Title: FDA Advisory Committee Meeting
1FDA Advisory Committee MeetingSafety
Considerations in the Development of Ultrasound
Contrast AgentsJune 24, 2008
- Nonclinical Development Program SonoVue
- Patricia D. Williams, PhD
- Chief Operating Officer
- Summit Drug Development, LLC
- Rockville, MD
2Nonclinical Development Program SonoVue
- Pharmacology studies
- Toxicology studies
- Studies on concurrent SonoVue administration and
ultrasound exposure at high acoustic pressure - Retrospectively (after anaphylactoid reactions
were observed in humans) potential mechanisms of
these reactions were studied in vitro and in vivo
3Pharmacology Studies SonoVue
- Imaging Studies to define the expected human dose
of SonoVue (pig, dog) - Safety pharmacology studies at multiples of human
imaging doses (MHDbsa) 3 (mouse), 5 (rat),
10 (rabbit), 18 (dog), 200 (monkey) - - Cardiovascular (dog, monkey)
- - Respiratory (rat, rabbit)
- - CNS (mouse)
- - Gastrointestinal (rat)
- - Renal (rat)
4Key Findings Safety Pharmacology Studies SonoVue
- CONSCIOUS DOGS
- - No cardiovascular effects at 0.3 mL/kg
(10-times clinical dose) - - At 1.0 mL/kg transient hypotension in 2/7
dogs - ANESTHETIZED DOGS (Pulmonary Hypertension model)
- - Transient and minimal (2.5 1.3 mmHg)
increase in - PAP at 1 mL/kg
- No other significant Cardiovascular, CNS,
Respiratory, GI or Renal findings in mouse, rats,
rabbits, monkeys
5Toxicology Studies SonoVue
- Intravenous bolus administration
- Clinical formulation used
- Max doses 27-54 times the human dose (MHDbsa)
- Single dose studies (rat, monkey)
- 4-week repeated dose studies (rat, monkey)
- Genetic toxicology
- Reproductive toxicology (rat, rabbit)
- Other studies (local tolerance blood
compatibility) -
6Key Findings Toxicology Studies SonoVue
- No significant findings in single and repeat dose
studies up to the dose of 5 mL/kg (rat, monkey) - Repeat dose NOEL in monkeys 5 mL/kg (50 MHDbsa)
- Cecum lesions in rats considered rodent specific
and observed with other contrast agents
otherwise NOEL 5 mL/kg - No signs of immunological reactions in either
species (thymus, spleen, lymph nodes) - No lung lesions or emboli in either species
- No brain lesions after direct injection in
carotid artery in rats (1 mL/kg)
7Studies With SonoVue and Concurrent Ultrasound
Exposure
- RATS No histological lesions in organs with
SonoVue (1 and 5 mL/kg) and exposed to ultrasound
at high acoustic pressure (up to MI 1.9) - DOGS No effect of ultrasound exposure (up to MI
1.2) on ECG (QTc) and on heart histopathology in
conscious dogs administered with SonoVue (up to 1
mL/kg)
8Conclusion of the Nonclinical Animal Studies on
SonoVue
- SonoVue was well tolerated in standard
toxicological and safety pharmacology studies
when administered alone or with concurrent
ultrasound exposure - Cardiovascular effects (transient hypotension)
observed only at very high doses in dogs (1
mL/kg) - Nonclinical study results corroborated the
overall safety profile of SonoVue in humans
9Mechanism of Anaphylactoid Reactions
- Low incidence ( 0.01) of allergic-like
(anaphylactoid) reactions in humans found in
post-marketing surveillance - ? Additional in vitro and animals studies were
designed to investigate potential mechanism(s) of
these reactions
10Mechanism of Anaphylactoid Reactions
- Hypothesis allergic-like (anaphylactoid)
reactions are related to the particulate nature
of ultrasound contrast agents - Cardiopulmonary studies at imaging dose in pigs
- Cardiovascular studies at very high doses in rats
- In vitro complement activation (pig, human)
- In vitro basophil activation (human)
-
11The Use of the Pig Pros Cons
- Common large animal used in echocardiography (eg.
