| Literature DB >> 29043014 |
Marc A Riedl1, Jonathan A Bernstein2, Timothy Craig3, Aleena Banerji4, Markus Magerl5, Marco Cicardi6, Hilary J Longhurst7, Mustafa M Shennak8, William H Yang9, Jennifer Schranz10, Jovanna Baptista10, Paula J Busse11.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Hereditary angioedema (HAE) is characterized by recurrent attacks of subcutaneous or submucosal edema. Attacks are unpredictable, debilitating, and have a significant impact on quality of life. Patients may be prescribed prophylactic therapy to prevent angioedema attacks. Current prophylactic treatments may be difficult to administer (i.e., intravenously), require frequent administrations or are not well tolerated, and breakthrough attacks may still occur frequently. Lanadelumab is a subcutaneously-administered monoclonal antibody inhibitor of plasma kallikrein in clinical development for prophylaxis of hereditary angioedema attacks. A Phase 1b study supported its efficacy in preventing attacks. A Phase 3, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel-arm study has been completed and an open-label extension is currently ongoing. METHODS/Entities:
Keywords: Bradykinin; C1-inhibitor; Hereditary angioedema; Lanadelumab; Monoclonal antibody; Orphan disease; Plasma kallikrein; Prophylaxis; Rare disease
Year: 2017 PMID: 29043014 PMCID: PMC5629784 DOI: 10.1186/s13601-017-0172-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Transl Allergy ISSN: 2045-7022 Impact factor: 5.871
Current therapeutics for long-term prophylaxis in HAE
| Prophylactic treatment | Route of administration | Dosing frequency | Efficacy | Safety |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Plasma-derived C1-INH | Intravenous | Every 3–4 days | Effective in reducing attack rate [ | Risk of thromboembolic events [ |
| Androgens | Oral | Daily | Treatment associated with significantly fewer and less severe attacks [ | Most common side effects: weight gain, virilization, headaches, myalgia, mood changes, menstrual disorders, liver dysfunction, increased serum lipids [ |
| Tranexamic acid | Oral | Daily | Not licensed for long-term prophylaxis, although often used for this indication [ | Gastrointestinal upset, myalgia, theoretical risk of thrombosis [ |
C1-INH C1 inhibitor, HAE hereditary angioedema
Safety and efficacy results from Phase 1a and 1b studies with lanadelumab
| Study | Population | N | Treatments | TEAEs | Anti-drug antibodies | Efficacy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Phase 1aa | Healthy subjects | 32 | Single dose: | Most common TEAE was headache (25% of both placebo- and lanadelumab-treated patients) | None | NA |
| Phase 1bb | Patients with HAE | 37 | Two doses: | Most common treatment emergent adverse events for lanadelumab versus placebo were angioedema attacks (38 vs 69%), injection site pain (25 vs 23%), and headache (17 vs 23%) | Positive results in 3/92 (3.3%) post-dose samples from 2/23 patients (8.7%) | Angioedema attack rate decreased by 100% in 300 mg group (P < 0.0001) and by 88% in 400 mg group (P = 0.005) |
AE adverse event; HAE hereditary angioedema; NA not applicable; TEAE treatment-emergent adverse event
aDX-2930-01 (NCT01923207) [6]
bDX-2930-02 (NCT02093923) [7]
Fig. 1Overview of study design. DB double-blind; HAE hereditary angioedema, LTP long-term prophylaxis; OLE open-label extension. aFor rollover patients, Day 0 of the open-label extension study coincides with Day 182 of the double-blind study