TB Research

Adjunctive Pascolizumab in Rifampicin-Susceptible Pulmonary Tuberculosis: Proof-of-Concept, Partially-Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled, Dose-Escalation Trial

Nicholas I. Paton, Meera Gurumurthy, Qingshu Lu, Francesca Leek, Philip Kwan, Hiromi W.L. Koh, James S. Molton, Lalaine Mortera, et al. (100 authors)

The Journal of Infectious Diseases · 2024-03

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Interleukin 4 (IL-4), increased in tuberculosis infection, may impair bacterial killing. Blocking IL-4 confers benefit in animal models. We evaluated safety and efficacy of pascolizumab (humanized anti-IL-4 monoclonal antibody) as adjunctive tuberculosis treatment. METHODS: Participants with rifampicin-susceptible pulmonary tuberculosis received a single intravenous infusion of pascolizumab or placebo, and standard 6-month tuberculosis treatment. Pascolizumab dose increased in successive cohorts: (1) nonrandomized 0.05 mg/kg (n = 4); (2) nonrandomized 0.5 mg/kg (n = 4); (3) randomized 2.5 mg/kg (n = 9) or placebo (n = 3); and (4) randomized 10 mg/kg (n = 9) or placebo (n = 3). Coprimary safety outcome was study-drug-related grade 4 or serious adverse event (G4/SAE) in all cohorts (1-4). Coprimary efficacy outcome was week 8 sputum culture time-to-positivity (TTP) in randomized cohorts (3-4) combined. RESULTS: Pascolizumab levels exceeded IL-4 50% neutralizing dose for 8 weeks in 78%-100% of participants in cohorts 3-4. There were no study-drug-related G4/SAEs. Median week-8 TTP was 42 days in pascolizumab and placebo groups (P = .185). Rate of TTP increase was greater with pascolizumab (difference from placebo 0.011 log10 TTP/day; 95% Bayesian credible interval 0.006 to 0.015 log10 TTP/day). CONCLUSIONS: There was no evidence to suggest blocking IL-4 was unsafe. Preliminary efficacy findings are consistent with animal models. This supports further investigation of adjunctive anti-IL-4 interventions for tuberculosis in larger phase 2 trials. CLINICAL TRIALS REGISTRATION: NCT01638520.

MeSH terms

  • Medicine
  • Placebo
  • Tuberculosis
  • Internal medicine
  • Randomized controlled trial
  • Adverse effect
  • Rifampicin