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Drug Development Lynnda Reid, Ph.D. Pharmacology/Toxicology Reviewer Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER) Rafael Ponce, Ph.D., DABT Senior Scientist ZymoGenetics, Inc. Outline Regulatory Overview Drug/biologic development process Resources Questions (and answers?) Parties involved in Drug Development FDA Sponsor Contract Labs Clinical Sites Manufacturing Sites Consultants Other… Sponsors Pharmaceutical/Biotechnology Firms Practicing Physicians and Dentists Academic Institutions NIH Other Proteins Small Molecules Drug substance Heterogenous mixture Broad specs during development Specs may change Drug product Usually IV or SC Single entity; high chemical purity Exception: racemic mixtures Specs well-defined early Usually oral Impurities Difficult to standardize Standards well established Bridging requirements Significant for drug substance Bioequivalence procedures Biological activity May mimic naturally occurring molecules Primary MOT Predictive based on MOA Variable significance Less predictive Chronic Toxicity Lack of models; species specificity and antigenicity Models sometimes relevant Impurities Toxicity not a major issue, may impact immunogenicity May be significant Purity standards well established Nonspecificity Usually significant Drug-drug interaction What Types of Nonclinical Studies Should Sponsors Conduct? ICH (International Conference on Harmonization) Guidelines Drug class specific guidance Generaltoxicity? Toxicology? FDA Consultations General Genotoxicity? Genotoxicity? Carcinogenicity? Carcinogenicity? The ICH S6 Guidance Coverage “Preclinical Testing of Biotechnology-Derived Pharmaceuticals” – Two species see Olson (2000) Reg. Toxicol. Pharm., 32:56-67 – Use relevant over non-relevant species Mechanism of safety/efficacy distinct form small molecules Demonstrate appropriateness – Animal models (disease/TG-XO) may provide meaningful insight – Immunogenicity testing and its implications – Genotoxicity testing Generally not appropriate – Chronic toxicity testing see Clarke J et al (in press) Reg. Toxicol. Pharm. – Carcinogenicity testing Generally unnecessary unless growth factor or immunosuppressive Darren Warren, SNBL Designing a Tox Study Species selection Dose Selection Route of administration Duration of study Group sizes Recovery/non-treatment groups needed? Endpoints/parameters to evaluate Katie Sprugel, Amgen Designing a Tox Program ICH M3 ICH S6 Precedence – http://www.fda.gov/cder/biologics/biologics_table.htm Species Selection Goal: Identify most appropriate rodent and nonrodent species for safety evaluations Appropriate means what? – Not the cheapest, the smallest, the easiest… – Best model scientifically for the human biology – Suitable for safety assessment studies Katie Sprugel, Amgen Species Selection-Data Sequence homology Tissue expression Binding data In vitro functional assay – Ideally reconstituting entire signaling pathway with species-appropriate reagents In vivo response Katie Sprugel, Amgen Types of Toxicology Studies Recommended General Toxicology – acute and repeat dose toxicology studies Special Toxicology Studies – local irritation studies, e.g., site specific, ocular – hypersensitivity studies for inhalation and dermal drug products Reproductive and Developmental Toxicology Studies – male and female fertility – embryonic and fetal development – post-natal reproductive and developmental effects Purpose of Preclinical Studies Eliminate excessively toxic compounds from development Identify potential target organs Provide data to guide selection of safe initial starting dose in humans Evaluate potential safety and pharmacodynamic biomarkers Impact of Nonclinical Studies on Drug Development Setting Initial Doses in Humans Identification of Possible Adverse Effects Identification of Reversible vs Irreversible Effects Identification of Useful Biomarkers for Monitoring Toxicity during Clinical Trials Drug Labeling Drug Development Process PRELEAD IND Investigational New Drug NDA/BLA New Drug Application Biologics License Appl. Research “Discovery” Development Toxicology Testing Process PRELEAD IND NDA/BLA Discovery Development Nonclinical tox studies in animals P1 P2 P3 Clinical trials Nonclinical Information Flow In vitro/Animal Models Hypothesis testing Mechanism of action Safety assessment Develop surrogate markers ADME/PK Application Trial Potential for effect Toxicity profile Dose/regimen Route of administration J. Lipani, 1998 Contract Research Organizations • Formulation/Manufacture/Fill and Finish • Metabolism/distribution (ADME/PK) • In vitro – Activity/high throughput screening – Toxicity (non-GLP and GLP) • In vivo – Research – Model development – Proof of concept/efficacy – Development – GLP toxicology testing for regulatory submission Types of Nonclinical Studies Reviewed by FDA Basic pharmacology – primary and secondary mechanisms of action – nonclinical efficacy studies Safety pharmacology Pharmacokinetics Toxicology Genotoxicology Carcinogenicity What Does FDA Expect from Nonclinical Studies? Pharmacology – proposed mechanism of action – identification of secondary pharmacologic effects – Proof of Concept studies for serious indications Safety Pharmacology – effects on neurological, cardiovascular, pulmonary, renal, and gastrointestinal systems – abuse liability What Does FDA Expect from Nonclinical Studies? Pharmacokinetics – comparison of ADME in species used for toxicology studies – identification of bioaccumulation potential – identification of potential differences in gender – generation of PK parameters, e.g., Cmax, Tmax, AUC(o-inf.), half life What Does FDA Expect in General Toxicology Studies? Acute and repeat toxicology studies in two species Duration of repeat dose nonclinical studies should be at least equal or greater than the duration of the proposed clinical study A control and at least 3 drug concentrations – identification of the NOAEL and high-dose multiple toxicity – identify shape of the dose-response curve Doses/systemic exposure should exceed clinical dose/exposure See also ICH M3 What Does FDA Expect in General Toxicology Studies? Formulation should be the same as the clinical formulation Route of exposure: – should be the same as clinical route – additional routes of exposure may be needed to achieve systemic toxicity Histopathology examination of all animals and standard tissues Lymphoproliferative tissues should be assessed for unintended effects on the immune system Toxicokinetic information Timing of Nonclinical Studies - Phase 1 (see ICH M3) Prior to “First Time in Humans” – Pharmacokinetics/toxicokinetics (exposure data) – Safety in a rodent and a non-rodent single dose toxicity studies in 2 mammalian species expanded acute or repeat dose toxicity