Carcinogenicity risk assessment of romosozumab: A review of scientific weight-of-evidence and findings in a rat lifetime pharmacology study
医学
生理学
内科学
作者
Luc Chouinard,Melanie Felx,Nacera Mellal,Aurora Varela,Peter C. Mann,Jacquelin Jolette,Rana Samadfam,Susan Y. Smith,Kathrin Locher,Sabina Buntich,Michael S. Ominsky,Ian Pyrah,Rogely W. Boyce
Romosozumab is a humanized immunoglobulin G2 monoclonal antibody that binds and blocks the action of sclerostin, a protein secreted by the osteocyte and an extracellular inhibitor of canonical Wnt signaling. Blockade of sclerostin binding to low-density lipoprotein receptor-related proteins 5 and 6 (LRP5 and LRP6) allows Wnt ligands to activate canonical Wnt signaling in bone, increasing bone formation and decreasing bone resorption, making sclerostin an attractive target for osteoporosis therapy. Because romosozumab is a bone-forming agent and an activator of canonical Wnt signaling, questions have arisen regarding a potential carcinogenic risk. Weight-of-evidence factors used in the assessment of human carcinogenic risk of romosozumab included features of canonical Wnt signaling, expression pattern of sclerostin, phenotype of loss-of-function mutations in humans and mice, mode and mechanism of action of romosozumab, and findings from romosozumab chronic toxicity studies in rats and monkeys. Although the weight-of-evidence factors supported that romosozumab would pose a low carcinogenic risk to humans, the carcinogenic potential of romosozumab was assessed in a rat lifetime study. There were no romosozumab-related effects on tumor incidence in rats. The findings of the lifetime study and the weight-of-evidence factors collectively indicate that romosozumab administration would not pose a carcinogenic risk to humans.