Publications by authors named "Yinuo Pang"

Background And Objective: The objective of this study was to characterize the effects of risankizumab on the pharmacokinetics of cytochrome P450 (CYP) 1A2, CYP2C9, CYP2C19, CYP2D6, and CYP3A substrates in patients with moderately to severely active Crohn's disease (CD) or ulcerative colitis (UC) using a cocktail approach.

Methods: Patients with CD or UC (n = 20) received single doses of probe substrates for CYP1A2 (caffeine 100 mg), CYP2C9 (warfarin 10 mg), CYP2C19 (omeprazole 20 mg), CYP2D6 (metoprolol 50 mg), and CYP3A (midazolam 2 mg) before and after intravenous infusions of risankizumab 1800 mg once every 4 weeks for four doses. Serial blood samples were collected for determination of concentrations of the CYP probe drugs and metabolites with and without risankizumab.

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Data from phase IIb/III and phase III studies were used to characterize the population pharmacokinetics of risankizumab and its exposure-response relationships for efficacy and safety in ulcerative colitis (UC) patients. A two-compartment model with first-order absorption and elimination accurately described risankizumab pharmacokinetics. Although certain covariates, namely, body weight, serum albumin, fecal calprotectin, sex, corticosteroid use, advanced therapy inadequate response, and pancolitis, were statistically correlated with risankizumab clearance, their impact on exposure was not clinically meaningful for efficacy or safety.

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Stem cell-derived exosomes (SC-Exos) are used as a source of regenerative medicine, but certain limitations hinder their uses. The effect of hydrolyzed collagen oligopeptides (HCOPs), a functional ingredient of SC-Exos is not widely known to the general public. We herein evaluated the combined anti-aging effects of HCOPs and exosomes derived from human umbilical cord mesenchymal stem cells (HucMSC-Exos) using a senescence model established on human skin fibroblasts (HSFs).

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Glucocorticoids (GCs) are efficacious drugs used for treating many inflammatory diseases, but the dose and duration of administration are limited because of severe side effects. We therefore sought to identify an approach to selectively target GCs to inflamed tissue. Previous work identified that anti-tumor necrosis factor (TNF) antibodies that bind to transmembrane TNF undergo internalization; therefore, an anti-TNF antibody-drug conjugate (ADC) would be mechanistically similar, where lysosomal catabolism could release a GC receptor modulator (GRM) payload to dampen immune cell activity.

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Risankizumab is a high-affinity neutralizing anti-interleukin (IL)-23 monoclonal antibody marketed in over 40 countries across the globe to treat several inflammatory diseases, such as plaque psoriasis (PsO), psoriatic arthritis (PsA), and Crohn's disease (CD). This paper reviews the regulatory approval, mechanism of action, pharmacokinetics (PKs)/pharmacodynamics, immunogenicity, and clinical efficacy and safety data for risankizumab, focusing on the three main approved indications. Risankizumab binds to the p19 subunit of IL-23 and inhibits IL-23 from interacting with the IL-23 receptor and subsequent signaling.

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Purpose: This article describes the clinical development bridging strategy and key data to support the marketing application of the risankizumab on-body injection (OBI) system for the treatment of moderately to severely active Crohn's disease (CD), even though the OBI was not evaluated directly in the pivotal Phase III studies in CD.

Methods: Three studies were conducted as part of the clinical bridging strategy. The pilot pharmacokinetics (PK) study was a Phase I, single-dose, 4-arm, open-label, randomized, parallel-group exploratory PK and tolerability study that assessed the effect of rate and volume of administration on the bioavailability (BA) of risankizumab and the extent of injection site-related pain after subcutaneous (SC) administration in healthy subjects.

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Article Synopsis
  • ABBV-3373 is an antibody-drug conjugate that combines adalimumab with a glucocorticoid receptor modulator, aimed at treating immune-mediated inflammatory diseases, and its first human study assessed its safety, pharmacokinetics, and immunogenicity in healthy participants.
  • The study involved 55 participants receiving different doses of ABBV-3373 via subcutaneous or intravenous routes, with blood samples collected to analyze drug behavior and immune response over 85 days.
  • Results showed that ABBV-3373 had favorable drug profiles and was mostly well-tolerated, with mild side effects noted, while not significantly affecting serum cortisol levels, supporting its further clinical development.*
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Background: Psoriasis is a chronic, inflammatory skin disease often requiring long-term therapy.

Objective: To evaluate the long-term safety and efficacy of risankizumab in patients with psoriasis.

Methods: LIMMitless is an ongoing phase 3, open-label extension study evaluating the long-term safety and efficacy of continuous risankizumab 150 mg every 12 weeks for adults with moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis following multiple phase 2/3 base studies.

