23 results on '"Khella, Sami"'
Search Results
2. Switching from inotersen to eplontersen in patients with hereditary transthyretin-mediated amyloidosis with polyneuropathy: analysis from NEURO-TTRansform.
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Conceição, Isabel, Berk, John L., Weiler, Markus, Kowacs, Pedro A., Dasgupta, Noel R., Khella, Sami, Chao, Chi-Chao, Attarian, Shahram, Kwoh, T. Jesse, Jung, Shiangtung W., Chen, Jersey, Viney, Nicholas J., Yu, Rosie Z., Gertz, Morie, Masri, Ahmad, Cruz, Márcia Waddington, and Coelho, Teresa
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CLINICAL trials ,PLATELET count ,NUTRITIONAL status ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,TRANSTHYRETIN - Abstract
Background: The phase 3 NEURO-TTRansform trial showed eplontersen treatment for 65 weeks reduced transthyretin (TTR), halted progression of neuropathy impairment, and improved quality of life (QoL) in adult patients with hereditary TTR-mediated amyloidosis with polyneuropathy (ATTRv-PN), vs. historical placebo. Methods: NEURO-TTRansform enrolled patients with ATTRv-PN. A subset of patients were randomized to receive subcutaneous inotersen 300 mg weekly (Weeks 1–34) and subsequently switched to subcutaneous eplontersen 45 mg every 4 weeks (Weeks 37–81). Change in serum TTR and treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs) were evaluated through Week 85. Effects on neuropathy impairment, QoL, and nutritional status were also evaluated. Results: Of 24 patients randomized to inotersen, 20 (83%) switched to eplontersen at Week 37 and four discontinued due to AEs/investigator decision. Absolute change in serum TTR was greater after switching from inotersen (−74.3%; Week 35) to eplontersen (−80.6%; Week 85). From the end of inotersen treatment, neuropathy impairment and QoL were stable (i.e., did not progress) while on eplontersen, and there was no deterioration in nutritional status. TEAEs were fewer with eplontersen (Weeks 37–85; 19/20 [95%] patients) compared with inotersen (up to Week 35; 24/24 [100%] patients). Mean platelet counts decreased during inotersen treatment (mean nadir reduction ‒40.7%) and returned to baseline during eplontersen treatment (mean nadir reduction, ‒3.2%). Conclusions: Switching from inotersen to eplontersen further reduced serum TTR, halted disease progression, stabilized QoL, restored platelet count, and improved tolerability, without deterioration in nutritional status. This supports a positive benefit-risk profile for patients with ATTRv-PN who switch from inotersen to eplontersen. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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3. Estimating Meaningful Differences in Measures of Neuropathic Impairment, Health‐Related Quality of Life, and Nutritional Status in Patients With Hereditary Transthyretin Amyloidosis.
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Folkvaljon, Folke, Gertz, Morie, Gillmore, Julian D., Khella, Sami, Masri, Ahmad, Maurer, Mathew S., Cruz, Márcia Waddington, Wixner, Jonas, Chen, Jersey, Reicher, Barry, Kwoh, Jesse, Yarlas, Aaron, and Berk, John L.
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Introduction/Aims: The degree of change in neuropathic impairment and quality of life (QoL) that is clinically meaningful to patients with hereditary transthyretin amyloidosis with polyneuropathy (ATTRv‐PN) is not established. This study aimed to estimate the magnitude of treatment differences that are meaningful to patients in measures of neuropathy and QoL and to determine whether eplontersen achieved a meaningful improvement versus placebo. Methods: Data from the NEURO‐TTRansform trial on patients with ATTRv‐PN treated with eplontersen (n = 141) or historical placebo (n = 59) were used. Anchor‐based approaches were used to estimate thresholds for meaningful differences in the modified Neuropathy Impairment Score +7 (mNIS+7) composite score, Norfolk QoL‐Diabetic Neuropathy (Norfolk QoL‐DN) total score, Neuropathy Symptoms and Change (NSC) total score, and modified body mass index (mBMI). Differences between the least squares means of the treatment groups were analyzed. Results: Meaningful improvement in mNIS+7 was estimated as −4.0 points and deterioration as 1.8 points. The estimated ranges of meaningful improvement and deterioration in Norfolk QoL‐DN were −12.8 to −4.0 points, and 5.9 to 14.7 points, respectively. For NSC, ranges were −2.4 to −1.3 points for meaningful improvement, and 0.6 to 5.8 points for deterioration. The estimated meaningful improvement in mBMI was 9.8 kg/m2 × g/L and deterioration was −40.9 kg/m2 × g/L. Improvements in each measure with eplontersen versus placebo were greater than the estimates of meaningful differences. Discussion: Eplontersen demonstrated a clinically meaningful effect on neuropathic impairment, QoL, and nutritional status. Such estimates have implications for clinical practice and trials. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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4. Treatment characteristics of patients with hereditary transthyretin amyloidosis: a cohort study.
