Title: Evaluation of Developmental Repro
1Evaluation of Developmental Repro Juvenile
Animal Toxicity
- Karen Davis-Bruno
- CDER/OND/DMEP
BioSafe/FDA Leadership Meeting Washington DC
Feb. 26, 2007
2Overview
- Developmental reprotoxicity case studies
- MAb NHP early embryo-fetal dev.
- rh-peptide reprotox std. battery
- Immunized rabbit model
- Test anti-rh-peptide antibody response
- Juvenile animal toxicity
3Case Study 1 Developmental Reprotox
- Fully humanized MAb
- Targets mediator of resorptive phase of bone
remodeling - Indications PMO, bone loss, RA, bone
metastasis, multiple myeloma - Relevant species NHP based on MAb recognition
of monkey analogue - Chronic tox 12 month cyno monkey
- Segment 2 cyno monkey
4NHP Embryo-Fetal Developmental (Seg 2) Study
- Cyno monkey 16/group
- Dose 0, 2.5, 5, 12.5 mg/kg/week, SC
- Organogenesis GD 21, 28, 35, 42, 49
- Cesarean GD 100
- Evaluation
- Maternal Wt, FC, Ab titer, pregnancy, TK
- Fetal Wt (body, placenta, organ), length,
external/visceral/skeletal exam, limited
histopath (thymus, spleen, Peyers patches) - Note target organ ID from knockout mice N/E
5Case 1 Results
- No maternal tox or adverse effects on pregnancy
- No teratogenicity
- ?Fetal spleen, ovarian wt
- ?Fetal body, adrenal, heart wt
- Incomplete bone ossification, vestigial/malformed
cervical ribs - Anti-MAb antibodies
- Maternal incidence 80, 69, 50
- Fetal incidence 53, 40, 6
- Neutralizing Ab 2/16 dams and 0/16 fetuses
6Limitations
- Inadequate histopath limits interpretation of
developmental risk - Known effects of MAb target in lactation signal
transduction related to pro-inflammatory response
may lead to peri-natal adverse effects not
evaluated
7Case 2 Background
- rh-peptide osteoblast differentiation factor,
promotes osteoinduction - Indication fracture healing
- PD conserved x-species
- ratgtdogsgtNHP
- IV, IM tox rat, dog
- IV Rat, Rb embryo-fetal development
- Decreased female fetuses
- Decreased ossif. skull, pubic ischial,vertebrae,
sternebrae - Rabbit increased abortions at HD
8Developmental Safety Concern
- Literature indicates rh-peptide is involved in
skeletal development - Abs to this peptide are associated with atypical
skeletal development - KO mouse gene for peptide is embryonic lethal
(cardiac defect) - Effect of anti-rh-peptide Abs tested in immunized
rabbits
9Developmental Study Immunized Rabbits
- Rh-peptide IM prior to mating
- Confirmed anti-peptide titers
- Relevant model
- Maternal to fetal Ab transfer as human
- High titers-no effect on repro/preg function
- Sm. inc. delayed ossif. of skull bones
- Litter variation in vascular organization from
immunized dams
10Case 2Juvenile Animal Study
- Determine effect of treating bone defects in
growing juvenile rabbits with active growth
plates - Concern metaphyseal fx w/ active physis can
result in premature closure of the growth plate
potential angular/rotational/length defect in
limb - Rabbit skeletal growth complete _at_ 28 weeks
- Rabbit growth plate fusion 25-28 weeks
- To support pediatric use of rh-peptide for fx
healing
11Juvenile Rabbit Bone Lesion
- Unilateral mid-diaphyseal ulna osteotomy in 2 3
month old rabbits - Rh-peptide given SD implant
- Study duration 4 weeks
- Weekly evaluations
- ulna length
- growth rate/plate morph
- radiography of fx site
- healing time
- surgical control contralateral ulna
12Results Juvenile Rabbit Bone Lesion
- Decrease in growth plate thickness in rh-peptide
trt limbs vs. surgical control - Radiographic ulna growth rate reduced week 4 in
rh-peptide vs. surgical control in 3 mo. Rbs - Differences in ulna length depends on Rb age _at_
treatment - 2-month old rabbits -0.6 mm ulna length
- 3-month old rabbits -0.3 mm ulna length
- Accelerated time to bone healing w/trt
- Adult Rbs 75 trt lesions bridged 2wks vs. 33 SX
CX - But fx gap still _at_ 4 weeks complete _at_ 6weeks
- 40 2-month old 70 3-month old Rbs. bridged _at_
1wk. vs (17) SX CX. - Like adult bridging _at_ 2 wks.
