Abstract
Many potential drugs for treatment of neurodegenerative diseases, particularly antisense oligonucleotides (ASOs), are administered via lumbar intrathecal injection, because these drugs do not cross the blood-brain barrier. Intrathecal injection is a well-established method in cynomolgus monkeys, a species that is used in preclinical safety assessment when other nonrodent species cannot be used. The authors completed intrathecal ASO administration in over 30 preclinical safety studies (>1000 animals and >4500 dose administrations) during which we observed 3 cases of procedure-related spinal cord necrosis (incidence <0.1%). We describe clinical symptoms, diagnostic approaches, morphological features, and prognosis of this rare injury, and compare these findings with typical drug-related findings of ASOs dosed by intrathecal injection. The low incidence of procedure-related and dose-limiting lesions confines this analysis to a small sample set. The pattern of effects is similar across all monkeys despite differences in age, body weight, and intrathecal injection site. All 3 cases presented a combination of the following findings: blood in cerebrospinal fluid at time of injection, clinical signs that increase in severity within a day of dosing, lameness of both hind limbs, reduced muscle tone, and loss of patellar, foot grip, and/or anal reflexes. In all cases, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) showed a linear hyperintense lesion in the lumbar spinal cord. In 2 cases, this hyperintensity was associated with evidence of spinal cord edema. We conclude that a pattern of in-life and pathology findings, including noninvasive MRI assessment, is indicative of procedure-related effects.
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