Alnylam’s Patisiran Shows Promise for Treating FAP in Phase 2 Trial
Patisiran (ALN-TTR02) led to an improvement in average nerve dysfunction in 26 patients with familial amyloid polyneuropathy (FAP), a rare disease that causes organ or nerve malfunction.
Moreover, all 25 eligible participants in the Phase 2 open label extension (OLE) study of patisiran were enrolled in the Phase 3 APOLLO OLE trial, allowing them to continue their treatment.
FA, also known as hereditary TTR-related amyloidosis (hATTR amyloidosis), is caused by an inherited defect in the protein transthyretin (TTR). The defective TTR, called TTR amyloid, Â accumulates in nerves and other organs, causing different symptoms, depending on where it is deposited in the body. In FAP, defective TTR causes nerve disease (neuropathy).
Alnylam Pharmaceuticals is a major RNAi therapeutics company. RNA interference (RNAi) is a small chemical produced in the body’s cells, mainly in the liver, that can block the production of a specific protein. In the case of patisiran, the production of TTR amyloid is blocked.
Results for the Phase 2 trial (NCT01961921) were presented at the American Academy of Neurology (AAN) 2017 Annual Meeting, held in April 2017.
New results from 26 patients showed a drop in the modified neuropathy impairment score (mNIS+7, a measure of muscle weakness and nerve malfunction) after 24 months. Skin samples from the treated patients showed significant decrease in TTR amyloid deposits.
An improvement or no change in mNIS+7 at 24 months was seen in 74 percent of patients tested.
There were no drug-related serious adverse events for up to 25 months of treatment or until treatment was discontinued because of the drug.
After receiving patisiran treatment in the Phase 2 OLE study, all 25 eligible patients were included in the APOLLO-OLE study Phase 3 trial  (NCT01960348) and 20 of them had received at least 36 months of the treatment as of April 12, 2017. Alnylam expects results from the APOLLO-OLE Phase 3 trial to be available in September of this year.
“We are encouraged to see the final 24-month results from our Phase 2 OLE, which provide continued evidence suggesting that patisiran can potentially halt or improve neuropathy progression in patients with hATTR amyloidosis,” Eric Green, Vice President, General Manager, TTR Program, said in a press release. “We are also pleased to present the first-ever clinical evidence that patisiran administration is associated with a decrease in dermal TTR amyloid burden, which we believe further supports the therapeutic hypothesis that TTR knockdown can potentially lead to reduction of amyloid deposits in the body.”