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Journal of Clinical Pharmacology 2000-Jul

Product equivalence study comparing the tolerability, pharmacokinetics, and pharmacodynamics of various human immunoglobulin-G formulations.

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I Andresen
J M Kovarik
M Spycher
R Bolli

Keywords

Abstract

In this randomized, double-blind, parallel-group study, a commercially available human immunoglobulin-G product, IVIG, was compared with two test formulations: (1) IVIG-N, which is a nanofiltered formulation of IVIG, and (2) IVIG-L, which is a nanofiltered, liquid, ready-for-use IgG formulation containing nicotinamide, L-proline, and L-isoleucine as stabilizers. Three groups of 10 healthy subjects each received a single 0.6 g/kg dose of one of the formulations infused over 3.5 to 6.8 hours, depending on the total volume to be infused. Blood samples were obtained over a 6-week period to assess pharmacokinetics, immunogenicity, and the pharmacodynamic effects on leukocytes and TNF-alpha. A blood sample was taken at 6 months for a viral safety check. Administrations were generally well tolerated with only one reference IVIG infusion stopped prematurely due to headache. The IgG Cmax and AUC over the 6-week blood sampling period from both test formulations satisfied equivalence criteria compared with the reference formulation. In subjects receiving IVIG-L, peak concentrations of the stabilizer nicotinamide ranged from 0.34 to 0.47 mmol/L and of nicotinamide-N-oxide from 0.03 to 0.04 mmol/L, which are below those reported to cause adverse events. During the infusion of IVIG, leukocyte counts initially declined from a baseline of 5.7 +/- 1.1 x 10(9)/L to 3.7 +/- 0.8 x 10(9)/L at 2 to 4 hours and returned to baseline by 24 hours. TNF-alpha levels, reflecting activation of the monocyte-macrophage system by the infused IVIG, rose from a baseline of 13 +/- 4 pg/mL to a peak of 272 +/- 324 pg/mL at 2 to 4 hours and returned to baseline by 24 hours. These patterns were generally similar for the test formulations, with the exception that the increase in TNF-alpha levels was dampened for IVIG-N, although this was not statistically significant. There was no evidence of immunogenicity or viral transmission from any of the formulations. Hence, these three formulations were generally well tolerated, yielded similar systemic exposure to IgG over a 6-week period after administration, and did not give rise to immunogenicity or viral safety concerns.

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