| Literature DB >> 26403534 |
Malcolm Brodlie1, Iram J Haq2, Katie Roberts2, J Stuart Elborn3.
Abstract
Cystic fibrosis is the most common genetically determined, life-limiting disorder in populations of European ancestry. The genetic basis of cystic fibrosis is well established to be mutations in the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) gene that codes for an apical membrane chloride channel principally expressed by epithelial cells. Conventional approaches to cystic fibrosis care involve a heavy daily burden of supportive treatments to combat lung infection, help clear airway secretions and maintain nutritional status. In 2012, a new era of precision medicine in cystic fibrosis therapeutics began with the licensing of a small molecule, ivacaftor, which successfully targets the underlying defect and improves CFTR function in a subgroup of patients in a genotype-specific manner. Here, we review the three main targeted approaches that have been adopted to improve CFTR function: potentiators, which recover the function of CFTR at the apical surface of epithelial cells that is disrupted in class III and IV genetic mutations; correctors, which improve intracellular processing of CFTR, increasing surface expression, in class II mutations; and production correctors or read-through agents, which promote transcription of CFTR in class I mutations. The further development of such approaches offers great promise for future therapeutic strategies in cystic fibrosis.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26403534 PMCID: PMC4582929 DOI: 10.1186/s13073-015-0223-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genome Med ISSN: 1756-994X Impact factor: 11.117
Fig. 1The different classes of CFTR gene mutations and the mechanisms of action of CFTR potentiators (such as ivacaftor), correctors (such as lumacaftor) and production correctors (such as ataluren). CFTR gene mutations are categorized into six classes. Mutation classes I, II, V and VI result in an absence or reduced quantity of CFTR protein at the cel membrane, whereas mutation classes III and IV influence the function or activity of CFTR at the cell membrane. Potentiators increase the function of CFTR channels expressed at the apical surface of epithelial cells; for example, ivacaftor increases the probability of Gly551Asp-CFTR channel opening. Correctors improve the intracellular processing and delivery of mutant CFTR protein, allowing more to reach the cell surface; for example, lumacaftor in Phe508del-CFTR. Production correctors (read-through agents) promote the read-through of premature termination codons in mRNA, generating more production of CFTR protein; for example, ataluren in class I CFTR mutations
Summary of different classes of CFTR mutations
| Mutation class | Nature of defect | Functional consequence | Example | Therapeutic strategy |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| I | CFTR protein synthesis | Reduced CFTR protein expression | Gly542X | Production correctors (ataluren) |
| II | CFTR protein processing | Misfolded CFTR not transported to cell surface | Phe508del | Corrector plus potentiator (lumacaftor plus ivacaftor, VX-661 plus ivacaftor) |
| III | CFTR channel gating | Reduced/lack of CFTR channel opening | Gly551Asp | Potentiator (ivacaftor) |
| IV | CFTR channel conductance | Misshaped CFTR pore restricts Cl− movement | Arg117His | Potentiator (ivacaftor) |
| V | Reduced CFTR protein production | Very low levels of CFTR protein | 3849 + 10 kb C → T | No data available |