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Qarni, Taha N., Jones, Felipe J. S., Drachman, Brian, Khella, Sami, Pieretti, Janice, Bustamante, Nicolas Sarmiento, and Karam, Chafic
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TRANSTHYRETIN ,ELECTRONIC health records ,AMYLOIDOSIS ,COHORT analysis ,GENE therapy - Abstract
Background: There are novel medications approved for the treatment of hereditary transthyretin amyloidosis (ATTRv), classified as transthyretin (TTR) stabilizers or gene silencers. While many patients may be on both classes of medications, there is no data available on the safety and efficacy of combination therapy. Objectives: To describe ATTRv patient and TTR-targeted therapy characteristics in a US cohort, and compare outcomes with combination therapy versus monotherapy. Methods: We performed a retrospective cohort study with electronic health record data of patients with ATTRv seen at a single institution between January 2018 and December 2022. We collected data on symptomatology, gene mutation, disease severity, ATTRv treatment, hospitalizations, and mortality. Results: One hundred sixty-two patients with ATTRv were identified. The average age at diagnosis was 65 years. 86 patients (53%) had the V122I variant. 119 patients were symptomatic, of whom 103 were started on ATTRv-specific treatment. 41 patients (40%) had cardiomyopathy only, and 53 (51%) had a mixed phenotype of cardiomyopathy and neuropathy. 38 patients (37%) received therapy with both a gene silencer and protein stabilizer. 9 patients (15%) in the monotherapy group had two or more cardiac hospitalizations after starting treatment, compared to 3 patients (9%) on combination therapy (p=0.26). The adjusted hazard ratio of all-cause mortality for the patients on combination therapy compared to monotherapy was 0.37 (0.08-1.8, p=0.21). Conclusions: While the efficacy is unproven, over one-third of patients with ATTRv are on both a stabilizer and a silencer. There were no safety issues for combination therapy. There was a trend towards improved hospitalizations and survival in patients in the combination group but this was not statistically significant. Larger studies with longer follow-up are necessary to determine benefit of combination therapy. Key summary points: • A large proportion of patients with ATTRv are on both a silencer and stabilizer despite the lack of evidence of benefit. • In our patients' population, the combination therapy was found to be safe. • No clear benefit was found between patients on monotherapy versus combination therapy. However, a trend of less hospitalization and mortality was observed in those patients on combination therapy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. Single institution experience with efgartigimod in patients with myasthenia gravis: Patient selection, dosing schedules, treatment response, and adverse events.
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Singer, Madeline, Khella, Sami, Bird, Shawn, McIntosh, Paul, Paudyal, Bandhu, Wadhwani, Anil, Quinn, Colin, and Karam, Chafic
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Introduction/Aims: Efgartigimod is a neonatal Fc receptor blocker and was the first approved medication in its class for the treatment of generalized myasthenia gravis (gMG). As a novel therapy, little is known about the use of efgartigimod in clinical practice. This study aims to describe how efgartigimod is being incorporated into the current therapeutic landscape of MG. Methods: We reviewed the charts of 17 patients with gMG treated with efgartigimod at the University of Pennsylvania between January 2022 and June 2023. Results: Efgartigimod was selected mainly for patients who were treatment refractory, had side effects to other treatments, and/or required quick improvement in their symptoms. All patients had been previously treated with at least one medication for MG and had an average baseline Myasthenia Gravis Activities of Daily Living (MG‐ADL) score of 9.1. The patients treated with efgartigimod improved their MG‐ADL score by an average of 5.5 points at 3 months (p <.001) and 7.1 points by 6 months (p <.001). Forty percent of patients achieved minimal symptom expression. Adverse events (AEs) were reported in 43.7% of patients on efgartigimod, the most common being mild infection (urinary tract infection and thrush). There were no serious AEs. Discussion: This study found efgartigimod to be efficacious, well tolerated, and safe in patients with MG. Efgartigimod should be considered as an add‐on therapy, a bridge therapy, or as a monotherapy if patients have difficulty tolerating other treatments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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6. Precision targeting of autoantigen-specific B cells in muscle-specific tyrosine kinase myasthenia gravis with chimeric autoantibody receptor T cells.
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Oh, Sangwook, Mao, Xuming, Manfredo-Vieira, Silvio, Lee, Jinmin, Patel, Darshil, Choi, Eun Jung, Alvarado, Andrea, Cottman-Thomas, Ebony, Maseda, Damian, Tsao, Patricia Y., Ellebrecht, Christoph T., Khella, Sami L., Richman, David P., O'Connor, Kevin C., Herzberg, Uri, Binder, Gwendolyn K., Milone, Michael C., Basu, Samik, and Payne, Aimee S.
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Muscle-specific tyrosine kinase myasthenia gravis (MuSK MG) is an autoimmune disease that causes life-threatening muscle weakness due to anti-MuSK autoantibodies that disrupt neuromuscular junction signaling. To avoid chronic immunosuppression from current therapies, we engineered T cells to express a MuSK chimeric autoantibody receptor with CD137-CD3ζ signaling domains (MuSK-CAART) for precision targeting of B cells expressing anti-MuSK autoantibodies. MuSK-CAART demonstrated similar efficacy as anti-CD19 chimeric antigen receptor T cells for depletion of anti-MuSK B cells and retained cytolytic activity in the presence of soluble anti-MuSK antibodies. In an experimental autoimmune MG mouse model, MuSK-CAART reduced anti-MuSK IgG without decreasing B cells or total IgG levels, reflecting MuSK-specific B cell depletion. Specific off-target interactions of MuSK-CAART were not identified in vivo, in primary human cell screens or by high-throughput human membrane proteome array. These data contributed to an investigational new drug application and phase 1 clinical study design for MuSK-CAART for the treatment of MuSK autoantibody-positive MG. A muscle autoimmune disease is treated in mice with CAAR T cells. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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7. The impact of inotersen on Neuropathy Impairment Score in patients with hereditary transthyretin amyloidosis with polyneuropathy.
