Paris-based Sanofi announced
that its olipudase alfa had positive results in two different clinical
trials for the treatment of acid sphingomyelinase deficiency (ASMD),
also known as Nieman-Pick disease. Olipudase alfa is an investigational
recombinant human acid sphingomyelinase.
ASMD Type A and Type B, is a rare, progressive and life-threatening
disease caused by deficient activity of the enzyme acid sphingomyelinase
(ASM). ASM is found in special compartments called lysosomes inside
cells, which is required to break down sphingomyelin, which is a type of
fat, or lipid. If sphingomyelin isn’t metabolized correctly, it
accumulates inside cells, leading to cell death and major organ
malfunction. It is caused by mutations in the sphingomyelin
phosphodiesterase 1 gene (SMPD1). It is estimated to affect about 2,000
people in the U.S., Europe and Japan.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) granted olipudase alfa
Breakthrough Therapy designation and the European Medicines Agency (EMA)
has awarded it PRIME designation. In Japan, it was granted the SAKIGAKE
designation, which is similar to both the FDA and EMA’s designations.
No treatments are currently approved for ASMD.
The Phase II/III trial investigated 36 adults with ASMD in 24 centers
in 16 countries. Patients received either olipudase alfa intravenously
or a placebo every two weeks at doses up to 3mg/kg over the course of a
year. The trial had two independent primary efficacy endpoints that
evaluated different critical manifestations, progressive lung disease
and enlarged spleen, both common in ASMD. The trial was deemed positive
if one of the primary endpoints was met.
The improvement in lung function endpoint was met, meaning ASCEND was
considered positive. It showed a 22% relative improvement from baseline
to week 52 for patients receiving olipudase alfa compared to 3% in the
placebo arm.
The other primary endpoint, spleen size, was also met. In patients
receiving olipudase alfa, spleen volume was decreased by 39.5% compared
to 0.5% in the placebo arm.
In the U.S., spleen volume was combined with patient-reported outcome
(PRO) of symptoms associated with enlarged spleen called Splenomegaly
Related Score (SRS). Compared to baseline, SRS was decreased by 8.0
points in patients receiving the drug and 9.3 points in the placebo arm.
This combination endpoint, then, was not met.
“These are important data in a disease with no approved treatments
available currently,” said Melissa Wasserstein, chief, Division of
Pediatric Genetic Medicine, Children’s Hospital at Montefiore and
professor of Pediatrics and Genetics at Albert Einstein College of
Medicine. Wasserstein is an investigator in the ASCENT trial.
Wasserstein added, “Treatment with olipudase alfa showed clinically
meaningful improvement in pulmonary function and reduction in spleen
size, critical manifestations of this progressive disease. Both of these
findings are consistent across the clinical studies with olipudase
alfa. The absence of an effect on SRS in this trial requires
exploration, in light of the significant reduction in spleen size.”
All patients in the trial experienced at least one adverse event,
although the number of events was lower in patients receiving the drug
than in the placebo arm. Severe adverse events were less common in the
olipudase alfa arm, only three events, compared to 13 in the placebo
arm. The most common adverse events were headache, nasopharyngitis,
upper respiratory tract infection, cough, and arthralgia.
Sanofi plans to present the data at future medical meetings and begin global regulatory submissions in the second half of 2021.
https://www.biospace.com/article/sanofi-reports-positive-data-in-rare-nieman-pick-disease/
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