Monday, December 14, 2009

Methotrexate & Ocrelizumab combination a new hope for RA patients....

In recent days, I have seen many researchers are trying the combination of existing drugs in combination with a monoclonal antibodies for many diseases like cancer, rheumatoid arthritis and are successful too. As synthetic chemist I was interested in knowing about these monoclonal antibodies and found some interesting info, which I am sharing herewith...

About monoclonal antibodies :

monoclonal antibodies (mAb or moAb) are monospecific antibodies that are identical because they are produced by one type of immune cell that are all clones of a single parent cell. Given almost any substance, it is possible to create monoclonal antibodies that specifically bind to that substance; they can then serve to detect or purify that substance. This has become an important tool in biochemistry, molecular biology and medicine. When used as medications, the non-proprietary drug name ends in -mab.

The invention is generally accredited to Georges Köhler, César Milstein, and Niels Kaj Jerne in 1975; who shared the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1984 for the discovery. The key idea was to use a line of myeloma cells that had lost their ability to secrete antibodies, come up with a technique to fuse these cells with healthy antibody-producing B-cells, and be able to select for the successfully fused cells. In 1988 Greg Winter (Nat Rev Cancer 2001;1:118-129) and his team pioneered the techniques to humanize monoclonal antibodies, removing the reactions that many monoclonal antibodies caused in some patients. Interestingly, many monoclinical antibodies have been tried for rheumatoid arthritis, chrohn's disease and as anticancer agents.

Many monoclonal antibodies like infliximab, etanercept and adalimumab were tried for the rheumatoid arthritis now its interseting to note that Genentech and Biogen Idec reported positive outcome from ocrelizumab ( humanized anti-CD20) -MTX (Methotrexate - see the structure : this drug is a part of DMARD treatment meant for RA patients) combination study in RA. The results are significant because they are the first data from a large Phase III trial to show that a humanized antibody targeted at B-cells improves the signs and symptoms of rheumatoid arthritis. Hope patients suffering from RA and those are not responding will breathe a sigh of relief in the days to come...

Ref : http://www.gene.com/gene/news/press-releases/display.do?method=detail&id=12487

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