Erythropoiesis Simulating Agents
Erythropoiesis Simulating Agents:  New Ideas and Barriers to Drug Development 
Presentation lecture by:Jeffrey R. Kanofsky, Loyola University
Objectives 
    * Physiology of erythropoietin
    * Available Epoetins and how they differ
    * Untoward Effects
          o Thrombotic Complications
          o Decreased Survival in Patients with Cancer
    * New Agents
          o Follow-on Epoetins
                + Regulatory Issues
          o Modified Epoetins
          o Erythropoietin-receptor agonists with no structural analogies to epoetins
          o ESA agents that work by mechanisms other than direct binding to the erythropoietin receptor
    * Conclusions
Physiology  
    * Erythropoietin cell surface receptor
          o Member of Type I cytokine receptor family
          o Glycoprotein with 484 amino acids and one N-linked glycan (60 kDa)
          o Activate cytoplasmic protein tyrosine kinase JAK2
          o Receptor is a dimer
                + Erythropoietin binding changes the conformation of  the dimer
    * Non-hematopoietic function of erythropoietin
          o EPO receptors present on many other types of cells including brain, nerves, placenta and endothelial cells
                + The density of receptors appears to be considerably lower than on erythroid precursors
          o EPO appears to be important for angiogenesis
          o EPO receptors appear to be present on some cancers
                + The specificity of the assay for the EPO receptors has been questioned
    * Most erythropoietin produced by interstitial cells of the kidney
          o Low oxygen induced EPO gene expansion
                + Transcription activation
                + mRNA stabilization
          o Hypoxia inducible factor-1 activation
                + Binds to hypoxia responsive element in the 3’ flanking region of the EPO gene
                + Forms a complex with p300 protein and hepatic nuclear factor 4
          o Upstream kidney inducible elements needed for increased renal expression
Oxygen dependent hydroxylation of asparagine residue 803 also blocks binding to  p300 
Oxygen Mechanism Responsible for Oxygen-Dependent Degradation of HIF-
Hydroxylases 
Available Agents 
Epoetins 
Modified Epoetins
Epoetins 
    * All have same 165 amino-acid sequence as natural human erythropoietin
    * Identical protein tertiary structure not certain
    * Different Epoetins differ somewhat in carbohydrates
    * Carbohydrate needed for protein stability
          o Unconjugated peptide chain has a very short life in circulation
    * Epoetin alfa (Procrit, Epogen, Eprex outside the USA)
          o Made in Chinese hamster ovary cells
          o About 40% carbohydrate, similar to, but not identical to natural erythropoietin
                + Molecular weight about 30 kDa
          o Half-life about 7 to 8 hours
    * Epoetin beta (NeoRecormon, available in Europe)
          o Same 165 amino acid sequence as epoetin alfa and natural erythropoietin
          o Made in Chinese hamster ovary cells
          o Carbohydrate composition differs somewhat from epoetin alfa
                + A greater proportion of more basic isoforms
          o Terminal half-life is 20% longer than epoetin alfa
    * Epoetin delta
          o Made in human fibrosarcoma cell cultures (HT-1080)
          o EPO gene activated by transformation of cells with cytomegalovirus promoter
          o Does not have N-glycolyneuramic acid (humans are unable to synthesize this compound)
          o Approved by European Agency for the Evaluation of Medicinal Agents (EMEA) in 2002 and marketed in some European countries
    * Epoetin omega
          o Made in baby hamster kidney cell cultures
          o Clinically used in some Eastern European, Central American and Asian countries
Modified Epoetins 
    * Darbepoetin alfa (Aranesp)
Untoward Effects
    * Background
          o Epoetins developed in mid to late 1980s
          o Risk of HIV infection from a transfusion on the order of 1:2,000
          o Current risk 1:1,000,000
          o Substantial reductions in risk for transmission for other viral diseases, such as hepatitis C
Effect of Epoetins on Thrombosis and Survival in Cancer Patients 
Black Box Warning 
    * Cancer
Likely New Warnings 
Follow-on Epoetins 
Regulatory Issues 
History of Legal Regulation 
Justification for Differences in Regulation 
Pure Red Cell Aplasia 
    * Clinical Features
Follow-On Epoetins 
Drug Price Competition and Patent Restoration Act of 1984 
(Hatch-Waxman Act) 
    * Requirements
Standards for Follow-on Biologics in Europe 
Working Group on Follow-On Proteins at the FDA 
Pathway for Biosimilars Act 
New Agents: Modified Epoetins 
Continuous Erythropoietin Receptor Activator 
Promising Agents not yet in Clinical Trials  
GATA Inhibitors 
Hemopoietic Cell Phosphatase Inhibitors (SHP-1) 
Synthetic Erythropoiesis Protein 
Non-Peptide Erythropoietin Mimetics  
Conclusions 
Erythropoiesis Simulating Agents.ppt

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