1. Effect of EPI-743 on the clinical course of the mitochondrial disease Leber hereditary optic neuropathy.
- Author
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Sadun AA, Chicani CF, Ross-Cisneros FN, Barboni P, Thoolen M, Shrader WD, Kubis K, Carelli V, and Miller G
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Blindness etiology, Blindness prevention & control, Child, Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid, Color Vision, Drug Approval, Emergency Medical Services, Eye pathology, Female, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Middle Aged, Mitochondrial Diseases complications, Optic Atrophy, Hereditary, Leber genetics, Retina pathology, Tandem Mass Spectrometry, Tomography, Optical Coherence, Ubiquinone adverse effects, Ubiquinone pharmacokinetics, Ubiquinone therapeutic use, United States, United States Food and Drug Administration, Visual Acuity, Visual Field Tests, Young Adult, Optic Atrophy, Hereditary, Leber drug therapy, Ubiquinone analogs & derivatives
- Abstract
Objective: To evaluate the safety and efficacy of a new therapeutic agent, EPI-743, in Leber hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON) using standard clinical, anatomic, and functional visual outcome measures., Design: Open-label clinical trial., Setting: University medical center. Patients Five patients with genetically confirmed LHON with acute loss of vision were consecutively enrolled and treated with the experimental therapeutic agent EPI-743 within 90 days of conversion. Intervention During the course of the study, 5 consecutive patients received EPI-743, by mouth, 3 times daily (100-400 mg per dose)., Main Outcome Measures: Treatment effect was assessed by serial measurements of anatomic and functional visual indices over 6 to 18 months, including Snellen visual acuity, retinal nerve fiber layer thickness measured by optical coherence tomography, Humphrey visual fields (mean decibels and area with 1-log unit depression), and color vision. Treatment effect in this clinical proof of principle study was assessed by comparison of the prospective open-label treatment group with historical controls., Results: Of 5 subjects treated with EPI-743, 4 demonstrated arrest of disease progression and reversal of visual loss. Two patients exhibited a total recovery of visual acuity. No drug-related adverse events were recorded., Conclusions: In a small open-label trial, EPI-743 arrested disease progression and reversed vision loss in all but 1 of the 5 consecutively treated patients with LHON. Given the known natural history of acute and rapid progression of LHON resulting in chronic and persistent bilateral blindness, these data suggest that the previously described irreversible priming to retinal ganglion cell loss may be reversed.
- Published
- 2012
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