studies safety pharmacology – Local tolerance – (In vitro evaluation of mutations and chromosomal damage) – (Hypersensitivity for inhaled and dermal drugs) Timing of Nonclinical Studies - Phase 1/2 Phase 1-2 Clinical Trials – repeat dose toxicity studies of appropriate length Phase 2 Clinical Trials – (complete genotoxicity assessment (in vivo and in vitro)) – repeat dose toxicity studies of appropriate length Timing of Nonclinical Studies - Phase 3 Phase 3 Clinical Trials – Repeat dose toxicity studies of appropriate length – Male and female fertility – Post-natal development – Carcinogenicity Questions Asked by Review Pharmacologist/Toxicologist Validity of study design: – Was the appropriate animal model used? – Were dose(s) and duration sufficient to support the proposed clinical study or labeling? – Were adequate systemic exposures achieved? – Was the route of administration relevant to clinical used? More Questions: Did the test system exhibit any effects? Were the effects treatment-related? Are the effects biologically significant? Are the effects reversible? Are the effects clinically relevant? Can the effects be monitored clinically? Preclinical Development of rFXIII Rafael Ponce Jenn Visich Toxicol Pathol. 2005;33(4):495-506 Toxicol Pathol. 2005;33(6):702-10 ZYMOGENETICS Clotting and Fibrinolysis are in balance Clotting Contact Pathway (Intrinsic pathway) Tissue Factor (Extrinsic pathway) Prothrombin (II) Thrombin Fibrinogen FXIII Fibrinolysis Cross-linked Fibrin Clot Plasminogen Plasmin Fibrin Degradation products D-dimers ZYMOGENETICS Tissue Factor (Extrinsic pathway) Contact Pathway (Intrinsic pathway) Neg. Charged Surface (collagen) HMWK PK Kallikrein XII XIIa XI XIa IX IXa Tissue damage Tissue Factor VIIa VIIIa VIII X Xa Prothrombin (II) Va V Thrombin-Antithrombin Complex (TAT) Thrombomodulin XIII XIIIa Plasminogen Antithrombin III + Heparin (heparan, etc.) Thrombin + F 1.2 Fibrinogen tPA-PAI complex VII Serine protease Thrombin-Thrombomodulin Complex Protein C Fibrin tPA Plasminogen Activator Inhibitor Plasmin Plasmin-antiplasmin complex a 2 -Antiplasmin Fibrin Degradation products, D-dimers Activated Protein C + Protein S Inhibit VIIIa and Va FXIII in Normal Hemostasis Prothrombin (II) Thrombin Fibrinogen XIII (rA2B2) (rA2*B2) rXIII (rA2) rXIII (2B) XIIIa (rA2*) Fibrin Fibrinsoluble Plasmin Fast Fibrincross-linked Slow ZYMOGENETICS Preclinical Model Species Selection Cynomolgus Monkeys Coagulation system similar to humans (general lit) Humans: 2B + rA2 Cynomolgus: 2cnB + rA2 rA2B2 rA2cnB2 - Binding of rFXIII to B-subunit across species ZYMOGENETICS Species Selection Cynomolgus Monkeys Coagulation system similar to humans (general lit) Humans: 2B + rA2 Cynomolgus: 2cnB + rA2 rA2B2 rA2cnB2 - Binding of rFXIII to B-subunit across species - Formation of FXIII rA2cnB2 in cynos in vivo ZYMOGENETICS Species Selection Cynomolgus Monkeys Humans: rFXIIIa + fibrin Cynomolgus: rFXIIIa + cyno fibrin x-linked fibrin x-linked fibrin ZYMOGENETICS Species Selection Cynomolgus Monkeys Humans: rFXIIIa + fibrin Cynomolgus: rFXIIIa + cyno fibrin x-linked fibrin x-linked fibrin - In vitro FXIII cross-linking in human and cyno plasma ZYMOGENETICS Species Selection Cynomolgus Monkeys Humans: rFXIIIa + fibrin Cynomolgus: rFXIIIa + cyno fibrin x-linked fibrin x-linked fibrin - In vitro FXIII cross-linking in human and cyno plasma - Formation of cross-linked