Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1224411 | Journal of Pharmaceutical and Biomedical Analysis | 2007 | 9 Pages |
Thrombocytopenia exposes patients to increased bleeding risk. This serious adverse event was observed with a frequency of approximately 2% in early clinical trials with the potent, orally bioavailable glycoprotein (GP) IIb/IIIa receptor antagonist roxifiban. We previously reported that drug-dependent antibodies (DDAbs) to GP IIb/IIIa are the main cause of thrombocytopenia with roxifiban. Two ELISA assays for detection of free DDAbs (in citrate plasma) and total DDAbs (in EDTA plasma to elute platelet bound DDAbs) were developed and analytically validated. These tests served two purposes during the clinical development program, to pre-screen patients for pre-existing antibodies and monitor patients for increasing antibody titers as a surrogate for eminent thrombocytopenia. The free DDAb assay showed inter and intra-assay precision of 5–12 and 12–14% CV, respectively. The total DDAb assay showed a precision of 5–10 and 4–12% CV, respectively. Three cycles of freeze–thaw did not significantly alter DDAb values in citrate plasma, EDTA plasma or extraction solution. The clinical qualifications of the two assays were conducted in two phase II clinical trials in coronary arterial disease (CAD) patients dosed with roxifiban. Both assays have demonstrated clinical sensitivity of nearly 99–100% and clinical specificity of nearly 95%.