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Yarlas, Aaron, Lovley, Andrew, Brown, Duncan, Vera-Llonch, Montserrat, Khella, Sami, and Karam, Chafic
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TRANSTHYRETIN ,POLYNEUROPATHIES ,CLINICAL trials ,AMYLOIDOSIS ,MUSCLE weakness - Abstract
Background: Patients with hereditary transthyretin amyloidosis (ATTRv) frequently experience symptoms of polyneuropathy (PN) that worsen over time and impair daily functioning. Previous analyses supported efficacy of inotersen, an antisense oligonucleotide, to slow neuropathic progression in patients with ATTRv-PN, as indicated by larger mean changes, relative to placebo, in total score and several subscales of the Neuropathy Impairment Score (NIS), and for the subset of NIS items specific to lower limbs (NIS-LL) for the overall study sample. A key objective of the current study was to evaluate efficacy of inotersen for slowing neuropathic progression in NIS/NIS-LL within key clinical subgroups of patients with ATTRv-PN. Additionally, for this study, responder definition (RD) thresholds were estimated for NIS/NIS-LL total and subscale scores, for the purpose of evaluating clinically meaningful benefit of inotersen at the individual patient-level. Methods: Post hoc analyses used data from the NEURO-TTR phase 3 trial of inotersen in patients with ATTRv-PN (NCT01737398). Treatment differences in mean changes on NIS/NIS-LL total and subscale scores from baseline to week 65 were examined within patient subgroups defined by clinical characteristics. Anchor- and distribution-based approaches estimated RDs for NIS/NIS-LL scores, with responders defined as patients who did not experience clinically meaningful neuropathic progression. Responder analyses compared the proportion of patients classified as responders for each NIS/NIS-LL score between treatment arms. Results: Within each patient subgroup, mean increases in NIS/NIS-LL total and muscle weakness subscales were significantly smaller after 65 weeks of treatment with inotersen compared to placebo. Similar patterns were observed for some, but not all, subgroups on NIS/NIS-LL reflex subscale scores. Recommended RDs were 8.1 points for NIS total and 4.7 points for NIS-LL total. Patients receiving inotersen for 65 weeks were significantly less likely than those receiving placebo to exhibit clinically meaningful increases on NIS/NIS-LL total, muscle weakness, and sensation subscales. Conclusions: This study supports previous evidence for efficacy of inotersen in this patient population and provides interpretation guidelines for clinically meaningful changes in NIS/NIS-LL scores. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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8. Vision Loss as a Presenting Feature of Chronic Inflammatory Demyelinating Polyneuropathy: A Case Series.
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Kruszewski, Adam M., Tauqeer, Zujaja, Meer, Elana A., Bautista, Sana Ali, Cherayil, Neena R., Cimino, Marcus E., Khella, Sami L., Lancaster, Eric, Bird, Shawn J., Scherer, Steven S., Revere, Karen E., Hamedani, Ali G., Liu, Grant T., and Tamhankar, Madhura A.
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- 2023
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9. Characteristics of Patients with Hereditary Transthyretin Amyloidosis-Polyneuropathy (ATTRv-PN) in NEURO-TTRansform, an Open-label Phase 3 Study of Eplontersen.
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Coelho, Teresa, Waddington Cruz, Márcia, Chao, Chi-Chao, Parman, Yeşim, Wixner, Jonas, Weiler, Markus, Barroso, Fabio A., Dasgupta, Noel R., Jung, Shiangtung W., Schneider, Eugene, Viney, Nicholas J., Dyck, P. James B., Ando, Yukio, Gillmore, Julian D., Khella, Sami, Gertz, Morie A., Obici, Laura, and Berk, John L.
