Immunogenicity, defined as the ability to provoke an immune response, can be either wanted (i.e., vaccines) or unwanted.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCPT Pharmacometrics Syst Pharmacol
February 2023
Immunogenicity against therapeutic proteins frequently causes attrition owing to its potential impact on pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, efficacy, and safety. Predicting immunogenicity is complex because of its multifactorial drivers, including compound properties, subject characteristics, and treatment parameters. To integrate these, the Immunogenicity Simulator was developed using published, predominantly late-stage trial data from 15 therapeutic proteins.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe develop a three-dimensional genuinely hybrid atomistic-continuum model that describes the invasive growth dynamics of individual cancer cells in tissue. The framework explicitly accounts for phenotypic variation by distinguishing between cancer cells of an epithelial-like and a mesenchymal-like phenotype. It also describes mutations between these cell phenotypes in the form of epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) and its reverse process mesenchymal-epithelial transition (MET).
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