Results from the Phase 1/2 trial (NEO1) and its ongoing extension study (NEO-EXT) show consistent safety data for Sanofi’s investigational avalglucosidase alfa (neoGAA) in patients with late-onset Pompe disease (LOPD) dosed over 3.5 years, without evidence of inhibition of enzyme activity over the analysis period. The study results were presented today at the 14th Annual WORLDSymposium 2018 in San Diego, California.
The NEO1 study enrolled 24 LOPD patients, including 10 patients who had not previously been on treatment and 14 who had been treated with alglucosidase alfa for at least nine months. After completing NEO1, in which patients received avalglucosidase alfa at 5, 10 or 20 mg/kg once every other week, 19 of 24 patients entered the NEO-EXT study, of which 18 are still enrolled. All patients in the NEO-EXT study have been switched to receive avalglucosidase alfa 20 mg/kg once every other week. Participants who remain in the study continue receiving avalglucosidase alfa for a planned 6-year follow-up.
Treatment-emergent adverse events (AEs) were mostly mild across both studies at all dose levels. The most common AEs were nausea, headache and fatigue, each occurring in 3/24 patients, and dizziness, redness of the skin (erythema), muscle spasm, muscle pain (myalgia), shortness of breath (dyspnea) and rash, each occurring in 2/24 patients. No deaths or life-threatening AEs have been reported. In addition, no patient developed immunoglobulin E antibodies or tested positive for inhibition of enzyme activity during the analysis period of the NEO1 study. One participant discontinued from NEO1 due to a serious AE and infusion-associated reaction of respiratory distress and chest discomfort. One person has discontinued NEO-EXT for personal reasons.
“These results are reassuring and indicate that the safety data for avalglucosidase alfa is consistent in longer term treatment with what we saw in the initial six months of the trial,” said Loren D.M. Pena, M.D., Ph.D, Associate Professor of Pediatrics at Duke University School of Medicine. “These data add to the body of research supporting avalglucosidase alfa as a potential new treatment option for patients living with Pompe disease.”
“The development of avalglucosidase alfa builds on Sanofi’s decades of commitment to research targeting new treatments for unmet needs in rare diseases, including Pompe disease,” said Rand Sutherland, M.D., Global Head, Rare Disease Development for Sanofi. “These results provide important additional momentum to our efforts to potentially bring avalglucosidase alfa to patients with Pompe disease.”