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TRANSTHYRETIN ,ORGANS (Anatomy) ,PERIPHERAL nervous system ,POLYNEUROPATHIES ,LIVER transplantation ,AMYLOIDOSIS - Abstract
Introduction: Hereditary transthyretin (ATTRv) amyloidosis is a rare, severe, progressive, debilitating, and ultimately fatal disease caused by systemic deposition of transthyretin (TTR) amyloid fibrils. ATTRv amyloidosis occurs in both males and females. Eplontersen (ION-682884), a ligand-conjugated antisense oligonucleotide designed to degrade hepatic TTR mRNA, is being evaluated for the treatment of ATTRv amyloidosis with polyneuropathy (ATTRv-PN) in the phase 3, international, multicenter, open-label NEURO-TTRansform study (NCT04136184). To describe the study population of this pivotal trial, here we report the baseline characteristics of patients enrolled in the NEURO-TTRansform study. Methods: Patients eligible for NEURO-TTRansform were 18–82 years old with a diagnosis of ATTRv-PN and Coutinho stage 1 (ambulatory without assistance) or stage 2 (ambulatory with assistance) disease; documented TTR gene variant; signs and symptoms consistent with neuropathy associated with ATTRv; no prior liver transplant; and New York Heart Association (NYHA) functional class I or II. Results: The NEURO-TTRansform study enrolled 168 patients across 15 countries/territories (North America, 15.5%; Europe, 38.1%; South America/Australia/Asia, 46.4%). At baseline, the study cohort had a mean age of 52.8 years, 69.0% of patients were male, and 78.0% of patients were White. The V30M variant was most prevalent (60.1% of patients), and prevalence varied by region. Overall, 56.5% and 17.3% of patients had received previous treatment with tafamidis or diflunisal, respectively. A majority of patients (79.2%) had Coutinho stage 1 disease (unimpaired ambulation) and early (before age 50) disease onset (53.0%). Time from diagnosis to enrollment was 46.6 (57.4) months (mean [standard deviation]). Most patients had a baseline polyneuropathy disability (PND) score of I (40.5%) or II (41.1%), and the mean modified Neuropathy Impairment Score + 7 (mNIS + 7) was 79.0. Conclusion: The recruited population in the ongoing NEURO-TTRansform study has global representation characteristic of contemporary clinical practice. Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov identifier NCT04136184. Plain Language Summary: Hereditary transthyretin amyloidosis, also called ATTRv amyloidosis, is a rare and serious disease that is passed down within families. People with ATTRv amyloidosis have a genetic variant that causes their liver to make abnormal versions of the transthyretin protein (also known as "TTR"), which clump together into "clusters" called amyloids. The amyloid clusters build up in various body tissues and organs such as the liver, nerves, heart, and kidney, causing damage that could ultimately lead to death. ATTRv amyloidosis is a progressive disease, meaning that it gets worse over time. Liver transplant has traditionally been the only treatment option. Recently, drugs that target TTR have been approved by the FDA, and potential drugs are being tested in clinical trials. Eplontersen is designed to degrade TTR mRNA in the liver and inhibit the production of TTR protein. NEURO-TTRansform is a global phase 3 study investigating the effectiveness and safety of eplontersen in 168 adults with ATTRv amyloidosis with polyneuropathy (ATTRv-PN), a disease in which amyloid accumulation in peripheral nerves causes multisystem damage and eventually death. This scientific article describes the characteristics of the patients at enrollment, including age, gender, geographic location, and disease-related information, to help improve the understanding of ATTRv-PN. NEURO-TTRansform is an ongoing study, and the results will be published at a later time as prespecified in the analysis plan. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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10. Author Correction: Precision targeting of autoantigen-specific B cells in muscle-specific tyrosine kinase myasthenia gravis with chimeric autoantibody receptor T cells.
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Oh, Sangwook, Mao, Xuming, Manfredo-Vieira, Silvio, Lee, Jinmin, Patel, Darshil, Choi, Eun Jung, Alvarado, Andrea, Cottman-Thomas, Ebony, Maseda, Damian, Tsao, Patricia Y., Ellebrecht, Christoph T., Khella, Sami L., Richman, David P., O'Connor, Kevin C., Herzberg, Uri, Binder, Gwendolyn K., Milone, Michael C., Basu, Samik, and Payne, Aimee S.
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- 2024
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11. Screening for ATTR amyloidosis in the clinic: overlapping disorders, misdiagnosis, and multiorgan awareness.
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Nativi-Nicolau, Jose N., Karam, Chafic, Khella, Sami, and Maurer, Mathew S.
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CARDIAC amyloidosis ,CARDIAC pacemakers ,CARDIAC pacing ,AMYLOIDOSIS ,MEDICAL screening ,CARPAL tunnel syndrome ,SPINAL stenosis ,SINOATRIAL node - Abstract
Amyloid transthyretin (ATTR) amyloidosis is a clinically heterogeneous and fatal disease that results from deposition of insoluble amyloid fibrils in various organs and tissues, causing progressive loss of function. The objective of this review is to increase awareness and diagnosis of ATTR amyloidosis by improving recognition of its overlapping conditions, misdiagnosis, and multiorgan presentation. Cardiac manifestations include heart failure, atrial fibrillation, intolerance to previously prescribed antihypertensives, sinus node dysfunction, and atrioventricular block, resulting in the need for permanent pacing. Neurologic manifestations include progressive sensorimotor neuropathy (e.g., pain, weakness) and autonomic dysfunction (e.g., erectile dysfunction, chronic diarrhea, orthostatic hypotension). Non-cardiac red flags often precede the diagnosis of ATTR amyloidosis and include musculoskeletal manifestations (e.g., carpal tunnel syndrome, lumbar spinal stenosis, spontaneous rupture of the distal tendon biceps, shoulder and knee surgery). Awareness and recognition of the constellation of symptoms, including cardiac, neurologic, and musculoskeletal manifestations, will help with early diagnosis of ATTR amyloidosis and faster access to therapies, thereby slowing the progression of this debilitating disease. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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12. Early Data on Long-term Impact of Inotersen on Quality-of-Life in Patients with Hereditary Transthyretin Amyloidosis Polyneuropathy: Open-Label Extension of NEURO-TTR.