| VI | High CFTR protein turnover at cell surface | Functional but unstable CFTR protein at cell surface | 120del23 | No data available |
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Summary of clinical studies investigating the efficacy of ivacaftor in patients with cystic fibrosis and the Gly551Asp mutation
| Study name and reference | Accurso et al. 2010 [ | STRIVE: Ramsey et al. 2011 [ | ENVISION: Davies et al. 2013 [ | Davies et al. 2013 [ | Barry et al. 2014 [ | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Type of study | Phase II RCT | Phase III RCT | Phase III RCT | Phase III RCT | Case–control study | |
| Number of participants |
|
|
|
|
| |
| Ivacaftor: 31; placebo: 8 | Ivacaftor: 83; placebo: 78 | Ivacaftor: 26; placebo: 22 | Ivacaftor: 21; placebo: 35 | |||
| Duration | 28 days | 48 weeks | 48 weeks | 29 days | 9 months | |
| Inclusion criteria | ≥18 years | ≥12 years | 6–11 years | ≥6 years | ≥18 years | |
| ≥1 Gly551Asp allele | ≥1 Gly551Asp allele | ≥1 Gly551AspP allele | ≥1 Gly551Asp allele | ≥1 Gly551Asp allele | ||
| FEV1 > 40 % | FEV1 40–90 % | FEV1 40–105 % | FEV1 > 90 % | FEV1 < 40 % | ||
| Weight ≥15 kg | LCI >7.4 | and/or actively listed for lung transplant | ||||
| Weight ≥15 kg | ||||||
| Outcome measure | Median change from baseline with 150 mg | Treatment effect | Treatment effect | Treatment effect | Changes within treated patients | Treated patients versus controls |
| Mean FEV1 (percentage predicted) | +8.7 ( | 24 weeks: +10.6 ( | 24 weeks: +12.5 ( | – | +4.2 ( | +3.8 versus 0.6 ( |
| 48 weeks: +10.5 (P < 0.001) | 48 weeks: +10 ( | |||||
| Sweat chloride levels (mmol/L) | −59.5 ( | −47.9 ( | −54.3 ( | – | – | – |
| CFQ-R score (points) | +8.3 ( | +8.6 ( | +6.1 ( | – | – | – |
| Nasal potential difference (mV) | −3.5 ( | – | – | – | – | – |
| Weight (kg) | – | +2.7 ( | +2.8 ( | – | +1.8 ( | +2.3 versus 0.6 ( |
| BMI | – | – | BMI-for-age | – | +1.1 kg/m2 ( | +0.84 versus 0.2 kg/m2 ( |
| Time on intravenous antibiotics (days per year) | – | – | – | – | −36 ( | −36 versus +10 ( |
| Pulmonary exacerbations | – | 55 % risk reduction | No significant difference | – | – | – |
| (0.455 hazard ratio: | ||||||
| LCI | – | – | – | −2.16 ( | – | – |
BMI body mass index (the weight in kilograms divided by the square of the height in meters), CFQ-R revised Cystic Fibrosis Questionnaire, FEV percentage predicted forced expiratory volume in 1 second for age, sex and height, LCI lung clearance index, RCT randomized controlled trial
Fig. 2Summary of initial in vitro data on effects of ivacaftor (VX-770) on human bronchial epithelial cells (HBEs) expressing the Gly551Asp CFTR mutation. a Potentiation of CFTR-mediated chloride (Cl−) secretion following treatment with ivacaftor. Chamber techniques were used to record the transepithelial current (I T) resulting from CFTR-mediated Cl− secretion. To isolate the CFTR-mediated I T, a basolateral-to-apical Cl− gradient was established, 30 μM amiloride was added to block the epithelial sodium channel (ENaC), and 10 μM (maximal effective concentration; EC99) forskolin (FSK) was applied to activate the CFTR. The concentration–response curve for ivacaftor in the presence of FSK is shown for Gly551Asp/Phe508del HBEs isolated from the bronchi of a single individual (filled circles; n = 16) and Phe508del HBEs isolated from the bronchi of the three individuals who responded to ivacaftor (open circles; n = 7–24). Left y-axis shows I T responses; right y-axis shows I T normalized to the 10 μM FSK-stimulated I T in non-cystic fibrosis (CF) HBEs (mean ± standard error of the mean). Note that the error bars for the Phe508del HBEs were smaller than the symbol. b Increased airway surface liquid (ASL) following treatment with ivacaftor. Mean (n = 3–9) ASL volume in the absence (open bars) or presence (filled bars) of 10 μM ivacaftor and in the presence of 30 nM vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) and/or 20 μM CFTR inhibitor-172 (inh-172). c Increased ciliary beat frequency (CBF) following treatment with ivacaftor. Mean (± standard error of the mean; n = 6) CBF for wild-type HBEs (filled bars) or Gly551Asp/Phe508del HBEs (open bars) after a 5-day treatment with DMSO, 30 nM VIP, 10 μM ivacaftor, or 30 nM VIP with 10 μM ivacaftor. Single asterisk indicates significantly different (P < 0.05) from vehicle control in Gly551Asp/Phe508del HBEs; double asterisk indicates significantly different (P < 0.05) from vehicle control and ivacaftor alone. EC half-maximum effective concentration. Reproduced with permission from Van Goor et al. [36]
Summary of clinical studies investigating the efficacy of ivacaftor in patients with cystic fibrosis mutations other than Gly551Asp
| Study name and reference | Flume et al. 2012 [ | KONNECTION: De Boeck et al. 2014 [ | KONDUCT: Moss et al. 2015 [ |
|---|---|---|---|
| Type of study | Phase II RCT with open label extension | Phase III randomized crossover trial with open label extension | Phase III RCT |
| Number of participants |
|
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|
| Ivacaftor 34; placebo 35 | |||
| Duration | 16 weeks (96-week extension) | 24 weeks (total) | 24 weeks |
| 8 weeks placebo/ivacaftor | |||
| 8 weeks ivacaftor/placebo | |||
| 12 weeks ivacaftor | |||
| Inclusion criteria | ≥12 years | ≥6 years | ≥6 years |
| Phe508del homozygous | >1 non-Gly551Asp gating mutation | >1 Arg117His mutation | |
| FEV1 > 40 % | FEV1 > 40 % | FEV1 > 40–90 % (>12 years) | |
| FEV1 > 40–105 % (6–11 years) | |||
| Weight >15 kg | |||
| Outcome measure | Treatment effect | Treatment effect after 8 weeks | Treatment effect |
| Mean FEV1 (percentage predicted) | +1.7 ( | +10.7 ( | All ages: +2.1 ( |
| >18 years: +5 ( | |||
| 6–11 years: −6.3 ( | |||
| Sweat chloride levels (mmol/L) | −2.9 ( | −49.2 ( | −24 ( |
| CFQ-R score (points) | No significant differences | +9.6 ( | +8.4 ( |
| Weight (kg) | No significant differences | – | – |
| BMI | No significant differences | BMI-for-age | – |
BMI body mass index (the weight in kilograms divided by the square of the height in meters), CFQ-R revised Cystic Fibrosis Questionnaire, FEV percentage predicted forced expiratory volume in 1 second for age, sex and height, RCT randomized controlled trial
Summary of clinical studies investigating the efficacy of ataluren in patients with nonsense cystic fibrosis mutations
| Study name and reference | Kerem et al. 2008 [ | Sermet-Gaudelus et al. 2010 [ | Wilschanski et al. 2011 [ | Kerem et al. 2014 [ |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Type of study | Phase II randomized crossover trial | Phase II randomized crossover trial | Extension of trial by Kerem et al. 2008 [ | Phase III RCT |
| Number of participants |
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|
|
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| Duration | Cycle 1: 16 mg/kg/day for 14 days; no treatment for 14 days | 2 × 28 days | 12 weeks | 48 weeks |
| Cycle 2: 40 mg/kg/day for 14 days; no treatment for 14 days | Cycle 1: 16 mg/kg/day for 14 days; no treatment for 14 days | Group 1: 16 mg/kg/day | ||
