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Duvoglustat HCl Increases Systemic and Tissue Exposure of Active Acid α-Glucosidase in Pompe Patients Co-administered with Alglucosidase α

Authors :
Sheela Sitaraman
Todd Levine
Carrolee Barlow
Mark Roberts
Barry J. Byrne
Tahseen Mozaffar
Priya S. Kishnani
Pascal Laforêt
Richie Khanna
Jessie Feng
Mark A. Tarnopolsky
David J. Lockhart
Majed Dasouki
Matthews Adera
Ozlem Goker-Alpan
Franklin K. Johnson
Mazen M. Dimachkie
K. Sivakumar
Pol Boudes
Kenneth J. Valenzano
Erika Finanger
Muhammad Ali Pervaiz
K. Guter
Elfrida R. Benjamin
John J. Flanagan
Richard Lazauskas
Jay A. Barth
Source :
Molecular Therapy, Kishnani, P; Tarnopolsky, M; Roberts, M; Sivakumar, K; Dasouki, M; Dimachkie, MM; et al.(2017). Duvoglustat HCl Increases Systemic and Tissue Exposure of Active Acid α-Glucosidase in Pompe Patients Co-administered with Alglucosidase α. Molecular Therapy, 25(5), 1199-1208. doi: 10.1016/j.ymthe.2017.02.017. UC Irvine: Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/7kd7w6h0
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2017.

Abstract

Duvoglustat HCl (AT2220, 1-deoxynojirimycin) is an investigational pharmacological chaperone for the treatment of acid α-glucosidase (GAA) deficiency, which leads to the lysosomal storage disorder Pompe disease, which is characterized by progressive accumulation of lysosomal glycogen primarily in heart and skeletal muscles. The current standard of care is enzyme replacement therapy with recombinant human GAA (alglucosidase alfa [AA], Genzyme). Based on preclinical data, oral co-administration of duvoglustat HCl with AA increases exposure of active levels in plasma and skeletal muscles, leading to greater substrate reduction in muscle. This phase 2a study consisted of an open-label, fixed-treatment sequence that evaluated the effect of single oral doses of 50 mg, 100 mg, 250 mg, or 600 mg duvoglustat HCl on the pharmacokinetics and tissue levels of intravenously infused AA (20 mg/kg) in Pompe patients. AA alone resulted in increases in total GAA activity and protein in plasma compared to baseline. Following co-administration with duvoglustat HCl, total GAA activity and protein in plasma were further increased 1.2- to 2.8-fold compared to AA alone in all 25 Pompe patients; importantly, muscle GAA activity was increased for all co-administration treatments from day 3 biopsy specimens. No duvoglustat-related adverse events or drug-related tolerability issues were identified.<br />Pharmacological chaperones stabilize enzyme replacement in circulation, providing increased uptake of properly folded enzyme into tissues. In a phase 2a study, Kishnani et al. demonstrate a 2-fold increase in plasma and increased uptake in muscle of active recombinant human GAA following co-administration with duvoglustat HCl in patients with late onset Pompe disease.

Details

ISSN :
15250016
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Molecular Therapy
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4614ccfa6b5327862ba825d37a016699
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ymthe.2017.02.017