Publication | Open Access
Monitoring of adalimumab and antibodies-to-adalimumab levels in patient serum by the homogeneous mobility shift assay
80
Citations
12
References
2013
Year
Analytical ValidationHomogeneous Mobility ShiftImmunologyPharmacotherapyInflammatory ArthritisRheumatoid DisorderBiomarker (Medicine)Inflammatory Rheumatic DiseaseAutoantibodiesDrug MonitoringClinical ChemistryLaboratory MedicineRheumatoid ArthritisAdalimumab Drug ToleranceRheumatologyTherapeutic Drug MonitoringAutoimmune DiseaseAllergyAutoimmunityAntibody ScreeningPharmacologyPatient SerumAntibodies-to-adalimumab LevelsTherapeutic EfficacyMedicineQuantitative Pharmacology
This report describes the analytical validation and application of the homogeneous mobility shift assay (HMSA) method for the measurement of adalimumab and human antibodies-to-adalimumab (ATA) in serum samples from patients who have lost response to adalimumab treatment. Validation of the ATA- and the adalimumab-HMSA revealed a lower limit of detection to be 0.026 U/mL for ATA and 0.018 μg/mL for adalimumab in serum samples. Intra-assay and inter-assay precision determination yielded a coefficient of variation of less than 15%, and the accuracy of both assays was within 20%. Adalimumab drug tolerance in the ATA-HMSA was up to 20 μg/mL in the test serum. Serum samples from 100 drug-naïve healthy subjects were tested to set-up the cut point of 0.55 U/mL for ATA and 0.68 μg/mL for adalimumab. Analysis of 100 serum samples from patients who were losing response to adalimumab showed that 26% had an adalimumab level below the cut point, of these 68% were ATA positive. Overall, 44% of the patients (44/100) were positive for ATA. This study presents evidence that drug and anti-drug antibody levels are important determinants of patient response to therapy.
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