Quantification of IgG monoclonal antibody clearance in tissues

MJ Eigenmann, L Fronton, HP Grimm, MB Otteneder… - MAbs, 2017 - Taylor & Francis
MJ Eigenmann, L Fronton, HP Grimm, MB Otteneder, BF Krippendorff
MAbs, 2017Taylor & Francis
Monoclonal antibodies are an important therapeutic entity, and knowledge of antibody
pharmacokinetics has steadily increased over the years. Despite this effort, little is known
about the extent of IgG antibody degradation in different tissues of the body. While studies
have been published identifying sites of degradation with the use of residualizing and non-
residualizing radiolabels, quantitative tissue clearances have not yet been derived. Here, we
show that in physiologically-based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) models we can combine mouse …
Abstract
Monoclonal antibodies are an important therapeutic entity, and knowledge of antibody pharmacokinetics has steadily increased over the years. Despite this effort, little is known about the extent of IgG antibody degradation in different tissues of the body. While studies have been published identifying sites of degradation with the use of residualizing and non-residualizing radiolabels, quantitative tissue clearances have not yet been derived. Here, we show that in physiologically-based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) models we can combine mouse data of Indium-111 and Iodine-125 labeled antibodies with prior physiologic knowledge to determine tissue-specific intrinsic clearances. Unspecific total tissue clearance (mL/day) in the mouse was estimated to be: liver = 4.75; brain = 0.02; gut = 0.40; heart = 0.07; kidney = 0.97; lung = 0.20; muscle = 3.02; skin = 3.89; spleen = 0.45; rest of body = 2.16. The highest catabolic activity (per g tissue) was in spleen for an FcRn wild-type antibody, but shifts to the liver for an antibody with reduced FcRn affinity. In the model developed, this shift can be explained by the liver having a greater FcRn-mediated protection capacity than the spleen. The quantification of tissue intrinsic clearances and FcRn salvage capacity increases our understanding of quantitative processes that drive the therapeutic responses of antibodies. This knowledge is critical, for instance to estimate the non-specific cellular uptake and degradation of antibodies used for targeted delivery of payloads.
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