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Abstract
Title | GS-9620 INDUCES A PRESYSTEMIC INNATE IMMUNE RESPONSE IN THE ABSENCE OF SERUM INTERFERON OR ADVERSE EFFECTS IN BOTH NON-CLINICAL SPECIES AND HUMANS | Speaker: | Abigail Fosdick | Author: | D. Tumas1, A. Fosdick1*, X. Zheng1, R. Lanford2, J. Hesselgesser1, C. Frey1, W. Grushenka1, R. Halcomb1, U. Lopatin1 | Affiliation: | 1Gilead Sciences Inc., Foster City, CA, 2Department of Virology and Immunology, Texas Biomedical Research Institute, San Antonio, TX, USA. *[email protected] | Background: The side effects associated with interferon-α (IFN-α) make it a challenging therapeutic option for many patients with chronic HBV or HCV infection. Therefore, we are a developing a potent Toll-like receptor 7 (TLR-7) agonist, GS-9620, as an oral immunomodulatory agent capable of inducing an antiviral immune response at the level of the liver and gut associated lymphoid tissue (GALT) without induction of systemic IFN-α or its side effects. (i.e. a “pre-systemic” response).
Aim: To demonstrate that low oral doses of the TLR-7 agonist GS-9620 can induce a pre-systemic innate immune response in the liver in the absence of induction of systemic IFN-α.
Methods: Single and/or multiple doses of GS-9620 were evaluated in mice, cynomolgus monkeys, chimpanzees (uninfected and HBV infected) and human healthy volunteers (0.3 to 12 mg doses). Pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamic responses (serum IFN-α, cytokines and interferon stimulated genes (ISGs) in blood and/or liver), and safety parameters were evaluated.
Results: At a similar serum Cmax exposure level, oral administration of GS-9620 provides a markedly greater serum IFN-a response than does intravenous administration. In cynomolgus monkeys and normal and HBV-infected chimpanzees, low oral doses of GS-9620 induced ISGs in the liver and/or in circulating blood cells with no increase in serum levels of IFN-α and caused a reduction of viral load in infected animals. In healthy humans, low oral doses of GS‑9620 (< 8 mg) induced a similar pre-systemic ISG response with neither detectable serum IFN-α nor adverse effects including signs or symptoms associated with systemic IFN-α.
[Figure 1]
Conclusions: In preclinical species, oral administration of GS-9620 induced more IFN-α than intravenous administration relative to GS-9620 exposure. This suggests that cells in the GALT and/or liver can be stimulated to induce a locally restricted TLR7 response following oral administration of GS-9620. In support of this hypothesis, following low oral doses of GS-9620 ISG induction was found in blood cells in the absence of either detectable serum IFN-α or adverse effects associated with systemic levels of IFN-α in normal and chronically HBV-infected non-human primates as well as in healthy human volunteers. |
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