| Literature DB >> 27834756 |
Derralynn A Hughes1, Kathleen Nicholls2, Suma P Shankar3, Gere Sunder-Plassmann4, David Koeller5, Khan Nedd6, Gerard Vockley7, Takashi Hamazaki6,8, Robin Lachmann9, Toya Ohashi10, Iacopo Olivotto11, Norio Sakai12, Patrick Deegan13, David Dimmock14, François Eyskens15, Dominique P Germain16, Ozlem Goker-Alpan17, Eric Hachulla18, Ana Jovanovic19, Charles M Lourenco20, Ichiei Narita21, Mark Thomas22, William R Wilcox23, Daniel G Bichet24, Raphael Schiffmann25, Elizabeth Ludington26, Christopher Viereck27, John Kirk27, Julie Yu27, Franklin Johnson27, Pol Boudes28, Elfrida R Benjamin27, David J Lockhart29, Carrolee Barlow30, Nina Skuban27, Jeffrey P Castelli27, Jay Barth27, Ulla Feldt-Rasmussen31.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Fabry disease is an X-linked lysosomal storage disorder caused by GLA mutations, resulting in α-galactosidase (α-Gal) deficiency and accumulation of lysosomal substrates. Migalastat, an oral pharmacological chaperone being developed as an alternative to intravenous enzyme replacement therapy (ERT), stabilises specific mutant (amenable) forms of α-Gal to facilitate normal lysosomal trafficking.Entities:
Keywords: Fabry disease; Pharmacological chaperone; enzyme replacement therapy; lyso-Gb3; lysosomal storage disorder
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27834756 PMCID: PMC5502308 DOI: 10.1136/jmedgenet-2016-104178
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Genet ISSN: 0022-2593 Impact factor: 6.318
Figure 1Study design and patient disposition. ERT, enzyme replacement therapy; OLE, open-label extension.
Baseline characteristics of the safety population
| Migalastat | ERT | All | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age (years)±SEM (min, max) | 50.5±2.3 | 46.3±3.3 | 48.9±1.9 |
| Sex, n (%) | |||
| Male | 16 (44) | 9 (43) | 25 (44) |
| Female | 20 (56) | 12 (57) | 32 (56) |
| Years since diagnosis (mean±SEM) | 10.2±2.0 | 13.4±2.6 | 11.4±1.6 |
| 24-hour protein (mg/24 hours, mean±SEM) | 267±69 | 360±150 | 301±70 |
| Median | 129 | 108 | 128 |
| IQR | 393 | 483 | 408 |
| Min, max | 0, 2282 | 0, 3154 | 0, 3154 |
| mGFRiohexol (mL/min/1.73 m2, mean±SEM) | 82.4±3.0 | 83.6±5.2 | 82.8±2.6 |
| eGFRCKD-EPI (mL/min/1.73 m2, mean±SEM) | 89.6±3.7 | 95.8±4.1 | 91.9±2.8 |
| eGFRMDRD (mL/min/1.73 m2, mean±SEM) | 83.6±3.7 | 87.8±19.0 | 85.1±28.0 |
| Left ventricular mass index (g/m2) | 97.5±4.7 | 94.6±5.6 | 96.5±3.6 |
| ERT, n (%) | |||
| Agalsidase beta | 11 (31) | 8 (38) | 19 (33) |
| Agalsidase alfa | 24 (67) | 13 (62) | 37 (65) |
| Use of ACEI/ARB/RI, n (%) | 16 (44) | 11 (52) | 27 (47) |
| Amenable | 34 (94) | 19 (90) | 53 (93) |
Based on randomised and treated patients. There were no statistically significant differences between treatment groups for these parameters (t-test; Fisher's exact).
ACEI, ACE inhibitor; ARB, angiotensin II receptor blocker; eGFRCKD-EPI, estimated GFR using the Chronic Kidney Disease Epidemiology Collaboration formula; eGFRMDRD, annualised change in estimated GFR using the Modification of Diet in Renal Disease; ERT, enzyme replacement therapy; GFR, glomerular filtration rate; mGFRiohexol, measured GFR using iohexol clearance; RI, renin inhibitor.
Amenable mutations of enrolled and treated patients and the corresponding clinical phenotype
| Amino acid change | Literature phenotype | Amino acid change | Literature phenotype |
|---|---|---|---|
| p.M96I | Non-classic | p.G260A | Classic |
| p.L32P (n=3) | Unknown | p.Q279E | Non-classic |
| p.G35R | Non-classic | p.M284T | Classic |
| p.D55V/Q57L | Unknown* | p.M296I | Non-classic |
| p.G85D (n=4) | Unknown* | p.R301P (n=3) | Classic |
| p.A97V | Non-classic | p.R301Q | Both |
| p.R112G | Unknown* | p.G328A | Classic |
| p.R112H | Non-classic | p.Q312R | Non-classic |
| p.A143T (n=3) | Non-classic | p.D322E (n=4) | Classic |
| p.A156T (n=6) | Classic | p.R356Q | Non-classic |
| p.P205T | Classic | p.R363H | Both |
| p.N215S (n=10) | Non-classic | p.L403S | Classic |
| p.Y216C | Classic | p.P409T | Unknown* |
| p.I253S | Unknown* |
Number of patients with each mutation is 1 unless indicated otherwise.