| Inclusion criteria | ≥18 years | 6–18 years | ≥18 years | ≥6 years |
| 2 disease mutations, >1 nonsense | 2 disease mutations, >1 nonsense | 2 disease mutations, >1 nonsense | Nonsense mutations | |
| Sweat chloride >40 mmol/L | Sweat chloride >40 mmol/L | Sweat chloride >40 mmol/L | Sweat chloride >40 mmol/L | |
| Abnormal nasal potential difference | Abnormal nasal potential difference | Abnormal nasal potential difference | Abnormal nasal potential difference | |
| FEV1 > 40 % | FEV1 > 40 % | FEV1 > 40 % | FEV1 40–90 % | |
| O2 saturation ≥92 % room air | O2 saturation ≥92 % room air | O2 saturation ≥92 % room air | O2 saturation ≥92 % room air | |
| Weight ≥25 kg | Weight ≥16 kg | |||
| Outcome measure | Treatment effect | Treatment effect | Treatment effect | Treatment effect |
| Mean FEV1 (percentage predicted) | Small increase ( | No significant difference | No significant difference | +3 % ( |
| Sweat chloride levels (mmol/L) | No significant difference | – | – | – |
| Chloride transport | Cycle 1: −7.1 ( | Cycle 1: −4.6 mV ( | Group 1: −6.8 ( | – |
| Cycle 2: −3.7 ( | Cycle 2: −3.9 mV ( | Group 2: −3.4 ( | ||
| Nasal potential difference (mV) | (Change in basal nasal potential difference) | – | – | – |
| Cycle 1: +3.3 ( | ||||
| Cycle 2: +3.1 ( | ||||
| Weight (kg) | +0.6 kg ( | No significant difference | – | – |
| Pulmonary exacerbations | – | – | – | Rate ratio 0.77 ( |
FEV percentage predicted forced expiratory volume in 1 second for age, sex and height, RCT randomized controlled trial
Summary of clinical studies investigating the efficacy of lumacaftor and ivacaftor in patients with Phe508del mutations
| Study name and reference | Boyle et al. 2014 [ | TRAFFIC and TRANSPORT: Wainwright et al. 2015 [ |
|---|---|---|
| Type of study | Phase II RCT | Phase III RCT |
| Number of participants and study design | Cohort 1: | Cohort 1: |
| 64 homozygotes |
| |
| Lumacaftor 200 mg/day for 14 days | Lumacaftor 600 mg/day plus ivacaftor 250 mg every 12 h | |
| Followed by: | Cohort 2: | |
| Ivacaftor 150 mg/250 mg every 12 h for 7 days |
| |
| OR | Lumacaftor 400 mg every 12 h plus ivacaftor 250 mg every 12 h | |
| Placebo for 21 days | Cohort 3: | |
| Cohorts 2 and 3: |
| |
| 96 homozygotes | Placabo plus placebo | |
| 28 compound heterozygotes | ||
| Cohort 2: | ||
| Lumacaftor 200 mg, 400 mg, 600 mg/day for 56 days | ||
| Cohort 3: | ||
| Lumacaftor 400 mg every 12 h for 56 days | ||
| Followed by: | ||
| Ivacaftor 250 mg every 12 h after 28 days | ||
| OR | ||
| Placebo for 56 days | ||
| Duration | Cohort 1: 21 days | 24 weeks |
| Cohorts 2 and 3: 56 days | ||
| Inclusion criteria | ≥18 years | ≥12 years |
| >1 Phe508del allele | Phe508del homozygous | |
| FEV1 > 40 % | FEV1 40–90 % | |
| Outcome measure | Treatment effect | Pooled analysis of treatment effect in TRAFFIC and TRANSORT |
| Mean FEV1 (percentage predicted) | Cohort 2 with lumacaftor 600 mg/day: +5.6 ( | Cohort 1: +3.3 ( |
| Cohort 3: no significant differences | Cohort 2: +2.8 ( | |
| Sweat chloride levels (mmol/L) | Cohort 1 with 250 mg ivacaftor: −9.1 mmol/L ( | – |
| CFQ-R score (points) | – | Cohort 1: 3.1 ( |
| Cohort 2: 2.2 ( | ||
| BMI | – | Cohort 1: 0.28 ( |
| Cohort 2: 0.24 ( | ||
| Pulmonary exacerbations | – | Cohort 1: rate ratio 0.7 ( |
| Cohort 2: rate ratio 0.61 ( |
BMI body mass index (the weight in kilograms divided by the square of the height in meters), CFQ-R revised Cystic Fibrosis Questionnaire, FEV percentage predicted forced expiratory volume in 1 second for age, sex and height, RCT randomized controlled trial