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Yarlas, Aaron, Lovley, Andrew, McCausland, Kristen, Brown, Duncan, Vera-Llonch, Montserrat, Conceição, Isabel, Karam, Chafic, Khella, Sami, Obici, Laura, and Waddington-Cruz, Márcia
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CARDIAC amyloidosis ,POLYNEUROPATHIES ,QUALITY of life ,TRANSTHYRETIN ,AMYLOIDOSIS ,RARE diseases - Abstract
Introduction: Patients with hereditary transthyretin amyloidosis associated with polyneuropathy (ATTRv-PN) experience deterioration in health-related quality of life (HRQOL) as the disease progresses. Findings from the randomized placebo-controlled phase III NEURO-TTR study showed treatment benefit of inotersen, an antisense oligonucleotide, for preserving or improving HRQOL after 65 weeks of treatment. The current analysis examines longitudinal trends in specific aspects of HRQOL, including polyneuropathy symptoms, daily activities, and physical, role, and social functioning in patients with ATTRv-PN receiving long-term treatment in a follow-up open-label extension (OLE) study. Methods: One-hundred thirty-five patients with ATTRv-PN were enrolled in an ongoing 5-year OLE study following completion of NEURO-TTR. Eighty-five patients received continuous weekly treatment with inotersen in both studies (inotersen-inotersen group), while 50 patients switched from placebo to inotersen at OLE study baseline (placebo-inotersen group). Descriptive analyses of changes in domain scores and item responses through week 104 of the OLE study were conducted for measures of neuropathy-related and generic HRQOL: Norfolk QOL-Diabetic Neuropathy (DN) questionnaire and SF-36v2® Health Survey (SF-36v2), respectively. Results: For both inotersen-inotersen and placebo-inotersen groups, all Norfolk QOL-DN and most SF-36v2 domain scores remained stable from OLE baseline through week 104. Differences in HRQOL between the two groups at OLE baseline were sustained through week 104. Analysis of item responses from NEURO-TTR baseline to OLE study week 104 (170 weeks) for the inotersen-inotersen group found no notable increases in the proportion of patients reporting substantial impairments across a wide variety of symptoms, daily activities, and functioning. Conclusion: Long-term treatment with inotersen preserved HRQOL for patients with ATTRv-PN for periods of up to 3 years. The gap in HRQOL between those who had previously received inotersen or placebo in NEURO-TTR did not close by week 104 of the OLE phase, indicating the importance of early treatment for maintaining HRQOL in these patients. Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifiers NCT01737398 for NEURO-TTR study; NCT02175004 for OLE study Infographic: Plain Language Summary: Hereditary transthyretin amyloidosis with polyneuropathy is a rare disease that causes damage to nerves in the limbs, leading to pain, numbness, loss of sensitivity, and muscle weakness, with eventual loss of the ability to walk (i.e., patients require a wheelchair or are bedridden). As the disease progresses, patients' quality of life, including their ability to engage in everyday activities, socialize with others, work, and live independently, continually worsens. In a recent clinical trial (the NEURO-TTR study), patients with this disease randomized to receive the drug inotersen for 66 weeks maintained their quality of life, while patients randomized to receive a placebo showed continued worsening. All patients completing the NEURO-TTR study could participate in an extension study during which all patients knowingly received inotersen for up to 5 years. We examined quality of life in patients through the first 2 years of this extension study. For all patients, regardless of previous treatment (inotersen or placebo), most aspects of quality of life did not change throughout the 2-year extension study, showing that inotersen can preserve quality of life of these patients for up to 2–3 years. However, while quality of life in patients who had received placebo in the NEURO-TTR study did not get worse during the extension study, it also did not improve to match that of patients who received inotersen during the NEURO-TTR study. This finding shows the importance of treating these patients with inotersen as early as possible to preserve their quality of life before it substantially deteriorates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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13. Design and Rationale of the Global Phase 3 NEURO-TTRansform Study of Antisense Oligonucleotide AKCEA-TTR-LRx (ION-682884-CS3) in Hereditary Transthyretin-Mediated Amyloid Polyneuropathy.
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Coelho, Teresa, Ando, Yukio, Benson, Merrill D., Berk, John L., Waddington-Cruz, Márcia, Dyck, Peter J., Gillmore, Julian D., Khella, Sami L., Litchy, William J., Obici, Laura, Monteiro, Cecilia, Tai, Li-Jung, Viney, Nicholas J., Buchele, Gustavo, Brambatti, Michela, Jung, Shiangtung W., St. L. O'Dea, Louis, Tsimikas, Sotirios, Schneider, Eugene, and Geary, Richard S.
