A survey of applications of biological products for drug interference of immunogenicity assays

Pharm Res. 2012 Dec;29(12):3384-92. doi: 10.1007/s11095-012-0833-2. Epub 2012 Aug 18.

Abstract

Purpose: Biological drugs in circulation can interfere with anti-drug antibody (ADA) assays and cause false ADA negatives. We surveyed the applications of biological products approved by FDA during 2005-2011 for prevalence of drug interferences and proposed approaches to address this issue scientifically.

Methods: The immunogenicity assay drug tolerance, steady-state drug concentrations, and immunogenicity rates were reviewed for 26 BLA/NDA and 2 sBLA.

Results: Many FDA approved biologics had higher steady-state drug concentrations than the drug tolerance of ADA assays, by 1.2- to 800-fold. Reported immunogenicity rates may be negatively impacted. Some sponsors triaged immunogenicity samples according to the drug tolerance, leaving some samples un-assayed or reporting them as inconclusive ADA; but these samples were interpreted as ADA- for calculating immunogenicity rates.

Conclusions: Implementation of ADA assays that can tolerate therapeutic drug concentrations is imperative. Given drug interferences, we propose in this paper the following practices: (i) to measure drug concentrations in ADA samples, (ii) to explicitly list all ADA status, including inconclusive ADA and un-assayed samples, (iii) to calculate population immunogenicity rates based on only subjects with confirmed ADA+ and ADA-, and (iv) to make available ADA assay specifics relevant to the use of ADA data in disease management.

MeSH terms

  • Antibodies / immunology*
  • Antibody Formation / drug effects*
  • Biological Products / immunology*
  • Drug Hypersensitivity / immunology
  • Drug Tolerance
  • Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions*
  • Humans
  • Immunologic Techniques / methods

Substances

  • Antibodies
  • Biological Products