With the approval of ONPATTRO and the current overall
clinical picture, in particular the highly encouraging safety profile seen with PCSK9-targeting Inclisiran in well over a 1000 subjects (à The Medicines Company and Alnylam),
the RNAi mechanism can be considered a clinically validated new drug modality.
Liver enzyme elevations, however, have been
seen across a few clinical programs. This includes ALN-AAT for alpha-1
antitrypsin-related liver disease, ALN-AT3 for hemophilia, and now also Givosiran (ALN-AS1). The most likelyreason for these observations is that the minimization of off-targeting had
been neglected for these ‘2nd-generation GalNAc-RNAi triggers’,
thereby raising the risk that the relatively high off-target noise (dozens of
off-targets) can be detrimental to target cell health.
To wit, the spectrum of off-target genes varies
tremendously from RNAi trigger sequence to RNAi trigger sequence and affects
biologically unrelated genes. This makes
it very hard to predict whether the off-target noise will have adverse effects
or will be just irrelevant noise to the cell. Not helping is the fact that lab animals due to
their genome sequence differences cannot model the safety around off-targeting. The hope is that perhaps organ explants or mice
with humanized organs (e.g. humanized mouse livers) will be better predictors since the
target cell is almost the same as in the clinical setting.
Marked liver enzyme elevation in Givosiran pivotal
trial
This week, Alnylam provided an interim read-out
from the ENVISION trial, the registrational study with GalNAc-siRNA Givosiran for acute hepatic porphyria (AHP). AHP is a rare
disease caused by defects in heme synthesis. This results in the accumulation of toxic
intermediates such as PBG and ALA which can cause a range of symptoms, including
severe pain attacks.
The study envisioned an interim biomarker read-out in a first cohort of patients that had been treated for at least 3 months with study drug. It had been agreed before
with the FDA that if lowering of ALA could be found in this read-out, it might
form the basis for an accelerated approval.
Unsurprisingly, urinary ALA levels were
reported to be statistically significantly lower in patients treated with
Givosiran compared to placebo- in-line with the phase I/II experience (p<0 .001="" span="" style="mso-spacerun: yes;"> 0>
Unfortunately, there were numerically more than
twice as many Givosiran-treated sujects (5/23) that experienced a serious
adverse event (SAE) than in the placebo group (2/20). One of the Givosiran-treated subjects had to discontinue treatment due to liver enzyme levels above the pre-specified threshold (>8x upper
limit of normal). While no liver enzyme
elevations had been reported in a similar number of patients in the earlier-stage
studies, I wished the company could have talked more about the presence of
other liver enzyme increases of less than 8x ULN to get a better sense of the magnitude of the problem and whether such incidence would be compatible with giving the drugs in a
chronic fashion.
Having said that, with 5 SAEs in 23 subjects
treated a little more than 3 months on average (on top of a case of drug-related
anaphylaxis in the phase I/II open-label extension study), SAEs that might be
drug-related, would already seem to invalidate Givosiran being used in those
with the same genetic condition, but not necessarily with recurrent pain
attacks. This would have tremendously extended the market opportunity of Givosiran.
In the same vein, with the present safety questions,
an accelerated approval that would shave off a few months before the full
dataset will be available in early 2019, can now be ruled out with high certainty.
To add insult to injury, Akcea reported earlier this week that a GalNAc-version of the competitive RNaseH antisense
technology did not suffer from thrombocytopenia as unconjugated ASOs typically
do, thus putting ASOs back in the race for liver targets. Still, in the long-term and in particular
with the more specific new GalNAc-RNAi trigger chemistries, RNAi should win for
most liver targets, but for some targets where either RNAi has inherent difficulties achieving
high potencies or in cases where off-targeting toxicity still strikes (albeit at a much lower
rate), RNaseH ASOs may emerge victorious.
Disclosure: long ALNY, but have taken some off
the table following these data and questions around cardiac issues with
ONPATTRO; it is important now for Inclisiran to re-instill confidence in the
safety of RNAi Therapeutics; short AKCA as I do not believe that their current
TTR and triglyceride-lowering drugs TEGSEDI and WAYLIVRA, respectively, can be
commercially successful drugs and its artificially bloated market cap is a
result of the low float and short interest in this stock and not a reflection of the value that the market sees in Akcea.
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