Superficial Venous-Associated Inflammation from Direct IV Administration of RRx-001 in Rats
Abstract
RRx-001 is a small molecule NLRP3 inflammasome inhibitor with anti-CD47 and antiangiogenic/vascular
normalization properties in a Phase 3 clinical trial that has been designated as a drug-device combination
by the FDA. In the Phase 1 first-in-man dose escalation clinical trial, where RRx-001 was given by direct
intravenous (IV) infusion, the main adverse event was a sterile painful infusion phlebitis (IP). Less pain was
experienced when RRx-001 was infused at a slower rate over multiple hours which was impractical on an
outpatient basis. In Phase 2, for reasons of convenience and safety, RRx-001 was co-administered with an
aliquot of autologous blood from an ex-vivo device called the eLOOP on the premise that RRx-001 binds
to hemoglobin on red blood cells (RBCs), making it unavailable to directly interact with venous
nociceptors. Phlebitis has the potential to progress to deep venous thrombosis or septic
thrombophlebitis or post-thrombotic syndrome in hypercoagulable and immunosuppressed cancer
patients. In this 13-week toxicology study of once weekly IV RRx-001 administration to Wistar Han rats
followed by a recovery period of 28 days. The main observed toxicity was a significant inflammatory
response in the vein wall, consistent with superficial venous thrombosis observed in man. Due to this
development, direct IV infusion of RRx-001 is relatively contraindicated in favor of co-administration with
autologous blood