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Hemofilie B; nog steeds on track?

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  1. flosz 2 augustus 2016 17:01
    quote:

    flosz schreef op 24 juni 2015 23:55:

    Implications of Baxter’s Latest Gene Therapy Data
    June 24, 2015
    Zack Fink
    Wednesday morning, Baxalta Incorporated (BXLT), a soon to be publically traded spin-off of Baxter International Inc. (BAX), presented updated data from an ongoing phase I/II open-label clinical trial assessing BAX335 at the 2015 International Society on Thrombosis and Haemostasis (ISTH) Congress. As a reminder, BAX335 is an investigational gene therapy being developed for hemophilia B and consisting of an AAV2/8 vector carrying the FIX-Padua transgene.

    I previously wrote about BAX335 after Baxter reported initial data from this trial in February 2015, suggesting then that this first data set was a derisking event for uniQure’s (QURE) hemophilia B program: BAX335 was unable to facilitate >20% FIX activity without immune complications. With today’s updated data from a larger patient population, I wanted to publish my thoughts as they relate to the hemophilia B gene therapy space as a whole. In addition, since I am currently bullish on uniQure, I wanted to explain what these data mean in relation to uniQure's AMT-060.

    Updated BAX335 Data

    As of the time of data collection, a total of seven patients have been treated with BAX335:

    BAX335 Dose Cohorts:

    Low dose: 2E11 [vc/kg] (n=2)
    Medium dose: 1E12 [vc/kg] (n=3)
    High dose: 3E12 [vc/kg] (n=2)

    Primary Takeaways:

    No patients have developed FIX inhibitors (immune response against FIX protein) to date.
    “Some FIX expression was observed in the lowest dose cohort.”
    “In the [medium] dose cohort, two patients have experienced no bleeds without regular infusions of FIX, and one of these patients has had sustained FIX [activity] levels of 20-25% for 12 months.”
    “In the highest dose cohort, expression levels have peaked above 50%, though the two patients in this cohort experienced an immune response which has led to decreased FIX expression, with one patient resuming regular FIX infusions.” These two patients were observed to have T-cell mediated immune responses.

    As shown below, one patient in the middle cohort had sustained 20-25% FIX activity at 52-weeks post treatment, with no bleeding episodes or exogenous FIX infusions required:

    This one patient reaching a 5% FIX activity threshold without signs of elevated liver enzymes or a T cell immune response is encouraging for BAX335 as a potential therapeutic.

    Nevertheless, it’s unclear – with current data – if this can be translated to a larger patient population (2 out of 3 patients in the middle cohort experienced no bleeding episodes post-treatment). In addition, it’s unclear – despite high FIX expression – if the high dose of BAX335 will be viable given the T-cell mediated immune responses (resulting in treatment with corticosteroids) observed in both patients in the high dose cohort.

    Results from one of these patients is below and demonstrates one of the potential negative consequences of T-cell mediated immune responses in AAV gene therapy – loss of transgene expression/activity (this is the same issue Spark Therapeutics (ONCE) apparently had with their previous AAV8 hemophilia B gene therapy discussed in their S-1):

    Study investigators believe the dramatic decrease in FIX activity is due to the delayed start of corticosteroids; however, a larger sample size will be needed to determine if this is true.

    What This Means for the Hemophilia B Gene Therapy Landscape

    These data are promising, but not a home run. So far the investigators have been unable to dose BAX335 as high as hoped without evidence of a T-cell mediated immune response or decreased FIX expression, despite improvements in manufacturing compared to the AAV8 hemophilia B candidate investigated at St. Jude’s. This leaves the door open for improvements from other companies pursuing gene therapies for hemophilia B since this apparent T-cell mediated immune response could be due to manufacturing or capsid characteristics specific to BAX335 (and other AAV8 gene therapies).

    For example, uniQure just began assessing AMT-060 (AAV2/5 with hFIXco transgene) in a phase I/II trial. As a reminder, uniQure uses an improved baculovirus manufacturing process compared to the triple transfection method used by St Jude’s (recall BAX335 uses improved purification during triple transfection manufacturing to significantly decrease the amount of empty capsids in the final product). UniQure has previously demonstrated the ability to dose an AAV2/5 gene therapy (AMT-021) at doses up to 2E13 [vg/kg] without evidence of elevated liver enzymes or T-cell immune response. In other words, if manufacturing is the limiting aspect, AMT-060 could have an upper hand.

    In the future, if AMT-060 or other hemophilia B gene therapies do not show superiority to BAX335, there is still room in the hemophilia B treatment landscape for more than one winner. Preexisting neutralizing antibodies to wild-type AAV vectors used in gene therapy are key exclusion criteria for administration of these gene therapies to date. According to Boutin et al, the seroprevalence for healthy individuals is about 40% for both AAV5 and AAV8. Approximately 40% of patients diagnosed with hemophilia B may be ineligible for gene therapy with either an AAV5 or AAV8 vector!Patients who have preexisting neutralizing antibodies against AAV8 simply cannot receive BAX335, and the same for AMT-060 and AAV5. And, patients receiving AAV8 gene therapy that need retreatment cannot subsequently receive an AAV8 gene therapy due to the now-present neutralizing antibodies – retreatment would require a non-AAV8 gene therapy.

