The use of the intravenous route of administration for the currently
leading systemic RNAi delivery technology, Tekmira’s SNALP technology,
has been noted to be a drawback of the technology, especially for non-severe diseases and in
therapeutic areas historically dominated by oral medicines (e.g. the cholesterol-lowering
market). As a result, the arrival of two
delivery approaches that promise to allow for subcutaneous administration
has been welcomed: Arrowhead’s Dynamic Polyconjugates (DPCs) and Alnylam
GalNAc-siRNA conjugates which have shown data suggesting their clinical use for gene knockdown in the liver (at least initially;
DPC with potential to go beyond the liver).
A day ahead of Alnylam’s
Roundtable on conjugate delivery, I thought it would be a good time to get into the mood and compare the two competing
technologies.
Basic Chemistries
GalNAc-siRNAs consist of siRNAs to which a cluster of three N-acetylgalactosamine
residues have been appended. It is these
GalNAcs that are recognized by the ASGPR receptor protein that is abundantly presented on hepatocytes. The
choice of three over just one or two GalNAcs is due to the
synergistic binding of multiple GalNAcs to the receptor.
DPCs also comprise of siRNA conjugates, but involve an
additional endosomolytic agent to facilitate siRNA release from the endosomes. The two components can be mixed together so
that the drug can be given as a single formulation. This, however, also requires that both siRNA
and endosomolytic agent end up in the same place. For hepatocytes, this is achieved by conjugating
the siRNA to a cholesterol moiety and the endosomolytic agent to GalNAc.
The reason why two different targeting agents are employed
are two-fold: reduced competition for the uptake receptor, and not requiring
triantennal GalNAcs such as in Alnylam's case which seems
to involve a quite costly chemistry. The reason why GalNAcs on the endosomolytic
agent in DPCs are not so expensive is because as a polymer (a peptide in the latest
versions) multiple mono-GalNAcs can be conjugated distributively and still achieve the same synergistic binding effect.
Potency and Safety
The Holy Grail in RNAi subcutaneous delivery appears to be
to get formulations potent enough so that the desired level of knockdown can be
achieved with volumes of 1ml or less: you can squeeze only that much liquid under
your skin through a thin needle.
The first of Alnylam’s GalNAcs, ALN-TTRsc, achieves a 80% target
gene knockdown (ED80) following repeat administration in preclinical animal studies. This is below the (based on OTS
2012) 3mg/kg barrier that apparently would allow for 1ml or less volumes in
humans. What surprised me to see at the
OTS meeting in late October was that the GalNAc potencies, both in rodents and
non-human primates, varied quite a bit between the programs. The TTR formulation actually had the poorest potency among the programs. This surprised me even more so given that ALN-TTR01 and ALN-TTR02 (both
SNALP programs) contained highly potent RNAi triggers. In the case of PCSK9, ED50 of less than
0.1mg/kg were obtained.
It is possible that the differences are not just due to the
natural sequence-specific differences in RNAi potency, but a result of advances in
chemistry. In particular, optimizing
siRNA-conjugates for tissue/endosomal stability rather than serum stability as is often practiced in RNAi Therapeutics is
critical. Importantly, this consideration also applies to DPC
technology.
DPCs should be more potent than isolated GalNAc siRNAs. This is because you are adding an endosomal
release agent to the liver-targeted siRNA (e.g. GalNAc-siRNA) conjugate
and unfacilitated release of nucleic acid out of endosomes is believed to be
highly inefficient.
Arrowhead has reported various impressive potencies such as 99%
knockdowns at sub-1mg/kg siRNA doses. This
to me is strong evidence of the superior potency of DPCs over GalNAc-siRNAs. Moreover, it seems that DPCs may inherently require
less frequent dosing compared to GalNAc-siRNAs for which Alnylam aims at weekly or twice monthly dosing.
What is unclear, however, is the amount and resulting safety
and volume implications of the endosomal release agent. In particular, the most impressive knockdown
data seemed to involve saturating amounts of endosomal release agent (~6mg/kg).
The first-generation endosomal release
agent, PBAVE, suffered from relatively high toxicity, partly as a result of
premature unmasking in the blood. It makes
sense that the newer, ‘more natural’ peptide-based endosomolytic release agents
are safer. By contrast, assuming that the GalNAc
sugar itself is harmless, I am not too concerned about the safety of Alnylam’s
GalNAc conjugates.
In terms of potency, advantage Arrowhead, in terms of
safety, advantage Alnylam.
Strategic
Considerations
The challenge for Arrowhead will be to make the case of the benefit
of increased complexity over GalNAc-siRNAs. Would the prospect of a 3- or 5-fold
increase in potency e.g. be enough justification for the investment? I say ‘prospect’ because Alnylam could obtain knockdown proof-of-concept data at least a year before Arrowhead,
especially since Arrowhead is planning to conduct the first study with DPC (ARC-520 for HepB) in
healthy volunteers and thus won’t be able to measure viral target knockdown.
In addition to potency, DPC has the important advantage that
it may be a more widely applicable RNAi delivery platform. This alone may tempt others to put some money
down on the technology to see where it can go.
Although GalNAc-siRNAs and DPCs are currently clearly
competing, there is also scope for them to synergize, especially in the area of
oligonucleotide chemistry. Curiously,
Alnylam did seek access to DPCs earlier this year, supposedly for its
evaluation in one of its 5x15
TM programs. Learning about DPC siRNA chemistry may be of
at least equal, if not considerably more value to Alnylam.
Which of the two delivery technologies do you prefer for target gene knockdown in the liver? Take the survey on the top right-hand corner.