| Literature DB >> 26662359 |
Márcia Waddington Cruz1, Merril D Benson2.
Abstract
Transthyretin (TTR)-related amyloidosis (ATTR) is a devastating disease which affects a combination of organs including the heart and the peripheral nerves, and which has a fatal outcome if not treated within a average of 10 years. Tafamidis, or 2-(3,5-dichloro-phenyl)-benzoxazole-6-carboxylic acid, selectively binds to TTR with negative cooperativity and kinetically stabilizes wild-type native TTR and mutant TTR; tafamidis therefore has the potential to halt the amyloidogenic cascade initiated by TTR tetramer dissociation, monomer misfolding, and aggregation. The first tafamidis trial, Fx-005, evaluated the effect of 18 months of tafamidis treatment (20 mg once daily) on disease progression, as well as assessing its safety in TTR-FAP Val30Met patients. The secondary objective of this trial was to study the pharmacodynamic stabilization of mutated TTR. Tafamidis proved effective in reducing the progress of neuropathy, and in maintaining the nutritional status and quality of life of stage 1 (able to walk without support) Val3OMet TTR-FAP patients. Furthermore, TTR stabilization was achieved in more than 90% of patients. An extension study, Fx-006, was conducted to determine the long-term safety and tolerability of tafamidis and to assess the efficacy of the drug on slowing disease progression. No significant safety or tolerability issues were noticed. Taken together, the results from both trials indicated that the beneficial effects of tafamidis were sustained over a 30-month period and that starting treatment early is desirable. Results are expected from an extended open-label study but data that have already been presented show that long-term use of tafamidis in Val30Met patients is associated with reduced progression in polyneuropathy. Tafamidis was initially approved for commercial use in Europe in 2011 and has since been approved for use in Japan, Mexico, and Argentina where it is used as a first-line treatment option for patients with early-stage TTR-FAP. Patients should be carefully followed at referral centers to ascertain the individual response to treatment. In cases of discontinuation, liver transplantation and enrollment in clinical trials of novel drugs aimed mostly toward suppression of TTR production are options.Entities:
Keywords: Amyloidosis; Familial amyloid polyneuropathy; Tafamidis; Transthyretin
Year: 2015 PMID: 26662359 PMCID: PMC4685869 DOI: 10.1007/s40120-015-0031-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurol Ther ISSN: 2193-6536
Fig. 1The amyloidogenic cascade is initiated by tetramer dissociation into monomers that misfold and aggregate causing toxicity. The site of binding of tafamidis is marked. Transthyretin (TTR). Source: with permission from Ref. [5]
Fig. 2Mechanism of action of tafamidis binding to thyroxin-binding sites at the transthyretin tetramer preventing dissociation into misfolded monomers and formation of fibrils and amyloid. a Tafamidis prevents dissociation into misfolded monomers and formation of amyloid fibrils. b Amyloid deposits in peripheral nerves in different tissue stainings (H&E, Gomori trichrome and Congo red)
Summary of tafamidis trials
| Protocol | Design | Number of participants | Primary endpoints | AEs | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fx-005 [ | Phase II/III, randomized-controlled, double-blind trial Treatment: placebo or tafamidis 20 mg once daily for 18 months | 128 Val30Met TTR mutation proved patients | NIS-LL, Norfolk QOL-DN | Same incidence of AEs and SAEs in both treatment arms; urinary infection and diarrhea more frequent in the placebo group | EE population NIS-LL responders: 60% in tafamidis group, 38.1% in placebo group ( |
| Fx-006 [ | Single-arm, open-label extension of Fx-005 to evaluate safety and efficacy of tafamidis Treatment: tafamidis 20 mg once daily for 12 months | 86 Val30Met TTR mutation proved patients | NIS-LL, Norfolk QOL-DN | No new safety signs | Beneficial effects of tafamidis were sustained over a 30-month period with gradual NIS-LL increase to month 30; early-start treatment is desirable |
| FX1A-201 [ | Multicenter, open-label trial Treatment: tafamidis 20 mg once daily for 12 months | 21 TTR mutation patients excluding Val30Met and Val122Ile | TTR stabilization at week 6 | Most common AEs: falls (24%), diarrhea (24%), and extremity pain (19%) | TTR stabilization at week 6 was achieved in 18 (94.7%) of 19 patients in the ITT population |
| FX1B-201 [ | Phase II, open-label trial Treatment: tafamidis 20 mg once daily for 12 months with routine standard of care | 31 wild-type CM patients and 4 TTR V122I CM patients | TTR stabilization at week 6 | Well tolerated; 7 of 31 wild-type CM patients had bouts of diarrhea | 96.8% achieved TTR stabilization after 6 weeks; Kaplan–Meier analysis of survival from time of diagnosis was 87.5% at 30 months; 25.7% experienced at least one cardiovascular-related hospitalization; 25.7% experienced the composite endpoint of death or cardiovascular-related hospitalization; NYHA was improved or preserved for 75% of patients after 12 months |
AEs adverse events, CM cardiomyopathy, EE efficacy evaluable, NIS-LL neuropathy impairment score in the lower limbs, Norfolk QOL-DN Norfolk quality of life-diabetic neuropathy questionnaire, NYHA New York heart association, SAEs serious adverse events, TTR transthyretin, TQoL quality of life