    I’m intrigued by the BAX335 data, which are certainly promising and support continued clinical advancement, but, there’s room for improvement - and room in the treatment landscape for other winners.

    twitter.com/bioterp/status/6138065619...
    twitter.com/zbiotech/status/760465991...
  2. flosz 3 augustus 2016 09:39
    tl.gd/n_1sovbvn

    $ONCE - LR $QURE Discontinuation of $SHPG's BAX 335 Program Positive for QURE
    • Bottom Line: SHPG (OP) announced on their 2Q16 earnings call
    today that they are discontinuing dev't of clinical stage hemophilia B gene
    therapy program BAX-335 and are focusing on advancing a different
    preclinical program instead given the inconsistent results seen to date.
    This is incrementally positive for QURE, since competition in hemophilia
    B has formed a major overhang on the stock. While several other gene
    therapy programs are currently in clinical dev't (e.g. ONCE, DMTX,
    SGMO), and ONCE's has generated highly impressive clinical data to
    date we believe that it is unlikely that one single gene therapy product will
    be used to treat all hemophilia B due to the product-specific limitations
    (e.g. neutralizing antibodies). We remain positively biased on QURE's
    stock given that it is trading below cash and QURE's current market cap
    reflects little to no value for AMT-060 or its gene therapy platform. In
    addition, QURE's GMP-grade commercial scale manufacturing capability
    represents in our view a strategic asset that could be attractive to
    competitors. Next updates from QURE's high dose cohort of the AMT-060
    trial are expected by YE16. Maintaining OP rating.
    • SHPG shifts focus of hemophilia B gene therapy program back
    to preclinical development. SHPG mgmt. noted on the 2Q16 earnings
    call this morning that following a review of BXLT heritage programs
    they decided to terminate their hemophilia B Phase I/II gene therapy
    program BAX 335. Recall, BAX 335 is an AAV8-based product using
    the hyperactive FIX-Padua variant (similar to ONCE). Clinical data
    has been presented previously, but we noted concern regarding the
    inconsistent FIX activity levels and duration (see our deep dive HERE:)
    which has now been highlighted by SHPG mgmt. BXLT previously noted
    potential initiation of Phase III trials with BAX 335 near-term. SHPG
    mgmt. stressed that they remain focused on gene therapy for hemophilia
    (and other indications) and will focus their efforts on a next generation
    preclinical program.
    • SHPG BAX 335 discontinuation removes near-term competitor
    for QURE's hemophilia B gene therapy program, AMT-060. The
    hemophilia B gene therapy landscape is perceived as "crowded" by
    investors with multiple players comporting in the space, some (e.g.
    ONCE) with highly impressive data, which has created a major overhang
    on QURE. However, in our view it's unlikely that one single gene therapy
    product will be used to treat all hemophilia B patients. This is due to
    the fact that high levels of pre-existing neutralizing antibodies exist in
    the population directed against specific AAV capsids that render these
    ineffective. For example 40% of HB patients have neutralizing antibodies
    directed against AAV8 or AAV8-derived capsids such as being developed
    by SHPG/BXLT and ONCE respectively, which would need an alternative
    gene therapy product. In contrast, neutralizing antibodies against AAV5
    capsid (e.g. QURE, BMRN) has only been seen in 5% of hemophilia
    patients and QURE had zero screening failures in any trial to date.
    • We remain positively biased on QURE. While results generated by
    competitor ONCE in hemophilia B are very impressive, we think it seems
    premature to write off QURE completely as the stock seems to indicate,
    now trading with a market cap of $183M, below its cash balance of ~