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POLYNEUROPATHIES ,CEREBRAL amyloid angiopathy ,AMYLOID ,CARDIAC amyloidosis ,BLOOD proteins ,NUCLEOTIDE sequence ,QUALITY of life - Abstract
Introduction: AKCEA-TTR-L
Rx is a ligand-conjugated antisense (LICA) drug in development for the treatment of hereditary transthyretin amyloidosis (hATTR), a fatal disease caused by mutations in the transthyretin (TTR) gene. AKCEA-TTR-LRx shares the same nucleotide sequence as inotersen, an antisense medicine approved for use in hATTR polyneuropathy (hATTR-PN). Unlike inotersen, AKCEA-TTR-LRx is conjugated to a triantennary N-acetylgalactosamine moiety that supports receptor-mediated uptake by hepatocytes, the primary source of circulating TTR. This advanced design increases drug potency to allow for lower and less frequent dosing. The NEURO-TTRansform study will investigate whether AKCEA-TTR-LRx is safe and efficacious, with the aim of improving neurologic function and quality of life in hATTR-PN patients. Methods/Design: Approximately 140 adults with stage 1 (independent ambulation) or 2 (requires ambulatory support) hATTR-PN are anticipated to enroll in this multicenter, open-label, randomized, phase 3 study. Patients will be assigned 6:1 to AKCEA-TTR-LRx 45 mg subcutaneously every 4 weeks or inotersen 300 mg once weekly until the prespecified week 35 interim efficacy analysis, after which patients receiving inotersen will receive AKCEA-TTR-LRx 45 mg subcutaneously every 4 weeks. All patients will then receive AKCEA-TTR-LRx through the remainder of the study treatment period. The final efficacy analysis at week 66 will compare the AKCEA-TTR-LRx arm with the historical placebo arm from the phase 3 trial of inotersen (NEURO-TTR). The primary outcome measures are between-group differences in the change from baseline in serum TTR, modified Neuropathy Impairment Score + 7, and Norfolk Quality of Life—Diabetic Neuropathy questionnaire. Conclusion: NEURO-TTRansform is designed to determine whether targeted delivery of AKCEA-TTR-LRx to hepatocytes with lower and less frequent doses will translate into clinical and quality-of-life benefits for patients with hATTR-PN. Trial Registration: The study is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT04136184) and EudraCT (2019-001698-10). Plain Language Summary: Hereditary transthyretin amyloidosis with peripheral neuropathy (hATTR-PN for short) is a rare inherited condition. In hATTR-PN, a protein called transthyretin (TTR for short) builds up and damages nerves throughout the body. This neuropathy causes symptoms such as weakness, loss of sensation, and pain. Currently available medicines can slow disease progression, but researchers are looking for more effective treatments with fewer side effects. AKCEA-TTR-LRx is an investigational treatment for hATTR-PN. AKCEA-TTR-LRx prevents the liver from making TTR, reducing the amount that causes disease progression. It is similar to an existing treatment called inotersen, but designed for better delivery to the liver and is more potent. This article describes the NEURO-TTRansform study that will evaluate how effective AKCEA-TTR-LRx is for treating hATTR-PN. Around 140 adults with hATTR-PN from the USA, Canada, and Europe will be able to take part in this study. The study treatment period will be 85 weeks long. People will receive injections underneath the skin of either: AKCEA-TTR-LRx every 4 weeks, or Inotersen once a week for 35 weeks, followed by a switch to AKCEA-TTR-LRx every 4 weeks. People may continue to receive AKCEA-TTR-LRx after the study treatment period ends. In this study, researchers will compare results from people who received AKCEA-TTR-LRx to results from people who received no active ingredients (called placebo) in a similar study (called NEURO-TTR). Researchers will measure the differences in peoples': Neuropathy symptoms. Quality of life. TTR protein levels in the blood. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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14. ATTR amyloidosis during the COVID-19 pandemic: insights from a global medical roundtable.
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Brannagan III, Thomas H., Auer-Grumbach, Michaela, Berk, John L., Briani, Chiara, Bril, Vera, Coelho, Teresa, Damy, Thibaud, Dispenzieri, Angela, Drachman, Brian M., Fine, Nowell, Gaggin, Hanna K., Gertz, Morie, Gillmore, Julian D., Gonzalez, Esther, Hanna, Mazen, Hurwitz, David R., Khella, Sami L., Maurer, Mathew S., Nativi-Nicolau, Jose, and Olugemo, Kemi
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COVID-19 pandemic ,COVID-19 ,AMYLOIDOSIS ,SARS-CoV-2 - Abstract
Background: The global spread of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection causing the ongoing coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has raised serious concern for patients with chronic disease. A correlation has been identified between the severity of COVID-19 and a patient's preexisting comorbidities. Although COVID-19 primarily involves the respiratory system, dysfunction in multiple organ systems is common, particularly in the cardiovascular, gastrointestinal, immune, renal, and nervous systems. Patients with amyloid transthyretin (ATTR) amyloidosis represent a population particularly vulnerable to COVID-19 morbidity due to the multisystem nature of ATTR amyloidosis.Main Body: ATTR amyloidosis is a clinically heterogeneous progressive disease, resulting from the accumulation of amyloid fibrils in various organs and tissues. Amyloid deposition causes multisystem clinical manifestations, including cardiomyopathy and polyneuropathy, along with gastrointestinal symptoms and renal dysfunction. Given the potential for exacerbation of organ dysfunction, physicians note possible unique challenges in the management of patients with ATTR amyloidosis who develop multiorgan complications from COVID-19. While the interplay between COVID-19 and ATTR amyloidosis is still being evaluated, physicians should consider that the heightened susceptibility of patients with ATTR amyloidosis to multiorgan complications might increase their risk for poor outcomes with COVID-19.Conclusion: Patients with ATTR amyloidosis are suspected to have a higher risk of morbidity and mortality due to age and underlying ATTR amyloidosis-related organ dysfunction. While further research is needed to characterize this risk and management implications, ATTR amyloidosis patients might require specialized management if they develop COVID-19. The risks of delaying diagnosis or interrupting treatment for patients with ATTR amyloidosis should be balanced with the risk of exposure in the health care setting. Both physicians and patients must adapt to a new construct for care during and possibly after the pandemic to ensure optimal health for patients with ATTR amyloidosis, minimizing treatment interruptions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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15. Neuropathy symptom and change: Inotersen treatment of hereditary transthyretin amyloidosis.
