Yesterday,
Arrowhead revealed the abstract for data on its new HBV RNAi drug candidate to be presented at the big annual
Liver Meeting in November (AASLD). The
data continue to support highly potent knockdown of not only the surface antigen
(HBsAg), but also other HBV components.
Dose response
issues
When Arrowhead
announced initial first-in-patient knockdown data from its 3rd
generation HBV RNAi candidate ARO-HBV, I found it suspicious for them to only reveal
data for the 100mg and 200mg cohorts although more data was available at the time. Curiously,
the new data seem to suggest that there was no apparent benefit from going
higher than 100mg in dose, at least when dosed with the current monthly
frequency.
Whether
there is significantly worsening safety with increasing dose remains to
be seen.
HBeAg positive/negative
dichotomy
Similarly
(but not as earth-shattering for sure) to the history of a prior HBV RNAi candidate by the company before, ARC-520, however, Arrowhead
was able to learn more about its drug candidate as they went along in the
study. In particular, the first dose
escalation cohorts (100, 200, 300, and 400mg monthly x3) encompassed a mix of HBeAg positive and negative patients,
with 13 out of 16 being HBeAg negative.
When
Arrowhead then decided the last 2 cohorts to be just HBeAg positive, a remarkable
increase in drug response was observed: whereas it took the predominantly HBeAg-negative
patients 70-90 days to achieve 1.5log reductions in HBsAg, it looks like the
pure HBeAg-positive patients only take 30-40 days to achieve the same.
Ergo, the
reason why no clean dose response had been seen in the first cohorts is best explained
by the fact that they were mixed and at that small cohorts.
Trigger choice
likely explanation
ARO-HBV
comprises 2 RNAi triggers: one that targets all
(intact) HBV mRNA (X trigger) and one that makes sure the surface antigen
is hit (S trigger) even in those patients with integrated HBV. These typically lose the corresponding DNA element targeted by the X trigger during integration.
In the
early days of RNAi, there was some controversy about the usefulness of using 2
or more triggers against the same target in terms of knockdown potency and
specificity. When I first started to practice
RNAi in the lab in 2003, it was my experience that when you combined a very potent
trigger with a less potent one, the knockdown was less than with the highly
potent one alone. As a result, I am a
firm believer in the concept of RNAi trigger competition.
In the case
of ARO-HBV it means that in HBeAg negative patients that have lost the X-trigger
DNA, there will be one sterile/inactive trigger somewhat blunting the potency
of the active one.
HBV biology
is certainly complex and downstream events could also account for final knockdown
differences. Accordingly, in the HBeAg-only
cohorts it appears from the early
observations that the nuc-experienced patients that in previous studies corresponded to patients that had lost the X-trigger-targeted elements by study enrollment not only responded as
well, but in fact slightly better than the nuc-naïve patients. It will therefore be important to learn more
about their HBV integration status at AASLD to confirm or disprove the competition theory.
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