Published November 8, 2022 | Version v.1
Journal article Restricted

Pharmacokinetic characterization, benefits and barriers of subcutaneous administration of monoclonal antibodies in oncology

  • 1. Department of Pharmacokinetics and Clinical Pharmacy, University of Belgrade – Faculty of Pharmacy, Belgrade, Republic of Serbia
  • 2. Clinic for Medical Oncology, Institute for Oncology and Radiology of Serbia, Belgrade, Republic of Serbia

Description

Abstract. Objective. Therapeutic monoclonal antibodies in oncology are slowly becoming the dominant treatment option for many different cancer types. The main route of administration, infusion, requires extensive product preparations, patient hospitalization and close monitoring. Patient comfort improvement, staff workload reduction and cost savings dictated the development of subcutaneous formulations. The aim of this review is to present pharmacokinetic characteristics of subcutaneous products, discuss the differences between intravenous and subcutaneous routes and to point out the advantages as well as challenges of administration route shift from the formulation development and pharmacometric angle. Data sources. Food and Drug administration's Purple book database and electronic medicines compendium were used to identify monoclonal antibodies in oncology approved as subcutaneous forms. Using keywords subcutaneous, monoclonal antibodies, pharmacokinetics, model, as well as specific drugs previously identified, both PubMed and ScienceDirect databases were researched. . Data Summary. There are currently six approved subcutaneous onco-monoclonal antibodies on the market. For each of them, exposure to the drug was similar in relation to infusion, treatment effectiveness was the same, administration was well tolerated by the patients and costs of the medical service were reduced. Conclusion. Development of subcutaneous forms for existing and emerging new monoclonal antibodies for cancer treatment as well as shifting from administration via infusion should be encouraged due to patient preference, lower costs and overall lack of substantial differences in efficacy and safety between the two routes.

Files

Restricted

The record is publicly accessible, but files are restricted to users with access.

Request access

If you would like to request access to these files, please fill out the form below.

You need to satisfy these conditions in order for this request to be accepted:

access to the full text with institutional password only

You are currently not logged in. Do you have an account? Log in here

Additional details

Identifiers

ISSN
1078-1552
PMID
36349366

Funding

Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development, Republic of Serbia, Grant no. 451-03-68/2020-14/200161 (University of Belgrade, Faculty of Pharmacy) 200161
Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development

Dates

Issued
2023-03
Available
2022-11-08

Software

Repository URL
https://zenodo.org/uploads/7766670
Development Status
Active