- Lesion healing 80 in trt young Rbs vs. 40 in
SX CX
13Limitations
- 4-weeks sufficient for Rb healing may not be
analogous to that in children - Model doesnt address the overgrowth phenomena
seen in healing pediatric fractures - ulna, radius, femur
- Long-term effect of ? g.plate thickness?
- Bone quality of bridge uncertain
- Untrt controls were from a different supply and
had larger initial bone lengths - Difference in bone size and growth plate
comparison difficult - Comparison to the surgical controls valid
14What have we learned?
- Experience with traditional biologics (MAb,
peptides) helpful - One size fits all development plan doesnt work
- New hybrid molecules pose new challenges
- Case by case with emphasis on science based study
designs based on knowledge of the molecule - Standard study designs may need modification to
address concerns
15Pediatric initiatives ID data gaps
- Unnecessary exposure to ineffective therapies
- Many examples e.g. therapies for depression
- Ineffective dosing overdosing of effective
drugs - Effects on metabolism/clearance
- Most pediatric trials are short duration focus
on PK - New pediatric adverse events (AEs)
- Increased depression, suicide (human, no model)
- Effects on growth behavior
16Addressing data gaps
- Juvenile animal studies may provide added hazard
ID adequate clinical monitoring in trial - Guidance to Industry Non-clinical Safety
Evaluation of Pediatric Drugs (Feb.2006) - Juvenile animals may be useful to assess safety
concerns not adequate, ethical or safely studied
in pediatrics
17Application of Juvenile Animal Data to Clinical
Risk Assessment
- Assure adequate clinical monitoring
- Identification of safety risk
- Correlate juvenile animal adverse effect to
exposure/duration - Identification of irreversible/non-monitorable
toxicity - Assess delayed toxicity following acute exposure
- Pediatric trials are short duration treatment
- Apply biomarkers/methods identified to limit risk
to trial design - Label considerations
- Inclusion of relevant non-clinical findings
- Identification of use/non-use at specific ages
18Pediatric PK/PD Differences Exist
- Developmental /or sensitivity differences may
result in altered PK/PD in pediatrics - Development (structure/function) is continuous
- Role of developmental vs. chronologic age-matched
animal/kids - Consider cross-species postnatal maturation
- Organ System Maturation
- Neurologic Adolescent-Adult
- Reproductive Adolescent/Puberty
- Pulmonary (alveoli) Infant (1-2 years)
- Renal function Infant (1 year)
- Skeletal Adolescent-Adult
- Immune (IgG, IgA) Infant-Child (5, 12 years)
19Utility Of Juvenile Animal Models
- Juvenile animals may be appropriate for
predicting postnatal developmental toxicities in
children when... - Likely use of the drug in pediatrics
- Safety data unavailable from toxicity testing or
clinic - Pre/postnatal studies indicate target organ
toxicity - Possible effects on growth/development
- Particular concern for long term exposure in
relation to critical human postnatal
developmental stages - Most PK pediatric clinical trials are lt 6 months
duration - Consider the developmental age of animal relative
to indicated pediatric population - Timing duration of dosing relative to growth
development in kids juvenile animals - Type of study design Screening vs. focused
study - Not every pediatric product requires juvenile
studies - Case by case basis Depends on available info
safety concern
20Conclusions
- Juvenile animal studies are useful, especially
when performed to address a concern - Juvenile animal studies are not prohibitively
challenging to conduct - However current data base is limited