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Additional Safety and Exploratory Efficacy Data at 48 and 60 Months from Open-HART, an Open-Label Extension Study of Pridopidine in Huntington Disease

Authors :
Michael R. Hayden
Juha-Matti Savola
Igor D. Grachev
Victor Abler
Peggy Auinger
Spyridon Papapetropoulos
Karl Kieburtz
Munish Mehra
Michal Geva
Mark Forrest Gordon
Andrew McGarry
Sanjay Gandhi
Source :
Journal of Huntington's disease. 9(2)
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Background Open-HART was an open-label extension of HART, a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study of pridopidine in Huntington disease (HD). Previously, we reported safety and exploratory efficacy data after 36 months of treatment with pridopidine 45 mg twice daily. In the interim, emerging data suggests pridopidine may have neuroprotective effects mediated by sigma-1 receptor agonism. Objective To report additional safety and exploratory efficacy data for continued open-label use of 45 mg BID pridopidine at 48 and 60 months. Methods Patients in Open-HART were followed up to or greater than 60 months. Adverse events, concomitant medications, vital signs, laboratory values, and ECG data were monitored. Rates of decline in total functional capacity (TFC) and total motor score (TMS) over 60 months were evaluated in an exploratory analysis and compared between Open-HART and placebo recipients from the 2CARE trial. To account for missing data, sensitivity analyses were performed. Results Of the original Open-HART baseline cohort (N = 118), 40 remained in the study at 48 months and 33 at 60 months. Pridopidine remained safe and well tolerated over the 60-month interval. TFC and TMS at 48 and 60 months remained stable, showing less decline at these timepoints compared to historical placebo controls from the 2CARE trial. TFC differences at 48 and 60 months observed remained nominally significant after sensitivity analysis. Conclusion The 45 mg BID pridopidine dosage remained safe and tolerable over 60 months. Exploratory analyses show TFC and TMS stability at 48 and 60 months, in contrast to placebo historical controls from the 2CARE trial. Results are consistent with data reported from the recent Phase 2 PRIDE-HD trial showing less functional decline in the pridopidine 45 mg BID treated group at 52 weeks.

Details

ISSN :
18796400
Volume :
9
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Huntington's disease
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f8aceec91064ad913b6a0274ccc118ce