ajt.15560
Language English
Journal American Journal of Transplantation

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