BT051 is an oral, non-systemic, multidrug resistance-associated protein 2 (MRP2)/formyl peptide receptor 1 (FRP1) antagonist. The drug targets gut neutrophil activity. To assess the safety, tolerability, and pharmacokinetics of BT051, healthy subjects were enrolled in five BT051 ascending single-dose cohorts (n=40) or placebo (n=10) [1]. The lowest administered dose was 100 mg, the highest dose was 3,500 mg. Participants were followed until 30 days post-dose.
Adverse events (AEs) occurred equally often in the BT051 cohorts and placebo group, with 22.5% and 20% of the subjects, respectively, experiencing at least 1 AE. No serious AEs or study discontinuations due to AEs were reported. In addition, no dose-limiting toxicities were observed for the BT051 cohorts. Moreover, systemic exposure was not quantifiable in most subjects. Only 2 subjects showed 1 quantifiable blood sample each. The mean percentage of BT051 excreted through faeces ranged between 10.2% and 23.7%. This suggests that BT051 is primarily excreted in the faeces. The mean percentage of BT051 excreted in urine was 0.01-0.03%. Importantly, concentrations of BT051 in the large intestine showed limited gut absorption after oral dosing. Immunosuppression through circulating T-cells was not observed for any dose.
- Stevens C, et al. Safety, tolerability and pharmacokinetics of BT051, an oral inhibitor of neutrophil migration and activation in clinical development for Inflammatory Bowel Disease. P259, ECCO 2021 Virtual Congress, 2-3 & 8-10 July.
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Table of Contents: ECCO 2021
Featured articles
Biologics Updates
Similar efficacy of ustekinumab and adalimumab for moderate-to-severe CD
Ustekinumab safe and effective in elderly CD patients
Early clinical remission and response following risankizumab therapy in CD
Risk of hospitalisation and surgery linked to IBD biological
Obesity increases the risk of immunogenicity to adalimumab in IBD
Improvements in Small Molecules
Upadacitinib meets primary endpoint for moderate-to-severe UC
Promising safety and pharmacokinetic data on BT051 for UC
Surgical closure plus anti-TNF outperforms anti-TNF alone for perianal fistula
Novel Biomarkers
Blood proteins predicting relapse in CD identified
Extracellular RNA has potential as a non-invasive biomarker in IBD
Risk Mitigation
No increased risk of (severe) COVID-19 among IBD patients
Oral faecal microbiota transplant therapy efficacious in UC
Artificial intelligence outperforms human classifying of endoscopic images in UC
Increased risk of rectal cancer after colectomy in IBD
Risk of colorectal cancer is detected by low-pass whole genome sequencing
Large variability in IBD care and education across Europe
Ultra-processed food intake associated with IBD
Factors of coping difficulties in IBD revealed
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