Aim: Etrolizumab, a humanized monoclonal antibody, has demonstrated clinical remission in a Phase II study of ulcerative colitis patients. In the Phase III program, a second indication, Crohn's disease was added. The pharmacokinetic ELISA used in the Phase I/II studies in normal human and ulcerative colitis sera exhibited matrix interference in the Crohn's disease population, necessitating implementation of a new technology. Methodology & results: Optimization of the original ELISA and assay redevelopment using different antibody pairs did not result in substantive improvements, necessitating implementation of an alternative technology for assay development.
Conclusion: We highlight the challenges encountered with optimization/redevelopment of the original ELISA and discuss results of the new assay on the Gyros platform.
Keywords: ELISA; Gyros technology; etrolizumab; immunoassay; matrix interference; microfluidic; pharmacokinetic.