Immunogenicity of Monoclonal Antibody: Causes, Consequences, and Control Strategies
免疫原性
单克隆抗体
病毒学
抗体
免疫学
医学
作者
Ahmad Zafran Amin Asmani,Ahmad Faris Fahmi Zainuddin,Nadhirah Ahmad Azmi Murad,Nur Hidayati Mohd Darwis,Nur Suhaida Suhaimi,Erizal Zaini,Muhammad Taher,Deny Susanti Darnis,Junaidi Khotib
Antibody-based treatment was first used in 1891 for the treatment of diphtheria. Since then, monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) have been developed to treat many diseases such as cancer and act as vaccines. However, murine-derived therapeutic mAbs were found to be highly immunogenic, and caused anti-drug antibodies (ADAs) reaction, reducing their efficacy and causing severe infusion reactions. Fully human, humanised, and chimeric antibodies were then introduced for better therapeutic efficacy. With the introduction of immune response associated with mAbs immunogenicity. This review explores the immunogenicity of mAbs, its mechanism, contributing factors, and its impact on therapeutic efficacy. It also discusses immunogenicity assessment for preclinical studies and strategies for minimising immunogenicity for effective therapeutic treatment in various diseases. Finally, predicting immunogenicity in drug development is essential for selecting top drug candidates. A lot of methods can be implemented by the researchers and developers to reduce the development of ADAs while simultaneously minimising the immunogenicity reaction of mAbs.