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High MW polyethylene glycol prolongs circulation of pegloticase in mice with anti-PEG antibodies

  • Anne M. Talkington
  • , Morgan D. McSweeney
  • , Tao Zhang
  • , Zibo Li
  • , Andrew C. Nyborg
  • , Brian LaMoreaux
  • , Eric W. Livingston
  • , Jonathan E. Frank
  • , Hong Yuan
  • , Samuel K. Lai
  • University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
  • Horizon Therapeutics
  • University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

15 Scopus citations

Abstract

Pegloticase is an enzyme used to reduce serum uric acid levels in patients with chronic, treatment-refractory gout. Clinically, about 40% of patients develop high titers of anti-PEG antibodies (APA) after initial treatment, which in turn quickly eliminate subsequent doses of pegloticase from the systemic circulation and render the treatment ineffective. We previously found that pre-infusion with high MW free PEG (40 kDa) can serve as a decoy to saturate circulating APA, preventing binding to a subsequently administered dose of PEG-liposomes and restoring their prolonged circulation in mice, without any detectible toxicity. Here, we investigated the use of 40 kDa free PEG to restore the circulation of radio-labeled pegloticase in mice using longitudinal Positron Emission Tomography (PET) imaging over 4 days. Mice injected with pegloticase developed appreciable APA titers by Day 9, which further increased through Day 14. Compared to naïve mice, mice with pegloticase-induced APA rapidly cleared 89Zr-labeled pegloticase, with ~75% lower pegloticase concentrations in the circulation at four hours after treatment. The 96-h AUC in APA+ mice was less than 30% of the AUC in naïve mice. In contrast, pre-infusion of free PEG into PEG-sensitized mice restored the AUC of pegloticase to ~80% of that seen in naïve mice, resulting in a similar biodistribution to pegloticase in naïve mice over time. These results suggest that pre-infusion of free PEG may be a promising strategy to enable the safe and efficacious use of pegloticase and other PEGylated drugs in patients that have previously failed therapy due to induced APA.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)804-812
Number of pages9
JournalJournal of Controlled Release
Volume338
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 10 2021

Keywords

  • Anti-PEG antibodies
  • PEG
  • Pegloticase

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