| Literature DB >> 31068803 |
Patrizio Scarozza1,2, Heike Schmitt2, Giovanni Monteleone1, Markus F Neurath2, Raja Atreya2.
Abstract
Inflammatory Bowel Diseases (IBD), whose denomination comprehends Crohn's Disease (CD) and Ulcerative Colitis (UC), are intestinal chronic diseases that often require lifelong medical therapy. In the last two decades monoclonal antibodies against the cytokine TNF have become integral parts in the treatment of IBD patients, however there are unwanted side-effects and one third of patients show primary non-response while another subgroup loses response over time. Finding novel drugs which could act as therapies against precise pro-inflammatory molecular targets to avoid unwanted systemic side effects and additionally the process of immunization, represents an important aim for subsequent therapeutic approaches. Oligonucleotide based therapies represent a promising novel concept for the treatment of IBD. The molecular action of oligonucleotides ranges from inhibition of the translational process of mRNA transcripts of pro-inflammatory molecules, to mimicking bacterial DNA which can activate cellular targets for immunomodulation. Alicaforsen, selectively targets ICAM-1 mRNA. ICAM-1 is an adhesion molecule which is upregulated on endothelial cells during IBD, thereby mediating the adhesion and migration of leucocytes from blood to sites of active inflammation. In CD parenteral application of alicaforsen did not show therapeutic efficacy in phase II trials, but it demonstrated an improved efficacy as a topical enema in distal UC. Topical application of alicaforsen might represent a therapeutic perspective for refractory pouchitis as well. SMAD7 is a protein that inhibits the signaling of TGFβ, which is the mainstay of a regulatory counterpart in cellular immune responses. An antisense oligonucleotide against SMAD7 mRNA (mongersen) demonstrated pre-clinical and phase II efficacy in CD, but a phase III clinical trial was stopped due to lack of efficacy. Cobitolimod is a single strand oligonucleotide, which mimics bacterial DNA as its CpG dinucleotide sequences can be recognized by the Toll-like receptor 9 on different immune cells thereby causing induction of different cytokines, for example IL10 and IFNα. Topical application of cobitolimod was studied in UC patients. We will also discuss two other novel oligonucleotides which act on the GATA3 transcription factor (SB012) and on carbohydrate sulfotransferase 15 (STNM01), which could both represent novel promising therapeutic options for the treatment of UC.Entities:
Keywords: Crohn disease; IBD; antisense oligonucleotide (ASO); target therapies; ulcerative colitis
Year: 2019 PMID: 31068803 PMCID: PMC6491809 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2019.00314
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
Overview of clinical studies with alicaforsen.
| ISIS 2302 | Phase I safety and pharmacokinetic profile of an intercellular adhesion molecule-1 antisense oligodeoxynucleotide (ISIS 2302) (Glover et al., | Phase 1 | Healthy male volunteers | Double-blind, placebo-controlled study | 44 male volunteers | Four healthy male volunteers recruited to each of seven single-dose groups (0.06, 0.12, 0.24, 0.5, 1.0, 1.5, and 2.0 mg/kg) and each of four multiple-dose groups (0.2, 0.5, 1.0, and 2.0 mg/kg). One subject in each group was allocated to placebo arm. The drug was infused intravenously on day 1 in the single dose-group and on days 1, 3, 5, and 7 in the multiple-dose group | Safety and pharmacokinetic profile of the drug | Good tolerability to the drug, with reproducibility of plasma pharmacokinetics |
| ISIS 2302 | Dose ranging pharmacokinetic trial of high-dose alicaforsen (intercellular adhesion molecule-1 antisense oligodeoxynucleotide) (ISIS 2302) in active Crohn's disease (Yacyshyn et al., | / | Patients with active CD (CDAI ≥220) | Double-blind, randomized study | 22 CD patients | 10 patients were randomized to the 300 mg arm, 10 to the 350 mg arm and 2 patients to the 250 mg arm. The drug was infused intravenously three times a week for 4 weeks | Clinical remission (CDAI ≤ 150) at week 8, 12, and after 6 months | In the intention to treat (ITT) population 14% (3/22) of the patients at week 8 and 23% (5/22) of the patients at week 12 were in clinical remission. After 6 months, 18% (4/22) of the ITT patients were in clinical remission. The efficacy was equivalent with all the three doses used |
