Efficacy and safety of arimoclomol in Niemann-Pick disease type C: Results from a double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled, multinational phase 2/3 trial of a novel treatment.
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BORIS DOI
Date of Publication
November 2021
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute
Contributor
Mengel, Eugen | |
Patterson, Marc C | |
Da Riol, Rosalia M | |
Del Toro, Mireia | |
Deodato, Federica | |
Grunewald, Stephanie | |
Grønborg, Sabine | |
Harmatz, Paul | |
Héron, Bénédicte | |
Maier, Esther M | |
Roubertie, Agathe | |
Santra, Saikat | |
Tylki-Szymanska, Anna | |
Day, Simon | |
Andreasen, Anne Katrine | |
Geist, Marie Aavang | |
Havnsøe Torp Petersen, Nikolaj | |
Ingemann, Linda | |
Hansen, Thomas | |
Blaettler, Thomas | |
Kirkegaard, Thomas | |
Í Dali, Christine |
Subject(s)
Series
Journal of inherited metabolic disease
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
1573-2665
Publisher
Wiley
Language
English
Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
34418116
Uncontrolled Keywords
Description
Niemann-Pick disease type C (NPC) is a rare, genetic, progressive neurodegenerative disorder with high unmet medical need. We investigated the safety and efficacy of arimoclomol, which amplifies the heat shock response to target NPC protein misfolding and improve lysosomal function, in patients with NPC. In a 12-month, prospective, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, phase 2/3 trial (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT02612129), patients (2-18 years) were randomised 2:1 to arimoclomol:placebo, stratified by miglustat use. Routine clinical care was maintained. Arimoclomol was administered orally three times daily. The primary endpoint was change in 5-domain NPC Clinical Severity Scale (NPCCSS) score from baseline to 12 months. Fifty patients enrolled; 42 completed. At month 12, the mean progression from baseline in the 5-domain NPCCSS was 0.76 with arimoclomol vs 2.15 with placebo. A statistically significant treatment difference in favour of arimoclomol of -1.40 (95% confidence interval: -2.76, -0.03; P = .046) was observed, corresponding to a 65% reduction in annual disease progression. In the prespecified subgroup of patients receiving miglustat as routine care, arimoclomol resulted in stabilisation of disease severity over 12 months with a treatment difference of -2.06 in favour of arimoclomol (P = .006). Adverse events occurred in 30/34 patients (88.2%) receiving arimoclomol and 12/16 (75.0%) receiving placebo. Fewer patients had serious adverse events with arimoclomol (5/34, 14.7%) vs placebo (5/16, 31.3%). Treatment-related serious adverse events (n = 2) included urticaria and angioedema. Arimoclomol provided a significant and clinically meaningful treatment effect in NPC and was well tolerated.
File(s)
| File | File Type | Format | Size | License | Publisher/Copright statement | Content | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Efficacy_and_safety.pdf | text | Adobe PDF | 2.04 MB | Attribution (CC BY 4.0) | published |