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Interim Results from a Dose Escalating Study of AMT-060 (AAV5-hFIX) Gene Transfer in Adult Patients with Severe Hemophilia B

Introduction: The development of gene transfer for hemophilia is advancing rapidly and offers the potential to shift the disease severity from severe to mild with a single treatment. AMT-060 consists of an AAV5 vector with a gene cassette containing an LP1 liver specific promoter and codon-optimized...

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Published in:Blood 2016-12, Vol.128 (22), p.2314-2314
Main Authors: Leebeek, Frank W.G., Tangelder, Marco, Meijer, Karina, Castaman, Giancarlo, Cattaneo, Federica, Coppens, Michiel, Kampmann, Peter, Klamroth, Robert, Schutgens, Roger E.G., Seifried, Erhard, Schwaeble, Joachim, Boenig, Halvard, Hendriks, Maaike, Corzo, Deya, Miesbach, Wolfgang A.
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Introduction: The development of gene transfer for hemophilia is advancing rapidly and offers the potential to shift the disease severity from severe to mild with a single treatment. AMT-060 consists of an AAV5 vector with a gene cassette containing an LP1 liver specific promoter and codon-optimized wild type hFIX gene that has previously been shown to result in durable increases in FIX activity of at least 4 years1. This phase 1/2 study aims to investigate the safety and efficacy of AMT-060 in adult patients with severe hemophilia B. Methods: This is a multi-national, multi-center, open-label, dose-escalating study in patients with FIX activity ≤ 2% of normal, and a severe bleeding phenotype. To be eligible, patients had to require either prophylactic exogenous FIX, or on-demand exogenous FIX with more than 4 bleeds per year or suffer from hemophilic arthropathy. Ten patients were treated in two subsequent, escalating dose cohorts, with AMT-060 5x 1012 gc/kg (n=5) or 2x 1013 gc/kg (n=5). Patients received AMT-060 via a single intravenous infusion over 30 minutes. Efficacy assessments include endogenous FIX activity, measured at least 10 days after the most recent administration of exogenous FIX; reduction of exogenous FIX use; and annualized spontaneous bleeding rates. Safety assessments include treatment related adverse events and immunological assessments, including T-cell response to capsid antigens. Results: There were no screen failures for pre-existing antibodies against AAV5. The age of enrolled patients ranged from 33 to 72 years. At enrollment, nine patients were on FIX prophylaxis, and one patient in the high dose cohort used on-demand FIX therapy. At the time of submission, all ten patients have received AMT-060. The mean of all endogenous FIX activity values after cessation of prophylaxis in the low-dose cohort was 5.4% (95% CI 5.0-5.8%, range 3.1-6.7%; n=4), and stable during the 39 weeks of follow-up. Four out of five patients in the low-dose cohort were able to stop FIX prophylaxis. These patients demonstrated a mean reduction in annualized total FIX usage of 82% after treatment with AMT-060. For all five patients in the low-dose cohort, the mean annualized total FIX usage declined 75% after treatment with AMT-060. Following AMT-060 administration, one patient in the lower dose cohort had a mild, asymptomatic, elevation of ALT at week 10 that resolved with a seven weeks course of tapering prednisolone. No change in FIX activity, and no T-ce
ISSN:0006-4971
1528-0020
DOI:10.1182/blood.V128.22.2314.2314