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Intradermal substance P as a challenge agent in healthy individuals

Pharmacological challenge models are deployed to evaluate drug effects during clinical development. Intradermal injection of Substance P (SP) neuropeptide, a potential challenge agent for investigating local mediators, is associated with wheal and flare response mediated by the MRGPRX2 receptor. Alt...

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Autores principales: ten Voorde, Wouter, Akinseye, Chika, Abdisalaam, Ismahaan, Wind, Selinde, Klarenbeek, Naomi, Bergmans, Menthe, van Doorn, Martijn, Rissmann, Robert, Kaur, Rejbinder, Hotee, Sarah, Foster, Katie, Nair, Arati, Fortunato, Lea, Macphee, Colin, Mole, Sarah, Baumann, Katrine, Brigandi, Richard
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10582677/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37547990
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/cts.13592
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author ten Voorde, Wouter
Akinseye, Chika
Abdisalaam, Ismahaan
Wind, Selinde
Klarenbeek, Naomi
Bergmans, Menthe
van Doorn, Martijn
Rissmann, Robert
Kaur, Rejbinder
Hotee, Sarah
Foster, Katie
Nair, Arati
Fortunato, Lea
Macphee, Colin
Mole, Sarah
Baumann, Katrine
Brigandi, Richard
author_facet ten Voorde, Wouter
Akinseye, Chika
Abdisalaam, Ismahaan
Wind, Selinde
Klarenbeek, Naomi
Bergmans, Menthe
van Doorn, Martijn
Rissmann, Robert
Kaur, Rejbinder
Hotee, Sarah
Foster, Katie
Nair, Arati
Fortunato, Lea
Macphee, Colin
Mole, Sarah
Baumann, Katrine
Brigandi, Richard
author_sort ten Voorde, Wouter
collection PubMed
description Pharmacological challenge models are deployed to evaluate drug effects during clinical development. Intradermal injection of Substance P (SP) neuropeptide, a potential challenge agent for investigating local mediators, is associated with wheal and flare response mediated by the MRGPRX2 receptor. Although dose‐dependent data on SP effects exist, full characterization and information on potential carryover effect after repeated challenge are lacking. This open‐label, two‐part, prospective enabling study of SP intradermal challenge in healthy participants aimed to understand and distinguish between wheal and flare responses following various SP doses. Part 1 included one challenge visit to determine optimum SP dose range for evaluation in part 2, which determined variability in 20 participants and used intradermal microdialysis (IDM) for SP‐challenged skin sampling. At 5, 15, 50, and 150 pmol doses, respectively, posterior median area under the curve (AUC; AUC(0–2h)) was 4090.4, 5881.2, 8846.8, and 9212.8 mm(2)/min, for wheal response, and 12020.9, 38154.3, 65470.6, and 67404.4 mm(2)/min for flare response (SP‐challenge visit 2). When the challenge was repeated ~2 weeks later, no carryover effect was observed. IDM histamine levels were relatively low, resulting in low confidence in the data to define temporal characteristics for histamine release following SP challenge. No safety concerns were identified using SP. Wheal and flare responses following intradermal SP challenge were dose‐dependent and different. The results indicate that this challenge model is fit‐for‐purpose in future first‐in‐human studies and further assessment of novel drugs targeting dermal inflammatory disease responses, such as chronic spontaneous urticaria, chronic inducible urticaria, and pseudo‐allergic reactions.
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spelling pubmed-105826772023-10-19 Intradermal substance P as a challenge agent in healthy individuals ten Voorde, Wouter Akinseye, Chika Abdisalaam, Ismahaan Wind, Selinde Klarenbeek, Naomi Bergmans, Menthe van Doorn, Martijn Rissmann, Robert Kaur, Rejbinder Hotee, Sarah Foster, Katie Nair, Arati Fortunato, Lea Macphee, Colin Mole, Sarah Baumann, Katrine Brigandi, Richard Clin Transl Sci Research Pharmacological challenge models are deployed to evaluate drug effects during clinical development. Intradermal injection of Substance P (SP) neuropeptide, a potential challenge agent for investigating local mediators, is associated with wheal and flare response mediated by the MRGPRX2 receptor. Although dose‐dependent data on SP effects exist, full characterization and information on potential carryover effect after repeated challenge are lacking. This open‐label, two‐part, prospective enabling study of SP intradermal challenge in healthy participants aimed to understand and distinguish between wheal and flare responses following various SP doses. Part 1 included one challenge visit to determine optimum SP dose range for evaluation in part 2, which determined variability in 20 participants and used intradermal microdialysis (IDM) for SP‐challenged skin sampling. At 5, 15, 50, and 150 pmol doses, respectively, posterior median area under the curve (AUC; AUC(0–2h)) was 4090.4, 5881.2, 8846.8, and 9212.8 mm(2)/min, for wheal response, and 12020.9, 38154.3, 65470.6, and 67404.4 mm(2)/min for flare response (SP‐challenge visit 2). When the challenge was repeated ~2 weeks later, no carryover effect was observed. IDM histamine levels were relatively low, resulting in low confidence in the data to define temporal characteristics for histamine release following SP challenge. No safety concerns were identified using SP. Wheal and flare responses following intradermal SP challenge were dose‐dependent and different. The results indicate that this challenge model is fit‐for‐purpose in future first‐in‐human studies and further assessment of novel drugs targeting dermal inflammatory disease responses, such as chronic spontaneous urticaria, chronic inducible urticaria, and pseudo‐allergic reactions. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2023-08-07 /pmc/articles/PMC10582677/ /pubmed/37547990 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/cts.13592 Text en © 2023 GlaxoSmithKline. Clinical and Translational Science published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Society for Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited and is not used for commercial purposes.
spellingShingle Research
ten Voorde, Wouter
Akinseye, Chika
Abdisalaam, Ismahaan
Wind, Selinde
Klarenbeek, Naomi
Bergmans, Menthe
van Doorn, Martijn
Rissmann, Robert
Kaur, Rejbinder
Hotee, Sarah
Foster, Katie
Nair, Arati
Fortunato, Lea
Macphee, Colin
Mole, Sarah
Baumann, Katrine
Brigandi, Richard
Intradermal substance P as a challenge agent in healthy individuals
title Intradermal substance P as a challenge agent in healthy individuals
title_full Intradermal substance P as a challenge agent in healthy individuals
title_fullStr Intradermal substance P as a challenge agent in healthy individuals
title_full_unstemmed Intradermal substance P as a challenge agent in healthy individuals
title_short Intradermal substance P as a challenge agent in healthy individuals
title_sort intradermal substance p as a challenge agent in healthy individuals
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10582677/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37547990
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/cts.13592
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