fibrin(ogen) in cynos in vivo ZYMOGENETICS Design of rFXIII Toxicology Studies • Dosing regimen support for CD and CPB indications • Identify initial safe dose and dose escalation scheme • Identify toxicity endpoints and their reversibility • Evaluate immunogenicity • Identify safety parameters for clinical monitoring • Study evaluating the safety of rFXIII after 2 hr ECC ZYMOGENETICS Toxicology Studies Study Duration No/Sex /Gp Dose (mg/kg) SNBL.002.02 14 d 1F 1x 12.8 and 25.5 SBi-1220-175 7d 1F 1x 0, 10, 17.5, 20 SBi-1278-175 7d 1F 1x 0, 20, 21.2, 22.5, 25, 30 SBi-1249-175 14 d 1 M/F 2x 0, 12.5, 17.5, 22.5 SBi-1266-175 29d + 29d 3-5 M/F 3x 0, 5, 8, 12.5 SBi-1394-175 14d + 28d 3-5 M/F 14x 0, 0.3, 3.0, 6.0 CRP 1184 1d 3M 0.7, 2.1, 7.1 ZYMOGENETICS FXIII-related Toxicity (> 22 mg/kg) • • Clinical signs • Variable • Included loss of consciousness, malaise, and poor food and water consumption Hematology • • Decreased platelet counts (<50,000/mL) Serum chemistry • Increased blood urea nitrogen, creatinine, LDH, AST, ALT, and C-reactive protein ZYMOGENETICS FXIII-related Toxicity (> 22 mg/kg) Gross pathology Hemorrhage in a variety of tissues including: Adrenal glands Lung Kidneys Heart Live Gastrointestinal tract ZYMOGENETICS FXIII-related Toxicity (> 22 mg/kg) Histologic observations Intravascular congestion, thrombosis, and subsequent necrosis in: Adrenal glands Eye Kidneys Lung Heart Gastrointestinal tract Pancreas Spleen Liver Brain Pituitary Bone marrow ZYMOGENETICS IND-Enabling Toxicology Study (CD) • • 28-day GLP repeated dose toxicology study Measurement endpoints - • clinical observations food consumption blood pressure heart rate histopathological evaluation - body weight - clinical pathology - body temperature - gross necropsy Bioanalytical evaluations PK (A2, A2B2, free B) Anti-FXIII antibody • Necropsy 48 hours after the last dose (all groups) after four-week dose-free period (vehicle and high dose group) ZYMOGENETICS FXIII-related Toxicity • • Clinical signs • Variable • Included loss of consciousness, malaise, and poor food and water consumption Hematology • • Decreased platelet counts (<50,000/mL) Serum chemistry • Increased blood urea nitrogen, creatinine, LDH, AST, ALT, and C-reactive protein ZYMOGENETICS FXIII-related Toxicity • Gross pathology Hemorrhage in a variety of tissues • Histologic observations Intravascular congestion, thrombosis, and subsequent necrosis ZYMOGENETICS Margin of Safety for CD Indication • Normal animals • Doses for the CD1 study were 2, 6, 20, 50 and 75 units/kg • Doses for the UKHV1 study were 2, 5, 10, 25 and 50 units/kg • Potency of rFXIII = 140 U/mg Dose associated with mild, reversible pathology 8.0 mg/kg x 140 U/mg = 1750 U/kg 560-fold (2 U/kg) to 15-fold (75 U/kg) ZYMOGENETICS Clinical Dosing Regimen Currently covered by toxicology studies • Single dose or split dose within 24 hours • Repeated dose once/month for CD for 3 months • Twice a month dosing • Daily rFXIII dosing over 14 days in cynomolgus monkeys 0.3-6 mg/kg rFXIII NOAEL = 6.0 mg/kg • Post-cardiopulmonary bypass study in progress ZYMOGENETICS Mechanism of Toxicity ZYMOGENETICS Hypothesis • Free [A2] dimer (rFXIII) may be activate in vivo (does not exist naturally) • rFXIIIa can cross-link plasma fibrinogen and other proteins • Cross-linked complexes can accumulate • Large cross-linked complexes can result in coagulopathy and ischemia • Ischemia/tissue