| Literature DB >> 29569190 |
Dalvir Kular1, Iain C Macdougall2.
Abstract
Anemia is a common complication of chronic kidney disease (CKD) in adult and pediatric patients. It has traditionally been treated with erythropoietin therapy and iron supplementation, with great success. With the discovery of the major transcription factor hypoxia inducible factor (HIF) for the erythropoietin gene in 1992, molecules were created that inhibit the HIF prolyl-hydroxylase enzyme. This new class of drug-called HIF stabilizers, or HIF prolyl-hydroxylase inhibitors-prevents the proteasomal degradation of HIF-α, thereby inducing upregulation of the erythropoietin gene. This new strategy for treating CKD anemia is already in phase III clinical trials in adults, and the potential advantages of this therapy are that it is orally active (thereby avoiding injections), and patients are exposed to lower circulating levels of erythropoietin. The long-term safety of this strategy, however, requires elucidation in these trials, particularly since there are many other hypoxia-sensitive genes, notably, angiogenic factors such as vascular endothelial growth factors (VEGF), as well as glycolytic enzymes. As with all new therapies, it is only once a positive benefit: risk profile has been ascertained in adults that the treatment will translate across into pediatrics. Specific issues in the pediatric CKD population are discussed in this review.Entities:
Keywords: Anemia; Chronic kidney disease; HIF prolyl-hydroxylase inhibitor; HIF stabilizer
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29569190 PMCID: PMC6349802 DOI: 10.1007/s00467-017-3849-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pediatr Nephrol ISSN: 0931-041X Impact factor: 3.714
Fig. 1Regulation of hypoxia inducible factor (HIF) activity. HIF-PH hypoxia inducible factor prolyl-hydroxylase, HIF-α hypoxia inducible factor alpha, HIF-β hypoxia inducible factor beta, HRE hypoxia response element, O oxygen, OH hydroxyl group, VHL von Hippel-Lindau, EPO erythropoietin gene
Phase III trials of hypoxia inducible factor (HIF) stabilizers
| Drug | Company | NCT reference | Study population | No. | Active comparator(s) drug | Outcomes* | Duration | Status | Start date; estimated completion date |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Roxadustat | FibroGen | 02021318 (Dolomites) | NDD-CKD | Darbepoetin alfa |
| 24 weeks- Up to 108 weeks | Recruiting | 03/2014–04/2020 | |
| 02273726 | HD/PD | Epoetin alfa |
| 52 weeks | Recruiting | 12/2014–03/2018 | |||
| 02174731 | Incident and stable HD/PD | Epoetin alfa |
| event-driven, anticipate 1–2 years | Recruiting | 07/2014–04/2018 | |||
| 01887600 (ALPS) | NDD-CKD | Placebo |
| 52 weeks- Up to 108 weeks | Active, not recruiting | 09/2013–11/2017 | |||
| 02174627 | NDD-CKD | Placebo |
| Event-driven, anticipate 1–2 years | Active, not recruiting | 06/2014–03/2018 | |||
| 02278341 (Pyrenees) | HD/HDF/PD | Darbepoetin alfa Epoetin alfa |
| 28 to 52 weeks | Active, not recruiting | 11/2014–07/2018 | |||
| 02052310 | Incident HD/PD | Epoetin alfa |
| 52 weeks and maximum of up to 3 years | Recruiting | 12/2013–03/2018 | |||
| 01750190 | NDD-CKD | Placebo |
| 52 weeks | Recruiting | 11/2012–03/2018 | |||
| 02988973 | NDD-CKD | Darbepoetin alfa |
| 24- up to 52 weeks | Recruiting | 01/2017–11/2018 | |||
| 02780726 | PD (>4 weeks) | N/A |
| 24 weeks | Active, not recruiting | 06/2016–09/2017 | |||
| 02964936 | NDD-CKD | N/A |
| 24 weeks | Recruiting | 01/2017–05/2018 | |||
| 02952092 | HD | Darbepoetin alfa |
| 24 weeks | Recruiting | 11/2016–06/2018 | |||
| 01630889 (Phase II/III) | NDD-CKD and DD-CKD | N/A |
| Up to 5 years | Enrolling by invitation | 05/2012–12/2018 | |||
| Vadadustat | Akebia Therapeutics | 02648347 | NDD-CKD | Darbepoetin alfa |
| 52 weeks–min 1 year (event driven) | Recruiting | 12/2015–11/2018 | |
| 02865850 | Incident HD/PD | Darbepoetin alfa |
| 52 weeks–min 1 year (event driven) | Recruiting | 07/2016–09/2019 | |||
| 02680574 | NDD-CKD | Darbepoetin alfa |