To date, 269 GLA mutations have been categorised as amenable to migalastat based on the Good Laboratory Practice human embryonic kidney assay. The supportive references for the literature phenotypes are provided in the online supplementary table S3.
*Ten of the 11 patients, including at least one patient for each of the six unique mutations (3 of 4 for p.G85D), had baseline disease in ≥2 organ systems.
Annualised GFR from baseline to month 18
| ANCOVA* | Migalastat, mean±SEM† (95% CI), | ERT, mean±SEM† (95% CI), | Means within | >50% overlap of the 95% CI |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| eGFRCKD-EPI | −0.40±0.93 | −1.03±1.29 | Yes | Yes |
| mGFRiohexol | −4.35±1.64 | −3.24±2.27 | Yes | Yes |
| eGFRMDRD | −1.51±0.95 | −1.53±1.32 | NA | NA |
GFR=mL/min/1.73 m2/year.
*mITT (randomised patients with amenable mutations receiving at least one dose of study medication and having a baseline and postbaseline efficacy measures of eGFRCKD-EPI and mGFRiohexol).
†Least-squares means.
ANCOVA, analysis of covariance; eGFRCKD-EPI, estimated GFR using the Chronic Kidney Disease Epidemiology Collaboration formula; eGFRMDRD, annualised change in eGFR using the Modification of Diet in Renal Disease; ERT, enzyme replacement therapy; GFR, glomerular filtration rate; mGFRiohexol, measured GFR using iohexol clearance; mITT, modified intention-to-treat population; NA, not assessed.
Composite clinical outcome: number of patients (mITT population)
| Component | Migalastat (n=34) | ERT (n=18) |
|---|---|---|
| Renal | 8 (24%) | 6 (33%) |
| Cardiac | 2 (6%) | 3 (17%) |
| CNS | 0 (0%) | 1 (6%) |
| Death | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) |
| Any | 10 (29%) | 8 (44%) |
Analyses undertaken in the mITT patients (randomised patients with amenable mutations receiving at least one dose of study drug and having baseline and postbaseline mGFRiohexol and eGFRCKD-EPI measures). Proteinuria event defined as >33% increase in 24-hour urine protein and level >300 mg; GFR event defined as >15 mL/min decline in eGFRCKD-EPI and level <90 mL/min/1.73 m2/year. Two patients in the ERT group experienced one cardiac and one renal event each.
CNS, central nervous system; eGFRCKD-EPI, estimated GFR using the Chronic Kidney Disease Epidemiology Collaboration formula; ERT, enzyme replacement therapy; GFR, glomerular filtration rate; mGFRiohexol, measured GFR using iohexol clearance; mITT, modified intention to treat; TIA, transient ischaemic attack; VT, ventricular tachycardia.
Echocardiography-derived changes in patients with amenable mutations
| Parameter | Baseline mean | Change from baseline to month 18 |
|---|---|---|
| Migalastat: LVMi (g/m2) | ||
| All (n=33) (% abnormal) | 95.3 (39) | −6.6 (−11.0 to −2.2)* |
| LVH† at baseline (9 females and 4 males) | 116.7 | −8.4 (−15.7 to 2.6) |
| ERT: LVMi (g/m2) | ||
| All (n=16) (% abnormal) | 92.9 (31) | −2.0 (−11.0 to 7−0) |
| LVH† at baseline (n=5) | 123.3 (100%) | 4.5 (−20.9 to 30.0) |
| Migalastat: LVPWT (cm) | ||
| All (n=33) | 1.17 | −0.035 (−0.077 to 0.007) |
| ERT: LVPWT (cm) | ||
| All (n=16) | 1.08 | 0.029 (−0.037 to 0.094) |
| Migalastat: IVSWT (cm) | ||
| All (n=33) | 1.16 | 0.058 (−0.200 to 0.140) |
| ERT: IVSWT (cm) | ||
| All (n=16) | 1.18 | 0.037 (−0.051 to 0.124) |
LVMi (g/m2): normal: female, 43–95, male, 49–115; LVPMT (cm): normal: female, 0.6–<1.0, male, 0.6–<1.1; IVSWT (cm): normal: female, 0.6–0.9, male, 0.6–1.0.
*Statistically significant (95% CI does not overlap zero).
†LVH; defined as LVMi (g/m2) >95 (females) or >115 (males).
ERT, enzyme replacement therapy; IVSWT, intraventricular septal wall thickness; LVH, left ventricular hypertrophy; LVMi, left ventricular mass index; LVPMT, left ventricular posterior wall thickness; LVPWT, left ventricular posterior wall thickness diastolic.