    $207M. QURE has generated positive proof-of-concept clinical data with
    AAV5 in hemophilia B (last updated at World Federation of Hemophilia
    (WFH) World Congress, LINK) showing sustained FIX expression.
    Results from a higher dose-cohort by YE16 could provide addl. validation
    for QURE in hemophilia, while other clinical and preclinical programs
    focused on CNS and CV disease (partnered with BMY ) ongoing. BMY
    currently who owns 10% of QURE's shares and has the option to buy
    10% more. In addition, QURE currently owns the largest gene therapydedicated
    GMP-grade manufacturing facility in the world, which should
    represent a strategic asset for potential future partners or acquirers
  3. flosz 3 augustus 2016 13:15
    Shire ($SHPG) has scrapped plans to further develop BAX 335, a hemophilia B gene therapy it gained in its $32 billion takeover of Baxalta. The move will see Shire focus its attention on a preclinical gene therapy program it thinks has a better chance of success, clearing the path for uniQure ($QURE) and Spark Therapeutics ($ONCE) to beat their bigger rival to market.
    Baxalta had advanced the gene therapy as far as a Phase I/II clinical trial, early data from which were released more than one year ago. Those results showed the gene therapy, which uses an AAV8 vector to deliver factor IX (FIX) Padua, elevated the FIX activity of one participant by 20% to 25% for a full year. Yet, while this represented a success for this one patient over that period of time, the overall, longer-term dataset has failed to convince Shire that BAX 335 is worth pursuing.
    “The expression was good but it was a little inconsistent between different patients. And, with time for some patients, the level of expression decreased,” Philip Vickers, head of R&D at Shire, said on a conference call with investors to discuss the company’s second quarter results.
    Shire plans to use the experience gained in the clinic to shape a preclinical program. Vickers said the team has an idea of some of the technical factors that could account for the inconsistency and slide in activity over time. And, with the Phase I/II trial showing that when the AAV8 vector works, it works well, Shire thinks it has the makings of an effective asset. Baxalta, through its then parent company Baxter ($BAX), acquired the AAV8 vector in the $70 million takeover of Chatham Therapeutics.
    The decision to scrap BAX 335 removes one of the more advanced riders from the congested race to bring a hemophilia B gene therapy to market. As recently as last month Baxalta was revising the list of clinical trial sites in the Phase I/II study and BAX 335 was still pencilled in to start Phase III this year. Now, Shire has pulled the plug on the trial, shortening the odds that one of the biotechs leading the pack will bring a hemophilia B gene therapy to market before their bigger rival.
    UniQure and Spark have both delivered some clinical data on their gene therapies, while Dimension Therapeutics ($DMTX) and Sangamo Biosciences ($SGMO) are closing in on that point, too. Of the group, uniQure is seen by investors as having the most to gain from the scrapping of BAX 335. The share price of the Dutch biotech, which has taken repeated hits over the past year, rose 8.5% on the day Shire revealed its decision. Dimension, Sangamo and Spark all closed down.
    While both BAX 335 and Spark’s SPK-FIX use AAV8 vectors and FIX Padua, uniQure’s program is built on AAV5 and wild-type FIX. So far, the approach pursued by Baxalta and Spark has delivered bigger increases in FIX activity. However, uniQure is yet to post data from a cohort of patients who have received a higher dose of its gene therapy. And its use of AAV5 positions it to treat the approximately 40% of patients who are ineligible for AAV8 because they have neutralizing antibodies. Whether FIX Padua or the wild type is more effective long-term is unclear.
    www.fiercebiotech.com/biotech/shire-c...
  4. flosz 3 augustus 2016 13:17
    Shire Plc (SHPG) Flemming Ornskov on Q2 2016 Results - Earnings Call Transcript

    Mbt BAX-335:
    At the senior leadership level, we have a 60%/40% split between legacy Shire and legacy Baxalta employees. We have completed a major pipeline prioritization exercise. We reviewed the entire pipeline and have made the decision to discontinue eight programs from across the Shire and the Baxalta heritage pipelines. Our decision and one decision worth noting was the decision to terminate Bax 335 the factor IX gene therapy program. We have shifted focus to a next-generation preclinical program demonstrating our commitment to gene therapy within hemophilia. Our hemophilia A gene therapy program is ongoing, and we plan to enter clinical studies later this year. Finally, we've initiated a procurement cost review and also have commenced a review of our manufacturing network

    With regards to the specific factor IX, we went over that in a lot of detail with the Baxalta colleague – legacy Baxalta colleagues that were working on that program. For the lead, for the lead compound, which was Bax 335, there was excellent expression, actually. Excellent expression seen with that particular vector. It's an AAV8 vector, so the adenoviral vector. We were very pleased to get access to. So the expression was good but it was a little inconsistent between different patients, and with time for some patients, the level of expression decreased. And we think that's a very important thing to factor in when considering all gene therapies, is the expression going to go down over time.

    Mbt.GT:

    Richard James Parkes - Deutsche Bank AG (Broker UK)
    Hi. Yes. Thanks for taking my questions. A couple really on hemophilia. First I just wondered if you could just discuss what impact ADYNOVATE having in the U.S. market since the launch. What kind of penetration rates it's achieving. And then secondly, just on your second generation factor IX gene therapyprogram, just wondering what it is that makes you more confident about that program? Maybe kind of outline what it was about the current program that made you discontinue. Thanks very much.
    Flemming Ornskov - Chief Executive Officer & Executive Director
    Yeah, I think in general, as we get into the hemophilia and hematology markets, our confidence, certainly my confidence, has grown significantly. There's a very strong team coming from Baxter, now Baxalta, now part of Shire, and I am very pleased that, that team has continued to work within Shire. So of course, given the significant position that now Shire has in hemophilia and in the main treatment options, which as you know factor VIII substitution, I think that a replacement – I think that we feel very confident about ADYNOVATE, I think it's off to a very good launch. Jeff, any specifics you want to comment on there?
    ......

