Comparison of clot lysis activity and biochemical properties of originator tenecteplase (Metalyse®) with those of an alleged biosimilar

The bioengineered tissue plasminogen activator tenecteplase is an important treatment modality of acute myocardial infarction recommended by international guidelines. Following introduction of originator tenecteplase (brand names Metalyse® and TNKase®), a ‘biosimilar’ tenecteplase became available f...

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Main Authors: Werner eKliche, Ingo eKrech, Martin C Michel, Nishant V Sangole, Sadhana eSathaye
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2014-02-01
Series:Frontiers in Pharmacology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fphar.2014.00007/full
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spelling doaj-e839c7b3476b42c9b4edc2702e35818e2020-11-24T20:47:16ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Pharmacology1663-98122014-02-01510.3389/fphar.2014.0000775061Comparison of clot lysis activity and biochemical properties of originator tenecteplase (Metalyse®) with those of an alleged biosimilarWerner eKliche0Ingo eKrech1Martin C Michel2Martin C Michel3Nishant V Sangole4Sadhana eSathaye5Boehrimger Ingelheim Pharma GmbH & Co KGBoehrimger Ingelheim Pharma GmbH & Co KGBoehringer Ingelheim Pharma GmbH & Co KGJohannes Gutenberg UniversityBoehringer Ingelheim India Pvt. Ltd.Institute of Chemical TechnologyThe bioengineered tissue plasminogen activator tenecteplase is an important treatment modality of acute myocardial infarction recommended by international guidelines. Following introduction of originator tenecteplase (brand names Metalyse® and TNKase®), a ‘biosimilar’ tenecteplase became available for commercial use in India under the brand name Elaxim® in the absence of Indian biosimilar guidelines which came into force from September 15th, 2012. Based on a report of biochemical and fibrinolytical differences between Metalyse and Elaxim, we have systematically compared them in a range of routine quality testing assays. As compared to Metalyse, Elaxim exhibited less clot lysis activity and contained less of the two-chain form of tenecteplase. Even upon full in vitro conversion to the two-chain form Elaxim exhibited less clot lysis activity. This was linked to differences in sialic acid content and glycosylation pattern with Elaxim exhibiting less bi- and more tetra-antennary glycosylation, leading to different charge heterogeneity profile. Regarding purity, Elaxim contained more tenecteplase aggregates and, in contrast to Metalyse, considerable amounts of Chinese hamster ovary cell protein. Taken together these data demonstrate that Metalyse and Elaxim differ considerably in clot lysis activity and biochemical properties. These data question whether Elaxim indeed can be considered a ‘biosimilar’ of Metalyse, i.e. whether and to which extent the clinical efficacy and safety properties of Metalyse can be extrapolated to Elaxim in the absence of comparative clinical data.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fphar.2014.00007/fullGlycosylationimpuritytenecteplasebiosimilarclot lysis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Werner eKliche
Ingo eKrech
Martin C Michel
Martin C Michel
Nishant V Sangole
Sadhana eSathaye
spellingShingle Werner eKliche
Ingo eKrech
Martin C Michel
Martin C Michel
Nishant V Sangole
Sadhana eSathaye
Comparison of clot lysis activity and biochemical properties of originator tenecteplase (Metalyse®) with those of an alleged biosimilar
Frontiers in Pharmacology
Glycosylation
impurity
tenecteplase
biosimilar
clot lysis
author_facet Werner eKliche
Ingo eKrech
Martin C Michel
Martin C Michel
Nishant V Sangole
Sadhana eSathaye
author_sort Werner eKliche
title Comparison of clot lysis activity and biochemical properties of originator tenecteplase (Metalyse®) with those of an alleged biosimilar
title_short Comparison of clot lysis activity and biochemical properties of originator tenecteplase (Metalyse®) with those of an alleged biosimilar
title_full Comparison of clot lysis activity and biochemical properties of originator tenecteplase (Metalyse®) with those of an alleged biosimilar
title_fullStr Comparison of clot lysis activity and biochemical properties of originator tenecteplase (Metalyse®) with those of an alleged biosimilar
title_full_unstemmed Comparison of clot lysis activity and biochemical properties of originator tenecteplase (Metalyse®) with those of an alleged biosimilar
title_sort comparison of clot lysis activity and biochemical properties of originator tenecteplase (metalyse®) with those of an alleged biosimilar
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Pharmacology
issn 1663-9812
publishDate 2014-02-01
description The bioengineered tissue plasminogen activator tenecteplase is an important treatment modality of acute myocardial infarction recommended by international guidelines. Following introduction of originator tenecteplase (brand names Metalyse® and TNKase®), a ‘biosimilar’ tenecteplase became available for commercial use in India under the brand name Elaxim® in the absence of Indian biosimilar guidelines which came into force from September 15th, 2012. Based on a report of biochemical and fibrinolytical differences between Metalyse and Elaxim, we have systematically compared them in a range of routine quality testing assays. As compared to Metalyse, Elaxim exhibited less clot lysis activity and contained less of the two-chain form of tenecteplase. Even upon full in vitro conversion to the two-chain form Elaxim exhibited less clot lysis activity. This was linked to differences in sialic acid content and glycosylation pattern with Elaxim exhibiting less bi- and more tetra-antennary glycosylation, leading to different charge heterogeneity profile. Regarding purity, Elaxim contained more tenecteplase aggregates and, in contrast to Metalyse, considerable amounts of Chinese hamster ovary cell protein. Taken together these data demonstrate that Metalyse and Elaxim differ considerably in clot lysis activity and biochemical properties. These data question whether Elaxim indeed can be considered a ‘biosimilar’ of Metalyse, i.e. whether and to which extent the clinical efficacy and safety properties of Metalyse can be extrapolated to Elaxim in the absence of comparative clinical data.
topic Glycosylation
impurity
tenecteplase
biosimilar
clot lysis
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fphar.2014.00007/full
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