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Safety and efficacy of leriglitazone for preventing disease progression in men with adrenomyeloneuropathy (ADVANCE): a randomised, double-blind, multi-centre, placebo-controlled phase 2?3 trial

Authors :
Wolfgang Köhler
Marc Engelen
Florian Eichler
Robin Lachmann
Ali Fatemi
Jacinda Sampson
Ettore Salsano
Josep Gamez
Maria Judit Molnar
Sílvia Pascual
Maria Rovira
Anna Vilà
Guillem Pina
Itziar Martín-Ugarte
Adriana Mantilla
Pilar Pizcueta
Laura Rodríguez-Pascau
Estefania Traver
Anna Vilalta
María Pascual
Marc Martinell
Uwe Meya
Fanny Mochel
Eavan Mc Govern
Elise Yazbeck
Magali Barbier
Marie-Pierre Luton
Françoise Pousset
Jean-Yves Hogrel
Isaac Adanyeguh
Florian Then Bergh
Caroline Bergner
Astrid Unterlauft
Hannes Roicke
Karl-Titus Hoffmann
Cordula Scherlach
Andrea Kalb
Bianca Meilick
Mandy Reuschel
Silvia Fenu
Elena Mauro
Elaine Murphy
Gauri Krishna
Tiggy Beyene
Alba Sierra
Sara Quiñoa
Anna Belen Canovas
Zoltan Grosz
Báthori Györgyi
S.I. van de Stadt
I.C. Huffnagel
W.J.C. van Ballegoij
M.M.C. Voermans
Reza Seyedsadjadi
Camille Corre
Neha Godbole
Natalie Rose Grant
Claudia Maria Brito Pires
Melissa Trovato
Nancy Yeh
Jordan Goodman
Jennifer Keller
Chris Joseph
Keith Van Haren
Sarada Sakamuri
Tina Duong
Lila Perrone
Stephanie Tran
Sally Dunaway Young
Syed Hashmi
Neurology
Paediatric Neurology
ANS - Cellular & Molecular Mechanisms
AGEM - Amsterdam Gastroenterology Endocrinology Metabolism
Paediatrics
Paediatric Pulmonology
Source :
The Lancet Neurology, 22(2), 127-136. Lancet Publishing Group
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Background: Adult patients with adrenoleukodystrophy have a poor prognosis owing to development of adrenomyeloneuropathy. Additionally, a large proportion of patients with adrenomyeloneuropathy develop life-threatening progressive cerebral adrenoleukodystrophy. Leriglitazone is a novel selective peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma agonist that regulates expression of key genes that contribute to neuroinflammatory and neurodegenerative processes implicated in adrenoleukodystrophy disease progression. We aimed to assess the effect of leriglitazone on clinical, imaging, and biochemical markers of disease progression in adults with adrenomyeloneuropathy. Methods: ADVANCE was a 96-week, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, phase 2–3 trial done at ten hospitals in France, Germany, Hungary, Italy, the Netherlands, Spain, the UK, and the USA. Ambulatory men aged 18–65 years with adrenomyeloneuropathy without gadolinium enhancing lesions suggestive of progressive cerebral adrenoleukodystrophy were randomly assigned (2:1 without stratification) to receive daily oral suspensions of leriglitazone (150 mg starting dose; between baseline and week 12, doses were increased or decreased to achieve plasma concentrations of 200 μg·h/mL [SD 20%]) or placebo by means of an interactive response system and a computer-generated sequence. Investigators and patients were masked to group assignment. The primary efficacy endpoint was change from baseline in the Six-Minute Walk Test distance at week 96, analysed in the full-analysis set by means of a mixed model for repeated measures with restricted maximum likelihood and baseline value as a covariate. Adverse events were also assessed in the full-analysis set. This study was registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT03231878; the primary study is complete; patients had the option to continue treatment in an open-label extension, which is ongoing. Findings: Between Dec 8, 2017, and Oct 16, 2018, of 136 patients screened, 116 were randomly assigned; 62 [81%] of 77 patients receiving leriglitazone and 34 [87%] of 39 receiving placebo completed treatment. There was no between-group difference in the primary endpoint (mean [SD] change from baseline leriglitazone: –27·7 [41·4] m; placebo: –30·3 [60·5] m; least-squares mean difference –1·2 m; 95% CI –22·6 to 20·2; p=0·91). The most common treatment emergent adverse events in both the leriglitazone and placebo groups were weight gain (54 [70%] of 77 vs nine [23%] of 39 patients, respectively) and peripheral oedema (49 [64%] of 77 vs seven [18%] of 39). There were no deaths. Serious treatment-emergent adverse events occurred in 14 (18%) of 77 patients receiving leriglitazone and ten (26%) of 39 patients receiving placebo. The most common serious treatment emergent adverse event, clinically progressive cerebral adrenoleukodystrophy, occurred in six [5%] of 116 patients, all of whom were in the placebo group. Interpretation: The primary endpoint was not met, but leriglitazone was generally well tolerated and rates of adverse events were in line with the expected safety profile for this drug class. The finding that cerebral adrenoleukodystrophy, a life-threatening event for patients with adrenomyeloneuropathy, occurred only in patients in the placebo group supports further investigation of whether leriglitazone might slow the progression of cerebral adrenoleukodystrophy. Funding: Minoryx Therapeutics.

Subjects

Subjects :
Neurology (clinical)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14744422
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Lancet Neurology, 22(2), 127-136. Lancet Publishing Group
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5eb8695c85f230bdb0e4f78481480d58