    Flemming Ornskov - Chief Executive Officer & Executive Director
    Yeah, and I think, as Jeff said, this is an incredibly experienced team, both at the managerial level, the strategic level, the marching level, but also the customer facing organization. And I think that's been a recent part of a huge success of this franchise has had also with other competitive entrants. Yes. Your second question, there's a lot of interest in non-factor developments including gene therapy. We're also at Shire participating in all of those aspects. Today is not the time to comment on each of those. We still think that factor substitution, or factor placement is still going to be the cornerstone, but on the non-factor treatments, do you want to talk about factor IX and why we went to a backup compound and what our commitment to factor VIII and factor IX gene therapy?
    Philip J. Vickers - Executive VP, Head-Research & Development
    So yeah, we, the company focused on rare genetic diseases. We think it's important that we do have a commitment to gene therapy in hemophilia and in other areas as well. And we went over, and we're delighted actually, one of the things associated with the acquisition of Baxalta was their depth of experience in aspects of gene therapy, including the manufacturing side of it as well. So we were delighted to get access to the talent and expertise in that space.
    With regards to the specific factor IX, we went over that in a lot of detail with the Baxalta colleague – legacy Baxalta colleagues that were working on that program. For the lead, for the lead compound, which was Bax 335, there was excellent expression, actually. Excellent expression seen with that particular vector. It's an AAV8 vector, so the adenoviral vector. We were very pleased to get access to. So the expression was good but it was a little inconsistent between different patients, and with time for some patients, the level of expression decreased. And we think that's a very important thing to factor in when considering all gene therapies, is the expression going to go down over time.
    So it did go down and we think it's very important for the community out there for us to bring forward the highest quality asset we think we possibly can in this space. So we went over some of the technical reasons why we might be seeing that inconsistency and somewhat of a decrease in expression over time. And, have some factors that we think could account for that and we're building those into the design and the constructs that we're using for the gene therapy. So it's really not any decrease in our commitment to the program. It's just that we're going to change the molecule and move forward for the compound that's now in preclinical. And the factor VIII gene therapy program goes forward unaffected.

    John T. Boris - SunTrust Robinson Humphrey, Inc.
    How are you thinking about prioritizing that in the contribution from those assets, in the top line? And then secondly, on gene therapy side, we've seen Pfizer recently move on Bamboo; BioMarin recently came out with some data on their gene therapy program. As you've looked at your internal gene therapyprogram that you have in place, especially in hemophilia, what do you like about what you have? And what else do you think you need in the gene therapy area? Thanks.

    Philip J. Vickers - Executive VP, Head-Research & Development
    We've been talking now for some time about our growing interest in gene therapy and wanting to get access to the right vectors and experience in manufacturing and such like. So yeah, we get some process development and manufacturing in that space, which is a very impressive organization in Austria. We think the vector design is a critical element of success and we've been impressed, again, by the colleagues that we have in Vienna, who are becoming experts in that space. And aspects of other elements of successful gene therapy, like understanding potential pre-immunogenicity and how you might be able to overcome some of those challenges. There's some really good thinking from the team there.
    I think this is kind of classic gene therapy where you'll get a protein and try and express it. Get a gene and then try and drive expression of that gene in particular tissues. But now we're also looking at things which are beyond that and you asked about areas that we might be looking at in the future. I think there's some aspects of gene editing as well as just gene replacement that are of interest to us. We have a lot of working aspects right now. So we're considering what our strategy should be in that space at the moment

    seekingalpha.com
  5. flosz 13 augustus 2016 16:32
    quote:

    flosz schreef op 27 juli 2016 20:57:

    $QURE Presents Updated Clinical Data in Patients with Severe Hemophilia B Demonstrating up to 9 Months of Sustained Levels of Factor IX Activity and Therapeutic Effect www.uniqure.com/uploads/News/PR_AMT-0...

    Patient nr.3 (samen met broer in trial): Ervaringen van Klaas Wildeboer.
    www.nvhp.nl/nieuws/203-gentherapie-vo...
  6. flosz 30 september 2016 12:26
    Philly-based Spark Therapeutics is racing to develop gene therapy for hemophilia
    www.philly.com/philly/business/201609...

    uniQure interim CEO Matt Kapusta envisioned a market that supported several gene therapies. Given differing immune responses, a therapy that works in one person might not be as effective in another.
  7. flosz 3 oktober 2016 19:32
    A Cure For Hemophilia: the Promise Becomes a Reality

