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Airway tryptase levels inform the lack of clinical efficacy of the tryptase inhibitor MTPS9579A in asthma

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posted on 2024-10-07, 14:23 authored by Horace Rhee, Lindsay M Henderson, Rebecca N Bauer, Kit Wong, Tracy L Staton, David F Choy, Prajna Banerjee, Victor Poon, Kenta Yoshida, Chen Chen, Keyi Long, Gizette Sperinde, Steven T Laing, Nicholas S Jones, Sara B Glickstein, Parul Dayal, Alice Fong, Ajit Dash, Grazyna Pulka, Brian Leaker, Dave Singh, Peter Bradding

Background: Tryptase, a mast cell protease, has been identified as a potential therapeutic target in managing patients with refractory asthma. We assessed the efficacy, safety, pharmacokinetics, and pharmacodynamics of MTPS9579A, an anti‐tryptase antibody, in a phase 2a randomized trial for patients with uncontrolled asthma and a phase 1c trial to understand activity within the lower respiratory tract.


Methods: Phase 2a patients (n = 134) received 1800 mg MTPS9579A or placebo intravenously every 4 weeks for 48 weeks. The primary endpoint was time to the first composite exacerbation event. Phase 1c patients (n = 27) received one intravenous dose of 300 or 1800 mg MTPS9579A or placebo. Both trials measured MTPS9579A concentrations and effects on tryptase in serum and nasal lining fluid; phase 1c also analyzed bronchial lining fluid.


Results: MTPS9579A did not meet the primary endpoint (hazard ratio = 0.90; 95% CI: 0.55–1.47; p = 0.6835); exacerbation rates in the placebo group were low. Serum and nasal MTPS9579A pharmacokinetics and tryptase levels were consistent with data from healthy volunteers. However, in phase 1c patients, compared to nasal levels, MTPS9579A bronchial concentrations were 6.8‐fold lower, and bronchial active and total tryptase levels were higher (119‐fold and 30‐fold, respectively). Pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic modeling predicted intravenous doses of 3800 mg every 4 weeks would be necessary to achieve 95% active tryptase inhibition from baseline.


Conclusions: The MTPS9579A dose tested in the phase 2a study was insufficient to inhibit tryptase in bronchial lining fluid, likely contributing to the observed lack of efficacy.

Funding

Genentech, Inc.

National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Manchester Biomedical Research Centre (BRC)

National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Leicester Biomedical Research Centre (BRC)

History

Citation

Rhee H, Henderson LM, Bauer RN, et al. Airway tryptase levels inform the lack of clinical efficacy of the tryptase inhibitor MTPS9579A in asthma. Allergy. 2024; 00: 1-12. doi:10.1111/all.16309

Author affiliation

College of Life Sciences/Respiratory Sciences

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Allergy

Publisher

Wiley

issn

0105-4538

eissn

1398-9995

Acceptance date

2024-07-29

Copyright date

2024

Available date

2024-10-07

Spatial coverage

Denmark

Language

en

Deposited by

Professor Peter Bradding

Deposit date

2024-09-30

Data Access Statement

For eligible studies, qualified researchers may request access to individual patient level clinical data through a data request platform. At the time of writing, this request platform is Vivli: https://vivli.org/members/enquiries-about-studies-not-listed-on-the-vivli-platform/ For up to date details on Roche's Global Policy on the Sharing of Clinical Information, and how to request access to related clinical study documents, see here: https://www.roche.com/innovation/process/clinical-trials/data-sharing Anonymized records for individual patients across more than one data source external to Roche cannot and should not be linked due to a potential increase in risk of patient re-identification.

Rights Retention Statement

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