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Journal article

A multicenter, open-label, prospective, randomized, dose-ranging pharmacokinetic study of the anti-TNF-α antibody afelimomab in patients with sepsis syndrome

Abstract

Abstract.Objective: To investigate the pharmacokinetics and safety of afelimomab, a murine antibody fragment against human tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-α in patients with sepsis. Design: Multicenter, randomized, open-label, placebo-controlled phase I/II clinical trial. Setting: Intensive care units of six academic medical centers in the United States. Patients: Forty-eight patients with a clinical diagnosis of sepsis who received standard supportive care and antimicrobial therapy. Interventions: Patients received 0.3, 1.0, or 3.0 mg/kg afelimomab or placebo intravenously over 20 min. Three patients in each dose group received single doses; the remaining nine patients in each group received multiple (nine) doses at 8-h intervals over 72 h. Measurements and main results: Afelimomab appeared safe and well tolerated. Single- and multiple-dose kinetics were predictable and dose related. The elimination half-life was 44.7 h. Afelimomab treatment resulted in increased serum concentrations of TNF (includes TNF-antibody complexes) and decreased serum interleukin-6 concentrations, whereas no discernible trends were observed in placebo-treated patients. There was no significant treatment effect on 28-day mortality as was expected given the small number of patients. However, overall mortality was significantly (p=0.001) associated with baseline interleukin-6 concentration. All patients experienced adverse events, but the vast majority were considered unrelated to the study drug and demonstrated no apparent relationship to afelimomab dose. Although 41% of patients developed human anti-murine antibodies, there were no clinical sequelae. Conclusions: Multidose therapy with afelimomab was safe, well tolerated, and had predictable linear kinetics. A large randomized trial comparing afelimomab to placebo in patients with well defined sepsis has recently been completed.

Authors

Gallagher J; Fisher C; Sherman B; Munger M; Meyers B; Ellison T; Fischkoff S; Barchuk WT; Teoh L; Velagapudi R

Journal

Intensive Care Medicine, Vol. 27, No. 7, pp. 1169–1178

Publisher

Springer Nature

Publication Date

July 1, 2001

DOI

10.1007/s001340100973

ISSN

0342-4642

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