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Safety and efficacy of first-in-man intrathecal injection of human astrocytes (AstroRx®) in ALS patients: phase I/IIa clinical trial results

Authors :
Marc Gotkine
Yoseph Caraco
Yossef Lerner
Simcha Blotnick
Maor Wanounou
Shalom Guy Slutsky
Judith Chebath
Graciela Kuperstein
Elena Estrin
Tamir Ben-Hur
Arik Hasson
Kfir Molakandov
Tehila Sonnenfeld
Yafit Stark
Ariel Revel
Michel Revel
Michal Izrael
Source :
Journal of Translational Medicine, Vol 21, Iss 1, Pp 1-12 (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
BMC, 2023.

Abstract

Abstract Background Malfunction of astrocytes is implicated as one of the pathological factors of ALS. Thus, intrathecal injection of healthy astrocytes in ALS can potentially compensate for the diseased astrocytes. AstroRx® is an allogeneic cell-based product, composed of healthy and functional human astrocytes derived from embryonic stem cells. AstroRx® was shown to clear excessive glutamate, reduce oxidative stress, secrete various neuroprotective factors, and act as an immunomodulator. Intrathecal injection of AstroRx® to animal models of ALS slowed disease progression and extended survival. Here we report the result of a first-in-human clinical study evaluating intrathecal injection of AstroRx® in ALS patients. Methods We conducted a phase I/IIa, open-label, dose-escalating clinical trial to evaluate the safety, tolerability, and therapeutic effects of intrathecal injection of AstroRx® in patients with ALS. Five patients were injected intrathecally with a single dose of 100 × 106 AstroRx® cells and 5 patients with 250 × 106 cells (low and high dose, respectively). Safety and efficacy assessments were recorded for 3 months pre-treatment (run-in period) and 12 months post-treatment (follow-up period). Results A single administration of AstroRx® at either low or high doses was safe and well tolerated. No adverse events (AEs) related to AstroRx® itself were reported. Transient AEs related to the Intrathecal (IT) procedure were all mild to moderate. The study demonstrated a clinically meaningful effect that was maintained over the first 3 months after treatment, as measured by the pre-post slope change in ALSFRS-R. In the 100 × 106 AstroRx® arm, the ALSFRS-R rate of deterioration was attenuated from − 0.88/month pre-treatment to − 0.30/month in the first 3 months post-treatment (p = 0.039). In the 250 × 106 AstroRx® arm, the ALSFRS-R slope decreased from − 1.43/month to − 0.78/month (p = 0.0023). The effect was even more profound in a rapid progressor subgroup of 5 patients. No statistically significant change was measured in muscle strength using hand-held dynamometry and slow vital capacity continued to deteriorate during the study. Conclusions Overall, these findings suggest that a single IT administration of AstroRx® to ALS patients at a dose of 100 × 106 or 250 × 106 cells is safe. A signal of beneficial clinical effect was observed for the first 3 months following cell injection. These results support further investigation of repeated intrathecal administrations of AstroRx®, e.g., every 3 months. Trial Registration: NCT03482050.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14795876 and 58896384
Volume :
21
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Journal of Translational Medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.3ddbc58896384d3a9d1071138a07d1a3
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12967-023-03903-3