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Introduction: In patients with moderate to severe Crohn's disease (CD), intravenous induction and subcutaneous maintenance dosing with risankizumab was efficacious and well tolerated. Long-term management of CD via self-administration of risankizumab using an on-body injector (OBI) may improve treatment adherence through convenience and ease of use.

Methods: Within the FORTIFY maintenance study, 46 patients from the United States (US) sites participated in an open-label extension Substudy and received 180 mg or 360 mg risankizumab delivered subcutaneously via OBI [360 mg (2.

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The population pharmacokinetics (PK) of risankizumab and exposure-response relationships for efficacy and safety in patients with Crohn's disease (CD) were characterized using data from phase II and III studies to support dosing regimen selection. A two-compartment model with first-order absorption and first-order elimination adequately described risankizumab PK. Covariates including sex, baseline fecal calprotectin, corticosteroid use, baseline creatinine clearance, body weight, and baseline albumin were statistically correlated with risankizumab clearance, but their impact on exposure was not clinically relevant for efficacy or safety.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study evaluated the effectiveness and safety of ABBV-3373, an antibody-drug conjugate combining adalimumab with a glucocorticoid receptor modulator, in treating rheumatoid arthritis compared to standard adalimumab.
  • In a randomized trial with 48 patients, those receiving ABBV-3373 showed significant improvement in disease activity scores (DAS28-CRP) at week 12 compared to historical data for adalimumab.
  • ABBV-3373 also demonstrated promising secondary outcomes, suggesting it may be more effective than adalimumab with a high probability of superiority in treating patients with moderate-to-severe RA.
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Introduction: Risankizumab is an anti-IL23 monoclonal antibody approved for the treatment of moderate to severe plaque psoriasis and active psoriatic arthritis (PsA). This work characterizes the pharmacokinetics of risankizumab in PsA compared with psoriasis and evaluates the efficacy and safety exposure-response relationships in PsA.

Methods: The population pharmacokinetic analyses included data from 1527 participants that originated from one phase 1 healthy participant study, one phase 2 dose-ranging study in patients with PsA with an open-label extension study, and two pivotal phase 3 studies in patients with PsA, where the clinical regimen of risankizumab 150 mg administered subcutaneously (SC) at weeks 0, 4, and every 12 weeks thereafter was compared with placebo.

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Background: There is a great unmet need for new therapeutics with novel mechanisms of action for patients with Crohn's disease. The ADVANCE and MOTIVATE studies showed that intravenous risankizumab, a selective p19 anti-interleukin (IL)-23 antibody, was efficacious and well tolerated as induction therapy. Here, we report the efficacy and safety of subcutaneous risankizumab as maintenance therapy.

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Background: Risankizumab, an interleukin (IL)-23 p19 inhibitor, was evaluated for safety and efficacy as induction therapy in patients with moderately to severely active Crohn's disease.

Methods: ADVANCE and MOTIVATE were randomised, double-masked, placebo-controlled, phase 3 induction studies. Eligible patients aged 16-80 years with moderately to severely active Crohn's disease, previously showing intolerance or inadequate response to one or more approved biologics or conventional therapy (ADVANCE) or to biologics (MOTIVATE), were randomly assigned to receive a single dose of intravenous risankizumab (600 mg or 1200 mg) or placebo (2:2:1 in ADVANCE, 1:1:1 in MOTIVATE) at weeks 0, 4, and 8.

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Background And Aims: Risankizumab, an interleukin-23 antibody, demonstrated efficacy and acceptable safety in a phase 2 study of patients with moderate-to-severe refractory Crohn's disease. This open-label extension investigated the long-term safety, pharmacokinetics, immunogenicity and efficacy of risankizumab in responders to risankizumab in the parent phase 2 study.

Methods: Enrolled patients had achieved clinical response [decrease in Crohn's Disease Activity Index from baseline ≥100] without clinical remission [Crohn's Disease Activity Index <150] at Week 26, or clinical response and/or remission at Week 52 in the parent phase 2 study and received open-label subcutaneous risankizumab 180 mg every 8 weeks.

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Purpose: Risankizumab is a humanized immunoglobulin G1 monoclonal antibody that inhibits the p19 subunit of interleukin 23 from interacting with its receptor for the treatment of moderate to severe plaque psoriasis. The aim of this Phase I biopharmaceutics bridging study was to evaluate the pharmacokinetic comparability, immunogenicity, and tolerability of the risankizumab 90 mg/mL prefilled syringe (PFS) and the risankizumab 150 mg/mL PFS and auto-injector (AI) in healthy subjects.