    In the late 1990s, animal studies employing adeno-associated viral (AAV) gene transfer offered the promise that gene therapy could someday be used to treat patients with the bleeding disorder hemophilia. These studies in mice and dogs with hemophilia B (deficiency of coagulation factor IX, FIX) quickly led to a first trial in humans. However, two decades of cycling back and forth between the laboratory and the clinic, including multiple clinical trials, were needed to get it right in patients. At long last, the lead investigators of two clinical trials have reported spectacular successes with AAV gene transfer for both hemophilia A (deficiency of factor VIII, FVIII) and hemophilia B at the World Federation of Hemophilia (WFH) Congress (Orlando, Florida, July 2016).
    To treat hemophilia B, Lindsey George (The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia) and her collaborators from Spark Therapeutics (Philadelphia) delivered a version of FIX that has approximately eightfold higher biological activity than that of the wild-type molecule. They administered an engineered AAV capsid and a vector dose of merely 5 × 1011 vector genomes (vg)/kg, and achieved sustained circulating levels of 20–40% of normal coagulation activity in all four treated patients without toxicity. No subsequent bleeding episodes occurred in these patients, and a case of recurring joint bleeding was resolved. Although <50% of normal coagulation activity is still considered mild hemophilia, levels of ~30% should confer a mostly normal life, with a requirement of some additional supplementary FIX concentrate only after severe trauma or for surgery.
    In the hemophilia A trial (sponsored by BioMarin Pharmaceutical Inc., San Rafael, CA), six of seven patients treated by John Pasi and colleagues (Royal London Hospital, UK) achieved normal or even superphysiological levels of FVIII and consequently no longer experienced bleeding episodes in the absence of FVIII protein administration. This was achieved at the highest vector dose of 6 × 1013vg/kg, using an AAV5 vector to deliver a codon-optimized complementary DNA expressing B domain–deleted FVIII. The remarkable outcomes of both trials have exceeded expectations and promise a future, in which—thanks to gene therapy—hemophilia will no longer exist in most adult patients of the developed world.
    This is in stark contrast to the modest goal of the initial trials in the 1990s, which was to elevate factor levels to >1% of normal to change the disease phenotype from severe to moderate with the hope of reducing the frequency of bleeding episodes. Both current trials are based on targeting hepatocytes for therapeutic gene expression. An AAV vector with a hepatotropic capsid containing a single-stranded DNA genome was infused intravenously, and gene expression is controlled by a hepatocyte-specific promoter. As hemophilia is X-linked, the patients enrolled in these studies are all male. Hepatocytes are the natural site of FIX expression, whereas FVIII is normally expressed by liver endothelial cells. However, hepatocytes are generally a good target, because they are abundant and efficient in secreting proteins into the blood (which is essential for treatment of hemophilia). Furthermore, optimized transgene expression in hepatocytes tends to induce immune tolerance.
    Nonetheless, prior trials with AAV2 and AAV8 serotype vectors were hampered by vector dose–dependent CD8+ T-cell responses to the viral capsid, causing hepatotoxicity and loss of expression. Transient immune suppression was successfully applied to solve this problem in some but not all studies. It appears that this problem can be entirely circumvented by using low vector doses­—made possible here through optimization of the vector and incorporation of a more highly active version of FIX. For the hemophilia A trial, the researchers adapted a different strategy. They packaged a codon-optimized FVIII sequence into AAV5, a capsid that has reduced homology to those typically found in humans. Therefore, AAV5 may be less prone to activating memory lymphocyte responses. This may be further supported by a third clinical trial (sponsored by UniQure, Amsterdam, the Netherlands). Wolfgang Miesbach (University Hospital Frankfurt, Germany) reported average FIX levels of ~5% of normal in five hemophilia B patients who were treated with an AAV5 vector at 5 × 1012 vg/kg. Only one patient showed elevated liver enzyme levels and was treated with steroid drugs. However, even when these results are adjusted with the consideration that this study used the wild-type instead of the enhanced-activity version of FIX, an approximately 10-fold dose disadvantage is apparent compared to the trial at Penn.
    This outcome may be due to a lower transduction efficiency of AAV5 in human hepatocytes, as suggested by a recent article in Molecular Therapy.1 Therefore, higher vector doses are required to achieve therapy. Given that FVIII is typically less efficiently expressed than FIX is, Pasi and colleagues used very high doses of 6 × 1013 vg/kg in the hemophilia A trial. Here, very mild elevations of liver enzyme levels were observed, and thus steroid drugs were administered. However, the reason for mild liver toxicity (which may not be immune mediated but still related to the high vector doses) is unclear. Only one patient had previously been treated at a threefold lower dose of 2 × 1013 vg/kg. He achieved substantially lower levels of 2–5% of normal. This discrepancy in the dose response remains to be resolved. An optimal vector dose would result in FVIII levels near normal but not superphysiological, with no or minimal/manageable toxicity. Thus far, the patients discussed here have been followed for up to 8 months. Long-term follow-up will establish whether this cure will last and whether factor levels will be stable. Encouragingly, hepatic AAV gene therapy in hemophilia A and B dogs directed stable levels for well over a decade.

    It has been estimated that a lifetime treatment of a patient with severe hemophilia amounts to a cost of US$25–50 million when using recombinant protein products. Gene therapy should be a much more cost-efficient alternative. Moreover, gene therapy may hold the key to treat hemophilia in the third world, where very few could afford these expensive protein drugs. Indeed, the majority of hemophilic patients worldwide currently are untreated. Hemophilia A is the more prevalent form of the disease and thus will require further improvements of the vector technology to be treatable at vector doses that are feasible to produce for large populations. At the same time, additional questions must be addressed for further development of this technology in the developed world as well. Currently utilized AAV capsids have low seroprevalence in the population, but patients with preexisting neutralizing antibodies nonetheless exist. Alternative capsids will need to be developed to enable giving gene therapy to these patients. Assuming that gene therapy in adult patients will be deemed safe, treatment of children may be considered so as to eliminate the disease earlier in life. Loss of episomal AAV vector genomes is a concern in a growing liver, and the risk of antibody (inhibitor) formation against the FVIII or FIX antigen is less clear in young patients with limited exposure. However, cautiously beginning by treating older pediatric patients may be a path to proceed initially. In any case, a cure for hemophilia by gene therapy is no longer merely a promise; it is a reality.
    www.nature.com/mt/journal/v24/n9/pdf/...
  8. flosz 4 oktober 2016 16:36
    Ter aanvulling, bovenstaande "A Cure For Hemophilia: the Promise Becomes a Reality"
    m.b.t. editor Roland Herzog:

