viernes, 25 de agosto de 2017

A study on the safety and efficacy of reveglucosidase alfa in patients with late-onset Pompe disease | Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases | Full Text

A study on the safety and efficacy of reveglucosidase alfa in patients with late-onset Pompe disease | Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases | Full Text

Biomed Central

Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases

A study on the safety and efficacy of reveglucosidase alfa in patients with late-onset Pompe disease

  • Barry J. ByrneEmail author,
  • Tarekegn Geberhiwot,
  • Bruce A. Barshop,
  • Richard Barohn,
  • Derralynn Hughes,
  • Drago Bratkovic,
  • Claude Desnuelle,
  • Pascal Laforet,
  • Eugen Mengel,
  • Mark Roberts,
  • Peter Haroldsen,
  • Kristin Reilley,
  • Kala Jayaram,
  • Ke Yang,
  • Liron Walsh and
  • on behalf of the POM-001/002 Investigators
Contributed equally
Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases201712:144
Received: 7 December 2016
Accepted: 8 August 2017
Published: 24 August 2017

Abstract

Background

Late-onset Pompe disease is a rare genetic neuromuscular disorder caused by lysosomal acid alpha-glucosidase (GAA) deficiency that ultimately results in mobility loss and respiratory failure. Current enzyme replacement therapy with recombinant human (rh)GAA has demonstrated efficacy in subjects with late-onset Pompe disease. However, long-term effects of rhGAA on pulmonary function have not been observed, likely related to inefficient delivery of rhGAA to skeletal muscle lysosomes and associated deficits in the central nervous system. To address this limitation, reveglucosidase alfa, a novel insulin-like growth factor 2 (IGF2)-tagged GAA analogue with improved lysosomal uptake, was developed. This study evaluated the pharmacokinetics, safety, and exploratory efficacy of reveglucosidase alfa in 22 subjects with late-onset Pompe disease who were previously untreated with rhGAA.

Results

Reveglucosidase alfa plasma concentrations increased linearly with dose, and the elimination half-life was <1.2 h. Eighteen of 22 subjects completed 72 weeks of treatment. The most common adverse events were hypoglycemia (63%), dizziness, fall, headache, and nausea (55% for each). Serious adverse events included hypersensitivity (n = 1), symptomatic hypoglycemia (n = 2), presyncope (n = 1), and acute cardiac failure (n = 1). In the dose-escalation study, all treated subjects tested positive for anti-reveglucosidase alfa, anti-rhGAA, anti-IGF1, and anti-IGF2 antibodies at least once. Subjects receiving 20 mg/kg of reveglucosidase alfa demonstrated increases in predicted maximum inspiratory pressure (13.9%), predicted maximum expiratory pressure (8.0%), forced vital capacity (−0.4%), maximum voluntary ventilation (7.4 L/min), and mean absolute walking distance (22.3 m on the 6-min walk test) at 72 weeks.

Conclusions

Additional studies are needed to further assess the safety and efficacy of this approach. Improvements in respiratory muscle strength, lung function, and walking endurance in subjects with LOPD may make up for the risk of hypersensitivity reactions and hypoglycemia. Reveglucosidase alfa may provide a new treatment option for patients with late-onset Pompe disease.

Trial registration

ISRCTN01435772 and ISRCTN01230801, registered 27 October 2011.

Keywords

Reveglucosidase alfa Late-onset Pompe disease Enzyme replacement therapy Pharmacokinetics SafetyEfficacy Respiratory Pulmonary

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