JID Innovations (Mar 2024)

A Bispecific, Tetravalent Antibody Targeting Inflammatory and Pruritogenic Pathways in Atopic Dermatitis

  • Julia Tietz,
  • Tea Gunde,
  • Stefan Warmuth,
  • Christopher Weinert,
  • Matthias Brock,
  • Alexandre Simonin,
  • Christian Hess,
  • Maria Johansson,
  • Fabio Spiga,
  • Simone Muntwiler,
  • Belinda Wickihalder,
  • Dana Mahler,
  • Dania Diem,
  • Julia Zeberer,
  • Robin Heiz,
  • Naomi Flückiger,
  • Noriko Shiraishi,
  • Yoshihide Miyake,
  • Nobuaki Takahashi,
  • Markus Fehrholz,
  • Marta Bertolini,
  • Peter Lichtlen,
  • David Urech,
  • Daniel Snell

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 2
p. 100258

Abstract

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Inhibition of IL-4/IL-13 signaling has dramatically improved the treatment of atopic dermatitis (AD). However, in many patients, clinical responses are slow to develop and remain modest. Indeed, some symptoms of AD are dependent on IL-31, which is only partially reduced by IL-4/IL-13 inhibition. Thus, there is an unmet need for AD treatments that concomitantly block IL-4/IL-13 and IL-31 pathways. We engineered NM26-2198, a bispecific tetravalent antibody designed to accomplish this task. In reporter cell lines, NM26-2198 concomitantly inhibited IL-4/IL-13 and IL-31 signaling with a potency comparable with that of the combination of an anti–IL-4Rα antibody (dupilumab) and an anti–IL-31 antibody (BMS-981164). In human PBMCs, NM26-2198 inhibited IL-4–induced upregulation of CD23, demonstrating functional binding to FcγRII (CD32). NM26-2198 also inhibited the secretion of the AD biomarker thymus and activation-regulated chemokine (TARC) in blood samples from healthy human donors. In male cynomolgus monkeys, NM26-2198 exhibited favorable pharmacokinetics and significantly inhibited IL-31–induced scratching at a dose of 30 mg/kg. In a repeat-dose, good laboratory practice toxicology study in cynomolgus monkeys, no adverse effects of NM26-2198 were observed at a weekly dose of 125 mg/kg. Together, these results justify the clinical investigation of NM26-2198 as a treatment for moderate-to-severe AD.

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