Pharmacokinetics and toxicity in rats and monkeys of coDbait: A therapeutic double-stranded DNA oligonucleotide conjugated to cholesterol

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Abstract

Increased DNA repair activity in cancer cells is one of their primary mechanisms of resistance to current radio- and chemotherapies. The molecule coDbait is the first candidate in a new class of drugs that target the double-strand DNA break repair pathways with the aim of overcoming these resistances. coDbait is a 32-base pair (bp) double-stranded DNA molecule with a cholesterol moiety covalently attached to its 5'-end to facilitate its cellular uptake. We report here the preclinical pharmacokinetic and toxicology studies of subcutaneous coDbait administration in rodents and monkeys. Maximum plasma concentration occurred between 2 to 4 hours in rats and at 4 hours in monkeys. Increase in mean AUC0-24h was linear with dose reaching 0.5 mg·h/ml for the highest dose injected (32 mg) for both rats and monkeys. No sex-related differences in maximum concentration (Cmax) nor AUC0-24h were observed. We extrapolated these pharmacokinetic results to humans as the subcutaneous route has been selected for evaluation in clinical trials. Tri-weekly administration of coDbait (from 8 to 32 mg per dose) for 4 weeks was overall well tolerated in rats and monkeys as no morbidity/mortality nor changes in clinical chemistry and histopathology parameters considered to be adverse effects have been observed. © 2012 American Society of Gene & Cell Therapy All rights reserved.

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Schlegel, A., Buhler, C., Devun, F., Agrario, C., Urien, S., Lokiec, F., … Dutreix, M. (2012). Pharmacokinetics and toxicity in rats and monkeys of coDbait: A therapeutic double-stranded DNA oligonucleotide conjugated to cholesterol. Molecular Therapy Nucleic Acids, 1(7), e33. https://doi.org/10.1038/mtna.2012.27

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