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Dyck, P. James B., Coelho, Teresa, Waddington Cruz, Marcia, Brannagan, Thomas H., Khella, Sami, Karam, Chafic, Berk, John L., Polydefkis, Michael J., Kincaid, John C., Wiesman, Janice F., Litchy, William J., Mauermann, Michelle L., Ackermann, Elizabeth J., Baker, Brenda F., Jung, Shiangtung W., Guthrie, Spencer, Pollock, Michael, and Dyck, Peter J.
- Abstract
Introduction: Hereditary transthyretin‐mediated amyloidosis (hATTR) manifests as multisystem dysfunction, including progressive polyneuropathy. Inotersen, an antisense oligonucleotide, improved the course of neuropathic impairment in patients with hATTR in the pivotal NEURO‐TTR study (NCT01737398). To determine inotersen's impact on symptoms and patients' neuropathy experience, we performed a post hoc analysis of the Neuropathy Symptoms and Change (NSC) score. Methods: Stage 1 or 2 hATTR patients were randomized to receive weekly subcutaneous inotersen or placebo for 65 weeks. NSC score was assessed at baseline and 35 and 66 weeks. Results: At 66 weeks, inotersen‐treated patients had symptom stabilization as compared with worsening in patients receiving placebo, based on total NSC score. There were also improvements in the subdomains of muscle weakness, sensory, pain, and autonomic symptoms, and for various individual items. Discussion Inotersen treatment stabilized neuropathy symptoms, including autonomic symptoms, in patients with hATTR according to NSC score. Thus, the NSC may be an effective measure to assess neuropathy progression and patients' neuropathy experience in clinical practice. See article on pages 502–508 in this issue. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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16. Inotersen preserves or improves quality of life in hereditary transthyretin amyloidosis.
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Coelho, Teresa, Yarlas, Aaron, Waddington-Cruz, Marcia, White, Michelle K., Sikora Kessler, Asia, Lovley, Andrew, Pollock, Michael, Guthrie, Spencer, Ackermann, Elizabeth J., Hughes, Steven G., Karam, Chafic, Khella, Sami, Gertz, Morie, Merlini, Giampaolo, Obici, Laura, Schmidt, Hartmut H., Polydefkis, Michael, Dyck, P. James B., Brannagan III, Thomas H., and Conceição, Isabel
- Subjects
QUALITY of life ,CARDIAC amyloidosis ,AMYLOIDOSIS ,ACTIVITIES of daily living - Abstract
Objective: To examine the impact on quality of life (QOL) of patients with hATTR amyloidosis with polyneuropathy treated with inotersen (Tegsedi™) versus placebo. Methods: Data were from the NEURO-TTR trial (ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT01737398), a phase 3, multinational, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study of inotersen in patients with hATTR amyloidosis with polyneuropathy. At baseline and week 66, QOL measures—the Norfolk-QOL-Diabetic Neuropathy (DN) questionnaire and SF-36v2
® Health Survey (SF-36v2)—were assessed. Treatment differences in mean changes in QOL from baseline to week 66 were tested using mixed-effect models with repeated measures. Responder analyses compared the percentages of patients whose QOL meaningfully improved or worsened from baseline to week 66 in inotersen and placebo arms. Descriptive analysis of item responses examined treatment differences in specific activities and functions at week 66. Results: Statistically significant mean differences between treatment arms were observed for three of five Norfolk-QOL-DN domains and five of eight SF-36v2 domains, with better outcomes for inotersen than placebo in physical functioning, activities of daily living, neuropathic symptoms, pain, role limitations due to health problems, and social functioning. A larger percentage of patients in the inotersen arm than the placebo arm showed preservation or improvement in Norfolk-QOL-DN and SF-36v2 scores from baseline to week 66. Responses at week 66 showed more substantial problems with daily activities and functioning for patients in the placebo arm than in the inotersen arm. Conclusion: Patients with hATTR amyloidosis with polyneuropathy treated with inotersen showed preserved or improved QOL at 66 weeks compared to those who received placebo. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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17. Inotersen for the treatment of adults with polyneuropathy caused by hereditary transthyretin-mediated amyloidosis.
