Over the last two days, breathtaking data were
reported for the treatment of two severe, inherited muscle-wasting diseases
affecting children. The investigative agents
were a small molecule splicing modulator and a gene therapy both of which
appear to achieve superior results compared to approved Oligonucleotide Therapeutics
agents.
The developments highlight the risk that while
gain-of-function changes (here by splice modulation) may have proved to be
low-hanging fruits for Oligonucleotide Therapeutics, they, unlike gene
knockdown approaches, face increased challenges from other technology platforms.
Small molecule splicing modulation for Spinal
Muscular Atrophy (SMA)
In 2011, Roche started collaborating with PTC
Therapeutics on small molecule splice modulators for the treatment of SMA. The idea is to screen small molecules for
their ability to bring about changes in RNA processing that would hopefully be
gene-specific enough so as not to cause widespread off-targeting.
I had always considered this to be a monumental, if
not insurmountable task. This is because a given splicing event brings together a set of proteins that each in
turn also function at other genes. So surely
a small molecule that may bias splicing from SMN1 to SMN2, as does antisense
oligonucleotide SPINRAZA from Ionis and Biogen through highly specific base pairing, would also affect a range of other genes.
If that were not enough of a challenge, a small
molecule carries the extra baggage of being more widely available across tissue
types such that off-targeting is a risk to not just the CNS as with SPINRAZA,
but many other cell types where there may be no benefit from SMN upregulation.
Accordingly, the first compound in the PTC-Roche
collaboration to enter clinical development, RG7800, had to be discarded last year due to
retinal tox concerns. Another small
molecule competitor, branaplam from Novartis, had similarly been put on hold due to tox concerns
although this compound has resumed development late last year.
It was therefore amazing to see updated results from the
FIREFISH study of the follow-on compound RG7916 in type I SMA infants. They show that 90% of children had an improvement
in the CHOP-INTEND measure of physical functioning after 6 months on the drug. The results are particularly impressive
considering that treatment had been initiated relatively late compared to the
new standard of care with SPINRAZA and the soon-to-be-approved gene therapy by
Novartis (àAvexis).
Not only that, there had been no treatment
discontinuations due to safety issues with RG7916.
Given that SPINRAZA has to be given intrathecally
while RG7916 can be given orally, and given that both the gene therapy and the orally available RG7916 appear to be somewhat more efficacious than the oligonucleotide, the focus of
Biogen and Ionis should now be on testing combinations of SPINRAZA with both modalities. Ideally, there is
added efficacy from using the agents together either because due to higher
achievable SMN protein levels and/or due to complementary biodistribution (note:
the value of SMN increases outside motor neurons is debated). If not, the SPINRAZA franchise may have a
limited shelf-life.
Fake-it-‘til-you-make-it Sarepta with gene
therapy breakthrough
The other piece of great news for families dealing
with neuromuscular disease came yesterday at the Sarepta Therapeutics R&D Day.
To wit, Sarepta had used dubious data and a lot of
political lobbying to get the controversial exon skipper eteplirsen approved under
accelerated approval. While delaying the
confirmatory study that is supposed to be part-and-parcel of an accelerated approval,
Sarepta has been raking in billions in sales and added market capitalization. This has allowed the company to build a
veritable DMD powerhouse with a number of candidates that look much more
promising than ordinary PMO-based eteplirsen. They include peptide-conjugated PMOs
and especially gene therapies.
If you are
involved in drug development, better get used to the dubious morals of the
industry. If things go well, you behave
like the paragon of virtue, if things don’t go so well you fake it until you
get another chance at succeeding. I
digress…
Before the initial gene therapy data were to be
presented by Jerry Mendell from Children’s Nationwide of SMA fame, I had dreaded
the thought of having a hyped-up R&D Day being about divining the
meaning of a biopsy slide or two on the barely-above-background expression of
the microdystrophin transgene.
However, what was presented was anything but borderline. Unlike with eteplirsen
where we were dealing with debatable 1%-type absolute expression levels, there
was robust microdystrophin expression: ~75% of cells expressed the transgene (by IF) with roughly 30% absolute expression of microdystrophin relative dystrophin from a normal
person (by Western blot).
Not only this, the microdystrophin was functional at the molecular level as judged by restoring dystrophin-related
protein complexes serving to protect the muscle from damage by acting as shock absorbers. Accordingly, CK levels in the blood, a marker
of muscle damage and elevated in children with DMD, were robustly (9x) and uniformly
lowered in all 4 boys between the ages of 4 and 7. Add to this the obligatory before-and-after
videos and there is little doubt already at this relatively early stage already (~1-3
months after gene transfer) that AAVrh74.MHCK7.microdystrophin is a powerful agent
applicable to essentially all types of DMD.
On the safety side, there were considerable, but
transient and manageable increases in liver enzymes. This was to be expected, however, considering the very
high doses of AAVRh74 needed to achieve widespread transgene expression in
muscles throughout the body and treating physicians know to look for it.
If the safety holds up and expression continues to be
long-lived, AAVrh74.MHCK7.microdystrophin could render many exon-specific
oligonucleotide splice modulators obsolete. The duration of action is the most concerning issue to me at this point given the attendant cell turnover and
attendant risk of losing episomal gene therapies in patients with muscle damage.