Methods: Healthy subjects received one 150-mg dose of risankizumab in 1 of 3 ways (226 subjects randomized 3:3:1 to 3 treatment arms): 150 mg/mL by PFS × 1 SC injection, 90 mg/mL by PFS × 2 SC injections, or 150 mg/mL by AI × 1 SC injection, and were followed up for 140 days after dosing for the collection of pharmacokinetic, immunogenicity, and tolerability data.

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Aims: The effects of serelaxin, a recombinant form of human relaxin-2 peptide, on vascular function in the coronary microvascular and systemic macrovascular circulation remain largely unknown. This mechanistic, clinical study assessed the effects of serelaxin on myocardial perfusion, aortic stiffness, and safety in patients with stable coronary artery disease (CAD).

Methods And Results: In this multicentre, double-blind, parallel-group, placebo-controlled study, 58 patients were randomized 1:1 to 48 h intravenous infusion of serelaxin (30 µg/kg/day) or matching placebo.

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Risankizumab is a humanized immunoglobulin (Ig) G1 monoclonal antibody developed and approved for the treatment of moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis at a dose of 150 mg administered subcutaneously at weeks 0 and 4, and every 12 weeks thereafter. Ongoing trials are investigating the use of risankizumab in other inflammatory autoimmune diseases. Risankizumab exhibits linear pharmacokinetics when administered intravenously (0.

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Risankizumab, a humanized monoclonal antibody that targets interleukin-23 p19 subunit, was developed for the treatment of psoriasis. This work characterizes risankizumab pharmacokinetics in Japanese and Chinese healthy subjects compared with white healthy subjects and in Japanese patients with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis, generalized pustular psoriasis, or erythrodermic psoriasis. A phase 1, single-dose study evaluated risankizumab pharmacokinetics and safety/tolerability in healthy white (18 and 300 mg subcutaneous [SC]), Japanese (18, 90, and 300 mg SC and 200, 600, and 1200 mg intravenous [IV]), and Chinese (18, 90, and 300 mg SC) subjects; pharmacokinetic data were analyzed using noncompartmental methods.

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Background And Objective: Risankizumab is an anti-interleukin (IL)-23 monoclonal antibody being developed for treatment of moderate to severe plaque psoriasis. This study provided a comprehensive analysis of risankizumab pharmacokinetics in healthy subjects and patients with plaque psoriasis using data across phase I-III clinical trials.

Methods: Plasma pharmacokinetic data from 1899 subjects, including 13,123 observations, who received single or multiple intravenous or subcutaneous doses of risankizumab (0.

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The colony-stimulating factor-1 (CSF-1) receptor pathway has been implicated in a variety of diseases, and CSF-1-dependent mechanisms are also involved in bloodborne protein clearance. Lacnotuzumab is a novel, high-affinity, humanized, anti-CSF-1 monoclonal antibody that prevents CSF-1-mediated receptor activation. This phase 1, two-part, double-blind study in healthy volunteers assessed the safety and tolerability of lacnotuzumab and its pharmacokinetics (PK) and pharmacodynamic properties.

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Objective: The objective of this study was to characterize the effects of risankizumab on the in vivo activity of cytochrome P450 (CYP) 1A2, CYP2C9, CYP2C19, CYP2D6, and CYP3A in psoriasis patients using a cocktail approach.

Methods: Patients with moderate to severe chronic plaque psoriasis (n = 21) received single oral doses of sensitive probe substrates for CYP1A2 (caffeine 100 mg), CYP2C9 (warfarin 10 mg), CYP2C19 (omeprazole 20 mg), CYP2D6 (metoprolol 50 mg), and CYP3A (midazolam 2 mg) on day 1, followed by 12 weeks of subcutaneous risankizumab treatment of 150 mg once every 4 weeks from day 8 to day 92, and again the same cocktail of substrates on day 98. Serial blood samples were collected for determination of the CYP probe drugs and metabolites with and without risankizumab.

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Aims: Serelaxin is a recombinant human relaxin-2 peptide being developed for the treatment of acute heart failure (AHF). The present analyses aimed to evaluate serelaxin pharmacokinetics following intravenous administration and to identify covariates that may explain pharmacokinetic variability in healthy subjects and patients.

Methods: Serum concentration-time data for 613 subjects from nine phase I and II studies were analysed using a nonlinear mixed-effects model to estimate population pharmacokinetics and identify significant covariates.

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Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) can cause significant disease in immunocompromised patients and treatment options are limited by toxicities. CSJ148 is a combination of two anti-HCMV human monoclonal antibodies (LJP538 and LJP539) that bind to and inhibit the function of viral HCMV glycoprotein B (gB) and the pentameric complex, consisting of glycoproteins gH, gL, UL128, UL130, and UL131. Here, we evaluated the safety, tolerability, and pharmacokinetics of a single intravenous dose of LJP538 or LJP539 or their combination in healthy volunteers.

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