damage can release tissue factor, activate clotting cascade via classical means • Clotting system activation initiates fibrinolytic system • Loss of compensatory control over clotting/fibrinolysis… ZYMOGENETICS End of the story? ZYMOGENETICS Pharmacokinetics of rFXIII Jenn Visich ZYMOGENETICS Circulating FXIII Species cnA2cnB2 cnB Before Dosing rA2 cnA2cnB2 rA2cnB2 rA2 cnB After Dosing ZYMOGENETICS FXIII Molecular Species Detected by ELISA and Activity Assays Assay Total A2 FXIII Molecular Species Detected rFXIII [A2] cnA2cnB2 (endogenous cynomolgus FXIII) rA2cnB2 (rFXIII complexed with cynomolgus FXIII-B subunit) FXIII A2B2 tetramer cnA2cnB2 rA2cnB2 Free B cnB FXIII Activity (Berichrom®) rA2 cnA2cnB2 rA2cnB2 rA2 (free cynomolgus FXIII-B subunit) ZYMOGENETICS Total A2 (rA2B2 and rA2) Plasma Concentration versus Time Profiles by Dose Total A2 Plasma Conc (mg/mL) (One Intravenous Dose) 1000.0 100.0 10.0 1.0 0.1 0 48 96 144 192 240 288 336 Time (hrs) vehicle 0.5 mg/kg 1.0 mg/kg 5.0 mg/kg Series5 ZYMOGENETICS Plasma Concentration versus Time Profiles, All ELISAs (One Intravenous Dose rFXIII) Plasma Conc. (mg/mL) 1000 100 FXIII A2B2 10 Total A2 1 Free cnB 0.1 0 48 96 144 192 240 288 336 Time (hours) 5 mg/kg A2 5 mg/kg A2B2 5mg/kg B ZYMOGENETICS Mean Free cnB Plasma Concentration versus Time Profiles (One intravenous dose) 1.6 1.2 0.8 vehicle 0.5 mg/kg 0.4 1.0 mg/kg 5.0 mg/kg 672 504 336 240 168 120 72 24 8 4 2 1 0.25 0.0 0 Free B Plasma Conc (mg/mL) 2.0 Time (hrs) vehicle 0.5 mg/kg 1.0 mg/kg 5.0 mg/kg ZYMOGENETICS Total A2 Noncompartmental PK Estimates Mean (Standard Deviation) Parameter Units 0.5 mg/kg 1.0 mg/kg 5.0 mg/kg C0 mg/mL 10.84 (1.55) 18.97 (3.99) 103.24 (9.78) t1/2, lz h 194.75 (99.93) 142.67 (70.22) 131.08 (33.94) AUCINF h*mg/mL 655.71 (201.22) 985.37 (400.31) 2676.60 (781.02) AUC(0 to t) h*mg/mL 588.84 (173.78) 915.81 (356.18) 2535.96 (710.75) CL mL/h/kg 0.87 (0.41) 1.15 (0.42) 1.98 (0.43) Vss mL/kg 172.75 (76.04) 187.94 (88.64) 275.08 (42.63) Plasma concentration versus time data were corrected for individual pre-dose FXIII Total A2 levels ZYMOGENETICS Pharmacokinetics of 125I-rFXIII in Male and Female Cynos • Iodinated rFXIII characterized Radiopurity Activity Structural Integrity Ability to bind Free B subunit • Bioanalytical Assay for analysis of plasma • Iodinated rFXIII administered to cynos, plasma collected over 72 hours SE-HPLC with radiodetection Standard curve was created by spiking rA2 into cyno plasma ZYMOGENETICS 5000 0.25 hr 3750 rA22 rA 2 cnB 2 2500 Counts 1250 0 0 2 4 5000 6 8 10 12 14 16 Elution time (minutes) SE-HPLC coupled with radiodetection 72 hr 3750 2500 rA 2 cnB 2 1250 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 Elution time (minutes) Mean Unbound rFXIII Plasma Concentrations vs.Time Single Dose, 5.0 mg/kg (125I-) rFXIII 16 (mg/mL) Concentration FXIII rFXIII Unbound (µg/mL) Concentration Unbound 0 1000 100 t = 3.57 h 1/2,λZ 10 1 0.1 t1/2, lz = 3.57 hr 0.01 0 4 8 12 Time (hr) Time (hours) ZYMOGENETICS Toxicokinetics of rFXIII • At high doses, Free B subunit is saturated • Uncomplexed rA2 may be activated and cause cross-linking of fibrin(ogen) • Kinetics of rA2 vs. rA2B2 Circulating half-life of rA2 Threshold concentration or duration of exposure of rA2 ZYMOGENETICS Kinetics of rA2 vs rA2B2 • rA2B2 has a half-life of ~ 4-7 days • Total A2 – A2B2 rA2 • Assay independent way to measure rA2 kinetics ZYMOGENETICS