Head to head study of oxelumab and adalimumab in a mouse model of ulcerative colitis based on NOD/Scid IL-2R?null mice reconstituted with peripheral blood mononuclear cells.
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ABSTRACT: The goal of this study was to demonstrate that the combination of patient immune profiling and testing in a humanized mouse model of ulcerative colitis (UC) may lead to patient stratification for treatment with oxelumab. First, immunological profiles of UC patients and non-UC donors were analyzed for CD4+ T cells expressing OX40 (CD134) and CD14+ monocytes expressing OX40L (CD252) by flow cytometric analysis. A significant difference was observed between both groups for CD14+ OX40L+ (UC: n=11, 85.44±21.17; mean±sd, non-UC: n=5, 30.7±34.92; p=0.02), no significant difference was detected for CD4+ OX40+. CD14+ OX40L+ monocytes correlated significantly with TH1 and TH2 cells. Secondly, NOD/Scid IL2-Rgamma null mice were reconstituted with peripheral blood mononuclear cells from UC donors exhibiting elevated levels of OX40L, and the efficacy of oxelumab was compared to that of adalimumab. Read out were the clinical, colon, andhistological scores, and serum levels of IL-6, IL-1ß and glutamic acid. Treatment with oxelumab or adalimumab resulted in significantly reduced clinical, colon, and histological scores, reduced serum levels of IL-6 and reduced frequencies of splenic human effector memory T cells and switched B cells. Comparison of efficacy of adalimumab and oxelumab by orthogonal partial least square discrimination analysis revealed that oxelumab was slightly superior to adalimumab, however, elevated serum levels of glutamic acid suggested ongoing inflammation. These results suggest that oxelumab addresses the pro-inflammatory arm of inflammation while promoting the remodeling arm and that patients exhibiting elevated levels of OX40L may benefit from treatment with oxelumab. Keywords: Ulcerative colitis, NOD/Scid IL2-R?null, NSG, anti-CD252 antibodies, oxelumab, inflammatory bowel disease.
SUBMITTER: Jodeleit H
PROVIDER: S-EPMC7847261 | biostudies-literature | 2020 Dec
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature
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