    R.W.H. received royalty payments for AAV gene transfer technology from Spark Therapeutics.

    Potential for cellular stress response to hepatic factor VIII expression from AAV vector
    www.nature.com/articles/mtm201663
  9. flosz 3 november 2016 14:18
    ASH 2016:

    Efficacy and safety results will be updated up to 52 weeks of follow up for the low-dose cohort. Initial efficacy and safety results from the higher-dose cohort up to 26 weeks of follow up will also be presented.

    %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%

    2314 Interim Results from a Dose Escalating Study of AMT-060 (AAV5-hFIX) Gene Transfer in Adult Patients with Severe Hemophilia B
    Gene Therapy and Transfer
    Program: Oral and Poster Abstracts
    Session: 801. Gene Therapy and Transfer: Poster I
    Saturday, December 3, 2016, 5:30 PM-7:30 PM
    Hall GH (San Diego Convention Center)
    Frank W.G. Leebeek, MD, PhD1, Marco Tangelder, MD, PhD2*, Karina Meijer, MD, PhD3, Giancarlo Castaman4*, Federica Cattaneo, MD5*, Michiel Coppens, MD, PhD6*, Peter Kampmann, MD7*, Robert Klamroth8*, Roger E.G. Schutgens, MD, PhD9, Erhard Seifried, MD, PhD10, Joachim Schwaeble, MD11*, Halvard Boenig, MD PhD12*, Maaike Hendriks2*, Deya Corzo, MD, FAAP2* and Wolfgang A. Miesbach, MD, PhD13
    1Department of Hematology, Erasmus University Medical Center, Rotterdam, Netherlands?2uniQure B.V., Amsterdam, Netherlands?3Department of Hematology, University of Groningen, University Medical Center Groningen, Groningen, Netherlands?4University Hospital Careggi, Firenze, Italy?5Chiesi Farmaceuti S.p.A, Parma, Italy?6Department of Vascular Medicine, Academic Medical Center, Amsterdam, Netherlands?7Department of Haematology, Rigshospitalet University Hospital, Copenhagen, Denmark?8Zentrum fuer Gefaessmedizin/ Haemophiliezentrum, Vivantes Klinikum im Friedrichshain, Berlin, Germany?9Hematology and Van Creveldkliniek, University Medical Center, Utrecht, Netherlands?10Institute for Transfusion Medicine and Immunohematology, University Hospital Frankfurt, Goethe University, Frankfurt/Main, Germany?11Institute for Transfusion Medicine and Immunohematology, Goethe-University Frankfurt, Frankfurt am Main, Germany?12DRK-Blutspendedienst Baden-Württemberg - Hessen gemeinnützige GmbH, Frankfurt, Germany?13Haemophilia Centre, University Hospital Frankfurt, Frankfurt, Germany

    Introduction: The development of gene transfer for hemophilia is advancing rapidly and offers the potential to shift the disease severity from severe to mild with a single treatment. AMT-060 consists of an AAV5 vector with a gene cassette containing an LP1 liver specific promoter and codon-optimized wild type hFIX gene that has previously been shown to result in durable increases in FIX activity of at least 4 years1. This phase 1/2 study aims to investigate the safety and efficacy of AMT-060 in adult patients with severe hemophilia B.

    Methods: This is a multi-national, multi-center, open-label, dose-escalating study in patients with FIX activity = 2% of normal, and a severe bleeding phenotype. To be eligible, patients had to require either prophylactic exogenous FIX, or on-demand exogenous FIX with more than 4 bleeds per year or suffer from hemophilic arthropathy. Ten patients were treated in two subsequent, escalating dose cohorts, with AMT-060 5x 1012gc/kg (n=5) or 2x 1013 gc/kg (n=5). Patients received AMT-060 via a single intravenous infusion over 30 minutes. Efficacy assessments include endogenous FIX activity, measured at least 10 days after the most recent administration of exogenous FIX; reduction of exogenous FIX use; and annualized spontaneous bleeding rates. Safety assessments include treatment related adverse events and immunological assessments, including T-cell response to capsid antigens.

