Population pharmacokinetics of antifibroblast activation protein monoclonal antibody F19 in cancer patients

Aims  The population pharmacokinetics of 131I‐mAbF19, a radiolabelled murine monoclonal antibody against fibroblast activation protein and a potential antitumour stroma agent, were investigated during two phase I studies in cancer patients. Methods  131I‐mAbF19 serum concentration‐time data were obt...

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Veröffentlicht in:British journal of clinical pharmacology 2001-02, Vol.51 (2), p.177-180
Hauptverfasser: Tanswell, Paul, Garin‐Chesa, Pilar, Rettig, Wolfgang J., Welt, Sydney, Divgi, Chaitanya R., Casper, Ephraim S., Finn, Ronald D., Larson, Steven M., Old, Lloyd J., Scott, Andrew M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Aims  The population pharmacokinetics of 131I‐mAbF19, a radiolabelled murine monoclonal antibody against fibroblast activation protein and a potential antitumour stroma agent, were investigated during two phase I studies in cancer patients. Methods  131I‐mAbF19 serum concentration‐time data were obtained in 16 patients from two studies involving imaging and dosimetry in colorectal carcinoma and soft tissue sarcoma. Doses of 0.2, 1 and 2 mg antibody were administered as 60 min intravenous infusions. The data were analysed by nonlinear mixed effect modelling. Results  The data were described by a two‐compartment model. Population mean values were 109 ml h−1 for total serum clearance, 3.1 l for the volume of distribution of the central compartment, and 4.9 l for the volume of distribution at steady state. Mean terminal half‐life was 38 h. Intersubject variability was high, but no patient covariates could be identified that further explained this variability. In particular, there was no influence of tumour type or mAbF19 dose. Conclusions  The pharmacokinetics of antistromal mAbF19 were well defined in these two studies with different solid tumour types, and were comparable with those of other murine monoclonal antibodies that do not bind to normal tissue antigens or blood cells.
ISSN:0306-5251
1365-2125
DOI:10.1111/j.1365-2125.2001.01335.x