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Gertz, Morie A., Scheinberg, Morton, Waddington-Cruz, Márcia, Heitner, Stephen B., Karam, Chafic, Drachman, Brian, Khella, Sami, Whelan, Carol, and Obici, Laura
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CARDIAC amyloidosis ,THERAPEUTICS ,OLIGONUCLEOTIDES ,AMYLOIDOSIS ,ADULTS ,BIOCHEMICAL mechanism of action ,ENGLISH language - Abstract
Introduction: Hereditary transthyretin-mediated amyloidosis (ATTRv; v for variant) is an underdiagnosed, progressive, and fatal multisystemic disease with a heterogenous clinical phenotype that is caused by TTR gene mutations that destabilize the TTR protein, resulting in its misfolding, aggregation, and deposition in tissues throughout the body. Areas covered: Inotersen, an antisense oligonucleotide inhibitor, was recently approved in the United States and Europe for the treatment of the polyneuropathy of ATTRv based on the positive results obtained in the pivotal phase 3 trial, NEURO-TTR. This review will discuss the mechanism of action of inotersen and its pharmacology, clinical efficacy, and safety and tolerability. A PubMed search using the terms 'inotersen,' 'AG10,' 'antisense oligonucleotide,' 'hereditary transthyretin amyloidosis,' 'familial amyloid polyneuropathy,' and 'familial amyloid cardiomyopathy' was performed, and the results were screened for the most relevant English language publications. The bibliographies of all retrieved articles were manually searched to identify additional studies of relevance. Expert opinion: Inotersen targets the disease-forming protein, TTR, and has been shown to improve quality of life and neuropathy progression in patients with stage 1 or 2 ATTRv with polyneuropathy. Inotersen is well tolerated, with a manageable safety profile through regular monitoring for the development of glomerulonephritis or thrombocytopenia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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18. Assessing mNIS+7Ionis and international neurologists' proficiency in a familial amyloidotic polyneuropathy trial.
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Dyck, Peter J., Kincaid, John C., Dyck, P. James B., Chaudhry, Vinay, Goyal, Namita A., Alves, Christina, Salhi, Hayet, Wiesman, Janice F., Labeyrie, Celine, Robinson‐Papp, Jessica, Cardoso, Márcio, Laura, Matilde, Ruzhansky, Katherine, Cortese, Andrea, Brannagan, Thomas H., Khoury, Julie, Khella, Sami, Waddington‐Cruz, Márcia, Ferreira, João, and Wang, Annabel K.
- Abstract
Introduction: Polyneuropathy signs (Neuropathy Impairment Score, NIS), neurophysiologic tests (m+7Ionis ), disability, and health scores were assessed in baseline evaluations of 100 patients entered into an oligonucleotide familial amyloidotic polyneuropathy (FAP) trial.Methods: We assessed: (1) Proficiency of grading neurologic signs and correlation with neurophysiologic tests, and (2) clinometric performance of modified NIS+7 neurophysiologic tests (mNIS+7Ionis ) and its subscores and correlation with disability and health scores.Results: The mNIS+7Ionis sensitively detected, characterized, and broadly scaled diverse polyneuropathy impairments. Polyneuropathy signs (NIS and subscores) correlated with neurophysiology tests, disability, and health scores. Smart Somatotopic Quantitative Sensation Testing of heat as pain 5 provided a needed measure of small fiber involvement not adequately assessed by other tests.Conclusions: Specially trained neurologists accurately assessed neuropathy signs as compared to referenced neurophysiologic tests. The score, mNIS+7Ionis , broadly detected, characterized, and scaled polyneuropathy abnormality in FAP, which correlated with disability and health scores. Muscle Nerve 56: 901-911, 2017. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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19. Clinical Experience With Efgartigimod in Generalized Myasthenia Gravis: Results From a Case Series of US-Based Patients Participating in an Expanded Access Program.
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Khella, Sami, Kuntz, Nancy, Ostrovskiy, Denis, Gelinas, Deborah, Rahman, Omar, and Mahuwala, Zabeen
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- 2022
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20. Hepatitis C: A Review of its Neurologic Complications.
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Khella, Sami L. and Souayah, Nizar
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- 2002
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21. Intracranial Hypotension Following Chiropractic Spinal Manipulation.
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Prasad, Sashank, El-Haddad, Ghassan, Zhuang, Hongming, and Khella, Sami
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HYPOTENSION ,SPINAL adjustment ,CRANIAL manipulation ,CEREBROSPINAL fluid ,MYELOGRAPHY ,SPINAL cord ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging - Abstract
We report a case of intracranial hypotension caused by chiropractic manipulation which, in contrast to previously reported cases, documents the location of the cerebrospinal fluid leak by radionuclide cisternography. Cervical spinal manipulation produced a remote lumbar dural tear in our patient. Spinal magnetic resonance imaging may falsely localize the dural tear in this condition. Although conservative management is often sufficient, precise localization is required for more invasive therapies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
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22. Unmasking and exacerbation of myasthenia gravis by ophthalmic solutions: betoxolol, tobramycin, and dexamethasone. A case report.
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Khella, Sami L., Kozart, David, Khella, S L, and Kozart, D
- Published
- 1997
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23. Dropped head syndrome.
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Khella, Sami and Frederic, Myron
- Published
- 1993
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