    Results: There were no screen failures for pre-existing antibodies against AAV5. The age of enrolled patients ranged from 33 to 72 years. At enrollment, nine patients were on FIX prophylaxis, and one patient in the high dose cohort used on-demand FIX therapy. At the time of submission, all ten patients have received AMT-060. The mean of all endogenous FIX activity values after cessation of prophylaxis in the low-dose cohort was 5.4% (95% CI 5.0-5.8%, range 3.1-6.7%; n=4), and stable during the 39 weeks of follow-up. Four out of five patients in the low-dose cohort were able to stop FIX prophylaxis. These patients demonstrated a mean reduction in annualized total FIX usage of 82% after treatment with AMT-060. For all five patients in the low-dose cohort, the mean annualized total FIX usage declined 75% after treatment with AMT-060. Following AMT-060 administration, one patient in the lower dose cohort had a mild, asymptomatic, elevation of ALT at week 10 that resolved with a seven weeks course of tapering prednisolone. No change in FIX activity, and no T-cell response or other possibly associated immunogenicity or inflammatory abnormalities were seen during the ALT elevation. Efficacy and safety results will be updated up to 52 weeks of follow up for the low-dose cohort. Initial efficacy and safety results from the higher-dose cohort up to 26 weeks of follow up will also be presented.

    Conclusions: Follow up of patients with severe hemophilia B who received either the low or higher dose of AMT-060 is ongoing. A single infusion of AMT-060 was generally well-tolerated. FIX activity increased to levels sufficient to provide endogenous prophylaxis in four of five patients in the low-dose cohort, relieving them from the need for exogenous FIX prophylaxis and resulting in marked decrease of FIX usage.
    1Nathwani et al. NEJM 2014; 371:1994-2004
    ash.confex.com/ash/2016/webprogram/Pa...
  10. flosz 4 december 2016 03:00
    Poster: www.uniqure.com/ASH%202016%20POSTER%2...

