| Literature DB >> 27499018 |
Ari Zimran1, Gloria Durán2, Pilar Giraldo3, Hanna Rosenbaum4, Fiorina Giona5, Milan Petakov6, Eduardo Terreros Muñoz7, Sergio Eduardo Solorio-Meza8, Peter A Cooper9, Sheeba Varughese9, Sari Alon10, Raul Chertkoff10.
Abstract
Taliglucerase alfa, the first available plant cell-expressed recombinant therapeutic protein, is an enzyme replacement therapy approved for Gaucher disease (GD). PB-06-001, a pivotal phase 3, multicenter, randomized, double-blind, parallel-dose study investigated taliglucerase alfa 30 or 60U/kg every other week through 9months in treatment-naïve adults with GD; 30-month extension study PB-06-003 followed. Patients completing PB-06-001 and PB-06-003 could continue treatment in PB-06-007. Nineteen patients enrolled in PB-06-007 (30U/kg, n=8; 60U/kg, n=9; dose adjusted, n=2); 17 completed 5 total years of treatment. In these 3 groups, respectively, taliglucerase alfa resulted in mean decreases in spleen volume (-8.7, -6.9, -12.4 multiples of normal), liver volume (-0.6, -0.4, -0.5 multiples of normal), chitotriosidase activity (-83.1%, -93.4%, -87.9%), and chemokine (CC motif) ligand 18 concentration (-66.7%, -83.3%, -78.9%), as well as mean increases in hemoglobin concentration (+2.1, +2.1, +1.8mg/dL) and platelet count (+31,871, +106,800, +34,000/mm3). The most common adverse events were nasopharyngitis and arthralgia. Most adverse events were mild/moderate; no serious adverse events were considered treatment-related. These results demonstrate continued improvement of disease parameters during 5years of taliglucerase alfa therapy in 17 treatment-naive patients with no new safety concerns, extending the taliglucerase alfa clinical efficacy and safety dataset. This study was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as NCT01422187.Entities:
Keywords: Anemia; Chemokine (CC motif) ligand 18; Chitotriosidase; Enzyme replacement therapy; Gaucher disease; Hepatomegaly; Splenomegaly; Taliglucerase alfa; Thrombocytopenia
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27499018 DOI: 10.1016/j.bcmd.2016.07.002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood Cells Mol Dis ISSN: 1079-9796 Impact factor: 3.039