| 52 weeks–min 1 year (event driven) | Recruiting | 02/2016–11/2018 | |||
| 02892149 | HD/PD | Darbepoetin alfa |
| 52 weeks–min 1 year (event driven) | Recruiting | 08/2016–09/2019 | |||
| Daprodustat | GlaxosmithKline | 03029208 | Incident HD/PD | Darbepoetin alfa |
| 52 weeks | Recruiting | 5/2017–11/2019 | |
| 02791763 | NDD-CKD/PD | Epoetin beta pegol |
| 52 weeks | Recruiting | 6/2016–6/2018 | |||
| 02969655 | HD | Darbepoetin alfa |
| 52 weeks | Active, not recruiting | 11/2016–07/2018 | |||
| 02879305 (ASCEND-D) | HD/PD | Epoetin alfa |
| 52 weeks- up to 3.3 years (event driven) | Recruiting | 6/2014–04/2020 | |||
| 02876835 (ASCEND-ND) | NDD-CKD | Darbepoetin alfa |
| 52 weeks-up to 4.1 years (event driven) | Recruiting | 09/2016–01/2021 | |||
| Molidustat | Bayer Pharmaceuticals | Phase III trials not announced | |||||||
Primary outcome(s) in bold
CKD chronic kidney disease, Hb hemoglobin, HD hemodialysis, IV intravenous, MACE major adverse cardiovascular event, NDD-CKD non-dialysis-dependent CKD stage 3 or 4 QOL quality of life, PD peritoneal dialysis
Roxadustat (FG-4592/ASP1517) pediatric investigation plan (PIP)
| Roxadustat (FG-4592 /ASP1517), (EMEA-001557-PIP01-13) decision: 30 January 2015 | |
|---|---|
| Subset of pediatric population concerned | 6 months to 18 years |
| Quality related studies | 1. Development of lower strength of the film-coated tablet not containing azo dyes |
| Non-clinical studies | 2. Definitive juvenile toxicity study |
| Clinical studies | 3. Open label, randomized, 3-way, cross-over study to evaluate the relative bioavailability, PK, food effect, and palatability of the pediatric formulation versus adult tablet. |
| Studies to be completed by | 2021 |
PK pharmacokinetics, PD pharmacodynamics, EPO erythropoietin, ESA erythropoiesis-stimulating agent, CKD chronic kidney disease
Vadadustat (AKB-6548) pediatric investigation plan (PIP)
| Vadadustat (AKB-6548), (EMEA-001944-PIP01-16) decision: 31 January 2017 | |
|---|---|
| Subset of pediatric population concerned | 4 months–18 years |
| Quality-related studies | 1. Development of an age-appropriate oral dosage form |
| Non-clinical studies | 2. Dose range-finding study in juvenile dogs |
| Clinical studies | 4. Open-label, single-arm, externally controlled trial to evaluate the activity, safety, tolerability, PK, and PD of vadadustat orally to correct anemia in children from 4 months to <18 years of age with anemia secondary to chronic kidney disease (CKD). |
| Extrapolation, modeling, and simulation studies | 7. Modeling and simulation study to develop PK/PD simulations to predict exposure and selection of doses for use in children from 4 months to <18 years of age with anemia secondary to CKD naïve to ESA treatment or receiving ESA treatment. |
| Studies to be completed by | 2024 |
PK pharmacokinetics , PD pharmacodynamics, ESA erythropoiesis-stimulating agent, CKD chronic kidney disease
Daprodustat (GSK1278863) pediatric investigation plan (PIP)
| Daprodustat (GSK1278863), (EMEA-001452-PIP01-13) decision: 6 August 2014 | |
|---|---|
| Subset of pediatric population concerned | 1–18 years |
| Quality-related studies | 1. Development of an oral solution or oral suspension |
| Non-clinical studies | 2. Dose range-finding study in juvenile rats |
| Clinical studies | 4. Relative bioavailability study of oral solution or oral suspension in adults |
| Studies to be completed by | 2027 |
Molidustat (BAY 85-3934) pediatric investigation plan (PIP)
| Molidustat (BAY 85–3934), (EMEA-001546-PIP01-13) decision: 27 October 2014 | |
|---|---|
| Subset of pediatric population concerned | 6 months–18 years |
| Quality-related studies | 1. Development of age-appropriate oral dosage form |
| Non-clinical studies | N/A |
| Clinical studies | 1. Relative bioavailability and food-effect study in healthy adults |
| Extrapolation, modeling, and simulation studies | 5. Modeling study to evaluate pharmacokinetic properties of molidustat in children from 6 months to <18 years |
| Studies to be completed by | 2024 |