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      The Binding Specificity and Selective Antagonism of Vedolizumab, an Anti-α 4β 7 Integrin Therapeutic Antibody in Development for Inflammatory Bowel Diseases

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          Abstract

          Vedolizumab is a humanized monoclonal antibody that targets the alpha(4)beta(7) integrin exclusively, and modulates inflammation in the gastrointestinal tract without inducing the systemic immunosuppression that characterizes anti-alpha(4) chain monoclonal antibodies, such as natalizumab. This unique pharmacologic profile is largely attributable to four determinants. The first determinant is the restriction of the expression of the alpha(4)beta(7) integrin to subsets of leukocytes. Vedolizumab does not bind to the majority of memory CD4(+) T lymphocytes (60%), neutrophils, and most monocytes. The highest level of vedolizumab binding is to a subset (approximately 25%) of human peripheral blood memory CD4(+) T lymphocytes that include gut-homing interleukin 17 T-helper lymphocytes. Vedolizumab also binds to eosinophils at high levels, and to naive T-helper lymphocytes, naive and memory cytotoxic T lymphocytes, B lymphocytes, natural killer cells, and basophils at lower levels; vedolizumab binds to memory CD4(+) T and B lymphocytes with subnanomolar potency (EC(50) = 0.3-0.4 nM). The second determinant is binding specificity; vedolizumab binds exclusively to the alpha(4)beta(7) integrin, and not to the alpha(4)beta(1) and alpha(E)beta(7) integrins. The third determinant is selective antagonism; vedolizumab selectively inhibits adhesion of alpha(4)beta(7)-expressing cells to mucosal addressin cell adhesion molecule 1 (median inhibition concentration [IC(50)] = 0.02-0.06 microg/ml) and fibronectin (IC(50) = 0.02 microg/ml), but not vascular cell adhesion molecule 1. The fourth determinant is the gastrointestinal-specific tropism of the alpha(4)beta(7) integrin function. These pharmacologic properties of vedolizumab, in conjunction with the gastrointestinal tropism of alpha(4)beta(7) integrin function, may ultimately confer an improved risk-to-benefit profile for patients with inflammatory bowel diseases.

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          Unravelling the pathogenesis of inflammatory bowel disease.

          Recently, substantial advances in the understanding of the molecular pathogenesis of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) have been made owing to three related lines of investigation. First, IBD has been found to be the most tractable of complex disorders for discovering susceptibility genes, and these have shown the importance of epithelial barrier function, and innate and adaptive immunity in disease pathogenesis. Second, efforts directed towards the identification of environmental factors implicate commensal bacteria (or their products), rather than conventional pathogens, as drivers of dysregulated immunity and IBD. Third, murine models, which exhibit many of the features of ulcerative colitis and seem to be bacteria-driven, have helped unravel the pathogenesis/mucosal immunopathology of IBD.
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            Efficacy and safety of ustekinumab, a human interleukin-12/23 monoclonal antibody, in patients with psoriasis: 52-week results from a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial (PHOENIX 2).

            Ustekinumab, a human monoclonal antibody against interleukins 12 and 23, has shown therapeutic potential for psoriasis. This study assessed the efficacy and safety of ustekinumab in psoriasis patients and assessed dosing intensification in partial responders. In this multicentre, phase III, double-blind, placebo-controlled study, 1230 patients with moderate-to-severe psoriasis (defined by a psoriasis area and severity index [PASI] score > or =12, and at least 10% total body surface area involvement) were randomly assigned to receive ustekinumab 45 mg (n=409) or 90 mg (n=411) at weeks 0 and 4, then every 12 weeks, or placebo (n=410). Partial responders (ie, patients achieving > or =50% but <75% improvement from baseline in PASI) were re-randomised at week 28 to continue dosing every 12 weeks or escalate to dosing every 8 weeks. Both randomisations were done with a minimisation method via a centralised interactive voice response. The primary endpoint was the proportion of patients achieving at least 75% improvement in PASI (PASI 75) at week 12. Analyses were by intention to treat. This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00307437. All randomised patients were included in the efficacy analysis. 273 (66.7%) patients receiving ustekinumab 45 mg, 311 (75.7%) receiving ustekinumab 90 mg, and 15 (3.7%) receiving placebo achieved the primary endpoint (difference in response rate 63.1%, 95% CI 58.2-68.0, p<0.0001 for the 45 mg group vs placebo and 72.0%, 67.5-76.5, p<0.0001 for the 90 mg group vs placebo). More partial responders at week 28 who received ustekinumab 90 mg every 8 weeks achieved PASI 75 at week 52 than did those who continued to receive the same dose every 12 weeks (22 [68.8%] vs 11 [33.3%]; difference in response rate 35.4%, 95% CI 12.7-58.1, p=0.004). There was no such response to changes in dosing intensity in partial responders treated with ustekinumab 45 mg. During the placebo-controlled phase, 217 (53.1%) patients in the 45 mg group, 197 (47.9%) in the 90 mg group, and 204 (49.8%) in the placebo group experienced adverse events; serious adverse events were seen in eight (2.0%) patients in the 45 mg group, five (1.2%) in the 90 mg group, and eight (2.0%) in the placebo group. Although treatment with ustekinumab every 12 weeks is effective for most patients with moderate-to-severe psoriasis, intensification of dosing to once every 8 weeks with ustekinumab 90 mg might be necessary to elicit a full response in patients who only partially respond to the initial regimen.
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              A genome-wide association study identifies IL23R as an inflammatory bowel disease gene.

              The inflammatory bowel diseases Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis are common, chronic disorders that cause abdominal pain, diarrhea, and gastrointestinal bleeding. To identify genetic factors that might contribute to these disorders, we performed a genome-wide association study. We found a highly significant association between Crohn's disease and the IL23R gene on chromosome 1p31, which encodes a subunit of the receptor for the proinflammatory cytokine interleukin-23. An uncommon coding variant (rs11209026, c.1142G>A, p.Arg381Gln) confers strong protection against Crohn's disease, and additional noncoding IL23R variants are independently associated. Replication studies confirmed IL23R associations in independent cohorts of patients with Crohn's disease or ulcerative colitis. These results and previous studies on the proinflammatory role of IL-23 prioritize this signaling pathway as a therapeutic target in inflammatory bowel disease.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics
                J Pharmacol Exp Ther
                American Society for Pharmacology & Experimental Therapeutics (ASPET)
                0022-3565
                1521-0103
                August 20 2009
                September 2009
                September 2009
                June 09 2009
                : 330
                : 3
                : 864-875
                Article
                10.1124/jpet.109.153973
                19509315
                e379da31-b886-4937-b20d-13fa48ce2512
                © 2009
                History

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