    -- Second-dose Cohort Demonstrates Dose Response with All Patients Free of Prophylactic FIX Replacement Therapy and Only One Spontaneous Bleed Reported
    -- Low-Dose Cohort Shows Sustained Levels of FIX Activity Up To One Year, with Marked Reduction of Bleeding Over Time and a Complete Cessation of Spontaneous Bleedings in Last 14 Weeks of Observation
    --No Activation of T-Cell Responses or Loss of FIX Activity in Any Patients
    --Investor Webcast Monday, December 5, 2016 at 7:00 a.m. PST/10 a.m. EST 
    LEXINGTON, Mass. and AMSTERDAM, the Netherlands, Dec. 03, 2016 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- uniQure N.V. (Nasdaq:QURE), a leader in human gene therapy, today announced new and updated results from its ongoing, dose-ranging Phase I/II trial of AMT-060, its proprietary, investigational gene therapy in patients with severe hemophilia B. The data includes up to 52 weeks of follow-up from the low-dose cohort and up to 31 weeks of follow-up from the second dose cohort. 
    New data presented from the second-dose cohort show a dose response with substantial improvement in disease state in all five patients, including the discontinuation of precautionary Factor IX (FIX) infusions in all four patients that previously required chronic replacement therapy.  To date, only one spontaneous bleed was reported after discontinuation of prophylactic FIX replacement therapy.
    All five patients in the low-dose cohort, who bleedings were previously uncontrolled despite being managed with prophylactic therapy, continue to maintain robust, constant and clinically meaningful levels of FIX activity for up to 52 weeks post treatment, with a complete cessation of spontaneous bleedings in the last 14 weeks of observation. 
    These clinical data from both patient cohorts were presented last evening in a poster session of the 58th American Society of Hematology (ASH) Annual Meeting taking place in San Diego, California.   ? ?"The data from this ongoing study demonstrate clinically significant and sustained increases in FIX activity, substantial reductions in FIX replacement usage and a near cessation of spontaneous bleeding episodes," stated Professor Frank W.G. Leebeek, M.D. Ph.D. of the Erasmus University Medical Center in Rotterdam, the Netherlands.  "Importantly, at both doses evaluated, AMT-060 appears to be safe and well-tolerated with no loss of FIX activity, no activation of T-cell response and no development of inhibitors for any of the 10 patients in the study. 
    "In total, we are observing a therapeutic benefit from AMT-060 that is clearly superior to their  previous prophylactic FIX  replacement therapy regimen, even in patients with advanced joint disease who still experienced many bleeds despite prophylaxis with FIX," he added.  "The safety and clinical efficacy profile observed in this study, together with the higher FIX expression levels support selection of the 2x1013 gc/kg dose for a pivotal registration trial."   
    Phase 1/2 Trial Overview  ???The AMT-060 gene therapy consists of a codon-optimized wild type FIX gene cassette, the LP1 liver promoter and an AAV5 viral vector manufactured by uniQure using its proprietary insect cell-based technology platform. It is the only hemophilia gene therapy that combines a gene cassette with clinically proven multi-year durability, now out more than five years, and an AAV5 vector serotype that has demonstrated safety and broad applicability due to the low prevalence of neutralizing antibodies (NABs) as evaluated in more than 20 patients across clinical studies in three different diseases.  
    * The Phase I/II, open-label, multi-center study includes 10 patients each receiving a one-time, 30-minute, intravenous administration of AMT-060, without the prophylactic use of corticosteroids.  
    * The study includes two dose cohorts of five patients each, with the first cohort receiving 5x1012 gc/kg and the second cohort receiving 2x1013 gc/kg.  
    * Nine patients in the trial were classified as having severe (<1% FIX activity) hemophilia.  One patient in the low-dose cohort had a moderate/severe (1.5% FIX activity) phenotype.   
    * Patients in the low-dose cohort were characterized by poorly controlled bleeding manifestations despite use of high-dose FIX replacement therapy during the year prior to study compared to the second-dose cohort.   
    * All but one patient in the study across both cohorts required chronic infusions of prophylactic FIX therapy at the time of enrollment. The remaining patient, who is in the second dose cohort, used FIX therapy on demand. 
    * There were no screening failures due to pre-existing anti-AAV5 NABs in the study. 
  11. flosz 4 december 2016 03:01
    Key Data Update from Phase I/II Clinical Trial of AMT-060 in Hemophilia B Patients   ???Data as of October 15, 2016: 
    * All 10 patients in the study have demonstrated improvements in their disease state as measured by reduced FIX replacement therapy and bleeding frequency.? 
    * In the second-dose cohort, only one spontaneous bleeding episode was reported over a period of 96 weeks of combined patient observation, representing a reduction in the annualized spontaneous bleed rate of 76% compared to the one-year period prior to administration of AMT-060.  ? 
    * Bleeding data was also evaluated from the low-dose cohort.  The frequency of spontaneous bleeds declined significantly over time, with no spontaneous bleeds reported by any patient in their last 14 weeks of observation.  With up to 52 weeks of follow-up, the annualized spontaneous bleed rate for the four patients that discontinued prophylactic FIX infusions was reduced by 59% compared to the one year period prior to administration of AMT-060. The one patient in the low-dose cohort that remained on prophylaxis also experienced a 45% reduction in spontaneous bleeds.    ? 
    * Eight of nine patients in the study that required chronic FIX infusions prior to administration of AMT-060, including all such patients in the second dose cohort, discontinued prophylaxis and remained prophylaxis-free at the last follow up (22-52 weeks).  ? 
    * Among the four patients in the low-dose cohort that discontinued prophylaxis, annualized consumption of FIX concentrate following AMT-060 administration was reduced substantially by more than a cumulative total of 1,329,000 international units (85%), compared to their pre-trial usage levels.  The one patient who remained on prophylactic FIX therapy in the low-dose cohort has reduced frequency of bleeding episodes and also requires materially less FIX concentrate after treatment with AMT-060. ? 
    * Through up to 6 months of follow-up among the five patients in the second-dose cohort, the mean steady-state FIX activity was approximately 7% of normal, with expression up to a FIX activity of 13% of normal.? 
    * In both dose cohorts, FIX activity remained consistent and stable through up to one year of follow up with no emergence of late immune response or loss of FIX activity in any of the patients.   ? 
    * AMT-060 continues to be well-tolerated, and there have been no severe adverse events.
    * Three out of the total of 10 patients (two in the second-dose cohort and one previously reported from the low-dose cohort) experienced mild, asymptomatic elevations of alanine aminotransferase (ALT) and received a tapering course of corticosteroids per protocol. Importantly, the temporary elevations in ALT were not associated with any loss of endogenous FIX activity or T-cell response.? 
    * No patients across either cohort have developed inhibitory antibodies against FIX, or demonstrated sustained AAV5 capsid-specific T-cell activation.   ? 
    * AMT-060 continues to demonstrate a very low screening failure rate, with all patients screened in the study testing negative for pre-existing anti-AAV5 NABs. To date, 25 patients have been screened for pre-existing anti-AAV5 NABs with a fully validated assay across several clinical studies with only one patient excluded due to a borderline positive result.  This collective data set suggests that a large proportion of the hemophilia patient population may be eligible for treatment with AMT-060. ?  
    "The data from our Phase I/II study demonstrate AMT-060 is delivering sustained and significantly improved clinical benefits to patients suffering from severe hemophilia B by enabling them to discontinue frequent infusions of FIX replacement therapy and to essentially eliminate the risk of spontaneous bleeding," stated Christian Meyer, M.D., Ph.D., chief medical officer at uniQure.  "Importantly, none of the patients treated with AMT-060 have lost FIX activity for up to one year post administration.  To date, our insect-cell manufactured AAV5 gene therapies have been administered to 22 patients across three clinical studies without any evidence of AAV5 capsid-specific cellular immune responses or long-term safety complications."
    "The proprietary elements of AMT-060, including our fully-humanized FIX gene cassette and AAV5 vector, are the only gene therapy components clinically demonstrated in hemophilia B to be safe, effective, and durable for up to six and a half years," he added.  "We believe these factors, along with our commercial-scale manufacturing capabilities, differentiate AMT-060 from other hemophilia gene therapies in development, and we look forward to advancing our program into a late-stage clinical study."   
    AMT-060 is being co-developed with Chiesi for Europe.   
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