size of heart human) - Known to have severe reactions to injection of
particulates - Have high concentrations of pulmonary
intravascular macrophages (PIMs) relative to
other species including humans - Imaging studies of UCA in pigs are routinely done
with pretreatment with indomethacin or aspirin - While useful for imaging, pig not considered as
an animal model for safety pharmacology studies
due to its over-reaction to all injected
particles, however - Based on rare human reactions, Bracco pursued
studies in naïve pigs to possibly gain insight
into the mechanism of these anaphylactoid
reactions
12Changes in PAP and SAP in Pigs Following SonoVue,
and other UCAs at Imaging Doses
13Marked Individual Variations of the CV Response
to SonoVue in Pigs
14Thromboxane Release Parallels PAP Increasewith
SonoVue and another UCA
Kinetics of pulmonary arterial pressure and TXB2
changes following SonoVue or another UCA
(Product B) injections in the pig at the human
imaging dose (mean of 5 injections)
15Key Findings Mechanistic Studies Pig Model
- SonoVue and other marketed UCAs were tested on
naïve, anesthetized pigs - Doses in the range of 1- 4x human imaging dose
- ? SAP ? PAP ? HR
- ? Airway resistance ? Lung compliance
- Effects are dose and injection rate dependent
- ? Plasma Thromboxane B2
- No detectable increases in C3a/C5a in vivo
- Effects blocked by aspirin pretreatment
- Effects similar to other injected particulates
(liposomes, micellar lipids, etc)
16Key Findings Mechanistic Studies Pig Model
- Marked individual variation but consistent
response in pigs at imaging dose of UCA - Pig shows sensitivity to SonoVue not seen in
humans - Symptoms cardiovascular effects resemble
anaphylactoid reactions in humans - Release of vasoactive mediators considered key
event in pigs - Relevance to humans unknown
17Key Findings Mechanistic Studies Rat Model
- Transient hypotension observed ? 5 mL/kg (25
MHDbsa) - ? Plasma thromboxane B2 (similar to pigs),
however - Hypotension NOT blocked by aspirin pretreatment
(contrary to pigs) - Hypotension blocked by PAF-antagonist (ABT-491)
pretreatment (contrary to pigs) - Hypotension blocked by complement depletion with
cobra venom factor (CVF) - Rats pig mechanisms may differ in mediators or
target cells involved
18Hypotension in Rats only at High Dose Levels
Systemic arterial blood pressure changes induced
by a single administration of SonoVue in
non-anesthetized rats (Dose levels correspond to
100 300 MHDbw or 17 50 MHDbsa)
19Key Findings Mechanistic Studies In Vitro
Complement and Basophil Activation
- SonoVue and another UCA tested at very high dose
levels show similar findings after incubation in
vitro - Dose-dependent increase in C3a/C5a in pig plasma
- Dose-dependent increase in C3a/C5a/SC5b-9 in
human serum - No marked differences between pigs humans in
vitro - No effects on human basophil activation (CD203c)
20Summary of Mechanistic Studies SonoVue
- Symptoms observed in pigs are similar to human
anaphylactoid reactions (cardiopulmonary changes) - Incidence of anaphylactoid reactions in pigs gtgtgt
humans - Sensitivity of pigs may be due to high density of
PIMs relative to other species - Rats show hypotension at very high dose
- Complement activation could be one of the
mechanisms involved in the reactivity in rats,
pigs and humans
21SonoVue Lessons Learned for Future
- SonoVue was well tolerated in nonclinical studies
and this was corroborated by the clinical trials - The lack of cardiovascular effects of SonoVue in
safety pharmacology studies at doses relevant to
humans correlates with the lack of anaphylactoid
reactions in clinical trials - Anaphylactoid reactions similar to humans are
seen in naive pigs with various classes of
particulate agents including UCA - Reactions in pigs attributed to high density of
PIMs - The relevance of the findings in pigs to humans
is unknown
22SonoVue Lessons Learned for Future
- In vitro complement activation may be an early
triggering event in the reactions observed in
humans and represents a potential screening tool - Bracco is incorporating in vitro and in vivo
testing in selection of next generation products - Results in in vitro and in vivo models may be
useful qualitatively but not quantitatively for
risk assessment - The rare anaphylactoid reactions may be reduced
through these screening efforts
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