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Safety, tolerability, and efficacy of PBT2 in Huntington's disease: a phase 2, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial

Authors :
Martha Nance
Izelle Labuschagne
Karen Marder
C. Herd
Mays A. El-Dairi
Scott R. Evans
A. Daley
Henry Moore
Phyllis Chua
Jody Corey-Bloom
S. Targum
Patrick Mitchell
Jody Goldstein
David Ames
Rajeev Ananda Kumar
H. Mack
Eric Molho
S. Wray
Susan R. Criswell
Carlos Singer
Ronda Clouse
Anita M.Y. Goh
Karen Anderson
Andrew Feigin
David Oakes
Jane Griffith
Peter K. Panegyres
Carr J. Vaughan
Alessandro Iannaccone
Andrew Churchyard
Leah Levi
Craig W. Ritchie
Russell L. Margolis
D. L. Lim
Nadine Yoritomo
Barbara J. Jennings
Cameron Stone
Vicki Sergo
Constance Orme
Sarah Janicki
D. Angus
K. Helles
H. D. Rosas
Ralf Reilmann
Carolyn M. Drazinic
Arthur Watts
B. Hennig
Shea Gluhm
Sharon Fekrat
Sandra K. Kostyk
Earl Ray Dorsey
M. Moscovitch-Lopatin
Mark S. LeDoux
S. Gao
R. Ranzi
N. Padron
Elise Kayson
Shannon Guyot
K. Baker
Pinky Agarwal
Clement T. Loy
Marguerite Wieler
Steven M. Hersch
Cindy Casaceli
M. Murathodizic
Julie C. Stout
Blair R. Leavitt
D. Germaine
Source :
The Lancet. Neurology. 14(1)
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Background: PBT2 is a metal protein-attenuating compound that might reduce metal-induced aggregation of mutant huntingtin and has prolonged survival in a mouse model of Huntington's disease. We aimed to assess the safety, tolerability, and efficacy of PBT2 in patients with Huntington's disease. Methods: In this 26-week, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial, adults ( ≥ 25 years old ) with early-stage to mid-stage Huntington's disease were randomly assigned ( 1:1:1 ) by a centralised interactive response system to once daily PBT2 250 mg, PBT2 100 mg, or placebo. Randomisation was stratified by site with a block size of three. Participants, carers, the steering committee, site investigators, study staff, and the study sponsor were masked to treatment assignment. Primary endpoints were safety and tolerability. The safety population consisted of all participants who were randomly assigned and had at least one dose of study drug. The principal secondary endpoint was cognition, measured by the change from baseline to week 26 in the main composite Z score of five cognitive tests ( Category Fluency Test, Trail Making Test Part B, Map Search, Symbol Digit Modalities Test, and Stroop Word Reading Test ) and scores on eight individual cognitive tests ( the five aforementioned plus the Trail Making Test Part A, Montreal Cognitive Assessment, and the Speeded Tapping Test ). The intention-to-treat population comprised participants who were randomly assigned and had at least one efficacy assessment after administration of study drug. This trial is registered with [http://clinicaltrials.gov/] ClinicalTrials.gov, [http://clinicaltrials.gov/show/NCT01590888] NCT01590888. Findings: Between April 18, 2012, and Dec 14, 2012, 109 participants were randomly assigned to PBT2 250 mg ( n=36 ), PBT2 100 mg ( n=38 ), or placebo ( n=35 ) at 19 research centres in Australia and the USA. 32 ( 89% ) individuals on PBT2 250 mg, 38 ( 100% ) on PBT2 100 mg, and 34 ( 97% ) on placebo completed the study. Six serious adverse events ( acute coronary syndrome, major depression, pneumonia, suicide attempt, viral infection, and worsening of Huntington's disease ) occurred in five participants in the PBT2 250 mg group, three ( fall with subdural haematoma, suicide attempt, and hospital admission for stabilisation of Huntington's disease ) occurred in two participants in the PBT2 100 mg group, and one ( increasing aggression ) occurred in a participant in the placebo group. The site investigators deemed all, except the worsening of Huntington's disease, as unrelated to study drug. 32 ( 89% ) participants on PBT2 250 mg, 30 ( 79% ) on PBT2 100 mg, and 28 ( 80% ) on placebo had at least one adverse event. Compared with placebo, neither PBT2 100 mg ( least-squares mean 0·02, 95% CI −0·10 to 0·14; p=0·772 ) nor PBT2 250 mg ( 0·07, −0·05 to 0·20; p=0·240 ) significantly improved the main composite cognition Zscore between baseline and 26 weeks. Compared with placebo, the Trail Making Test Part B score was improved between baseline and 26 weeks in the PBT2 250 mg group ( 17·65 s, 0·65–34·65; p=0·042 ) but not in the 100 mg group ( 0·79 s improvement, −15·75 to 17·32; p=0·925 ); neither dose significantly improved cognition on the other tests. Interpretation: PBT2 was generally safe and well tolerated in patients with Huntington's disease. The potential benefit on executive function will need to be confirmed in a larger study. Funding: Prana Biotechnology Limited.

Details

ISSN :
14744465
Volume :
14
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Lancet. Neurology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....061c6b2c50c34a60674732abb8ba1f5c