Interspecies scaling of human clearance and plasma trough exposure for antisense oligonucleotides: a retrospective analysis of GalNAc3-conjugated and …

C Nanavati, G McMullen, R Yu, RS Geary… - nucleic acid …, 2021 - liebertpub.com
C Nanavati, G McMullen, R Yu, RS Geary, SP Henry, Y Wang
nucleic acid therapeutics, 2021liebertpub.com
It is well documented and generally accepted that human clearance (CL) of unconjugated
single-strand antisense oligonucleotides (ASOs) can be directly predicted from monkeys by
body weight (BW) on a mg/kg dose basis. However, the scaling for triantennary N-acetyl
galactosamine (GalNAc3)-conjugated ASOs has not been fully established. In this study, we
retrospectively analyzed pharmacokinetic data from 9 GalNAc3-conjugated and 12
unconjugated single-stranded ASOs (ten 2′-methoxyethyl and two 2′, 4′-constrained …
It is well documented and generally accepted that human clearance (CL) of unconjugated single-strand antisense oligonucleotides (ASOs) can be directly predicted from monkeys by body weight (BW) on a mg/kg dose basis. However, the scaling for triantennary N-acetyl galactosamine (GalNAc3)-conjugated ASOs has not been fully established. In this study, we retrospectively analyzed pharmacokinetic data from 9 GalNAc3-conjugated and 12 unconjugated single-stranded ASOs (ten 2′-methoxyethyl and two 2′, 4′-constrained ethyl ASOs) to identify an appropriate allometric scaling factor between the two species. In addition, we compared the trough plasma concentrations (Ctrough, a surrogate for tissue exposure) between monkeys and humans at comparable dose levels, aiming at predicting tissue distribution in humans from monkeys. Overall, the median plasma CL ratios (monkey CL/human CL) were 1.05 and 0.94 when CL was normalized by BW, as compared with 0.33 and 0.29 when CL was normalized by body surface area (BSA) for the 12 unconjugated and 9 GalNAc3-conjugated ASOs, respectively. Similarly, the median Ctrough ratios (Ctrough in monkeys/Ctrough in humans) were 0.96 and 1.71, respectively, when Ctrough was normalized by mg/kg dose as compared with 3.10 and 5.50 when Ctrough was normalized by mg/m2 dose for the same unconjugated and conjugated ASOs, respectively. Equivalent CL and dose-normalized plasma Ctrough between monkeys and humans suggest similar pharmacokinetic profiles and tissue distribution between the two species on a per kilogram BW basis. In conclusion, human CL and plasma Ctrough (a surrogate of tissue distribution) can be directly predicted (1:1 or within twofold) from monkeys by BW on a mg/kg dose basis but these parameters can be under- or over-predicted by BSA on a mg/m2 dose basis. These results provide evidence for single species scaling from monkeys to humans directly and, thus, they can facilitate early human dose prediction in ASO drug development.
Mary Ann Liebert