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Reports of Presentations at the Workshop on “Naturally Occurring Infections in Non-human Primates and Immunotoxicity Implications”, Silver Spring, MD

Bacterial infections in cynomolgus monkeys given small molecule immunomodulatory antagonists

Pages 128-137 | Received 24 Aug 2009, Accepted 17 Nov 2009, Published online: 05 Feb 2010
 

Abstract

Opportunistic infections (OIs) during the course of non-clinical toxicity studies can serve as a clinical indicator of immunosuppression. In monkeys, severity may be magnified since the possibility for fecal-oral and cage-to-cage transmission of bacteria exists, reserve capacity is low, and clinical signs of infection are not easily detected until the infectious process is well underway. This review summarizes a case study presented at the HESI-ILSI ITC-Sponsored workshop on Naturally Occurring Infections in Non-human Primates and Immunotoxicity Implications. It gives an overview on the impact of bacterial infections in monkeys on the development and regulatory assessment of three closely-related representative small molecule immunomodulatory (anti-inflammatory) drug candidates all inhibiting the same drug target. The infections, which sometimes progressed to bacteremia and death, originally manifested in the skin, upper respiratory tract, gastrointestinal tract, and less frequently as soft tissue abscesses. Infections were sporadic and not observed in all studies despite coverage of equivalent or higher systemic exposures or longer durations of treatment. To address concerns regarding inconsistency in the presentation and type of findings and their potential relationship to infection, steps were taken to identify causative agents (via culture, microscopy), implement various intervention and treatment regimens (supportive care, antibiotics, drug holiday), demonstrate reversibility of clinical and immune effects, and study major immune components/mechanisms affected (cytokine/stress protein profiling, immune cell phenotyping, and humoral/innate immune cell function tests). Appropriate diagnosis and characterization of the infection was critical to discrimination of these findings as a secondary pharmacologic effect rather than a direct drug-related target organ effect, and also guided clinical protocol design and regulatory acceptance.

Acknowledgements

Many thanks to Dr. Wendy Freebern for scientific and technical input relating to innate immune function assessments and Dr. Helen Haggerty for thoughtful discussion of data and insightful comments during the preparation of this manuscript, as well as the Departments of Drug Safety Evaluation and Veterinary Sciences at Bristol-Myers Squibb Company, Syracuse, New York for technical conduct of these studies.

Declaration of interest

The author reports no conflicts of interest. The author is alone responsible for the content and writing of the paper.

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