| ISIS 2302 | A placebo-controlled trial of ICAM-1 antisense oligonucleotide in the treatment of Crohn's disease (Yacyshyn et al., | / | Patients with active moderate CD (CDAI 220–350) | Double-blind, placebo-controlled study | 20 CD patients | The patients were randomized (3:1, ISIS 2302 to placebo). The drug was infused intravenously at a dosage of 0.5, 1, or 2 mg/kg and was administered in 13 doses over 26 days | Assessment of tolerability, pharmacology and efficacy of the drug in steroid-dependent CD | Clinical remission was figured out in 47% (7/15) of the patients treated with the drug and in 20% (1/5) of those treated with placebo after 26 days from the start of the therapy. After 6 months 5 of the 7 patients treated with the drug maintained remission. The drug was correlated to a good profile of safety |
| ISIS 2302 | Efficacy of subcutaneous antisense ICAM-1 treatment of chronic active Crohn's disease (Schreiber et al., | / | Patients with steroid-refractory CD (CDAI 200–400) | Double-blind, placebo-controlled study | 75 CD patients | 75 patients were randomized to 4 treatment arms and a placebo group. 14 patients received treatment for 2 days, 17 patients for 1 week, 15 patients for 2 weeks and 14 patients for 4 weeks. 15 patients received placebo. The drug was administered subcutaneously at a dosage of 0.5 mg/kg | Complete clinical remission (CDAI < 150 with discontinuation of steroids) at week 14 | Clinical remission was reached by 18.3% of treated patients and by 20% of those treated with placebo at the week 14. No difference in clinical remission between the drug and placebo was evidenced |
| ISIS 2302 | Double blind, placebo controlled trial of the remission inducing and steroid sparing properties of an ICAM-1 antisense oligodeoxynucleotide, alicaforsen (ISIS 2302), in active steroid dependent Crohn's disease (Yacyshyn et al., | / | Steroid dependent CD patients with active disease (CDAI 200–350) | Double-blind, placebo-controlled study | 299 CD patients | The patients were randomized into three groups: ISIS 2302 at a dosage of 2 mg/kg intravenously three times a week for 2 weeks, ISIS 2302 at the same dosage and with the same frequency but for 4 weeks and placebo | Steroid free remission with a CDAI < 150 at the end of week 14 | Steroid free remission at week 14 was 20.2% in the group treated for 2 weeks, 21.2% in the group treated for 4 weeks and 18.8% in placebo group. No difference in clinical remission between the drug and placebo was evidenced |
| ISIS 2302 (Alicaforsen) | A randomized, double-masked, placebo-controlled study of alicaforsen, an antisense inhibitor of intercellular adhesion molecule 1, for the treatment of subjects with active Crohn's disease (Yacyshyn et al., | Phase 3 | Patients with active CD (CDAI 220–400) | Double-blind, placebo-controlled study | 331 CD patients | 221 patients were randomized to the study drug at a dosage of 100 mg at the first infusion and for the other 11 infusions at a dosage of 300 mg (patients weighing more than 50 kg) or 200 mg (patients weighing 36–50 kg). The drug was administered intravenously 3 times a week for 4 weeks. 110 patients were enrolled in placebo arm | Clinical remission at week 12 | No statistical difference between the study drug and placebo for clinical remission at week 12 (33.9% in the drug and 34.5% in the placebo arm) |
| ISIS 2302 (Alicaforsen) | A randomized, controlled, double blind, escalating dose study of alicaforsen enema in active ulcerative colitis (van Deventer et al., | / | Patients with active distal UC (DAI 4–10) | Double-blind, placebo-controlled study | 40 UC patients | The patients were randomized to the alicaforsen enema administration at four different dosages (0.1, 0.5, 2, or 4 mg/ml) or to placebo. Each patient received alicaforsen enema once daily for 28 days | Safety and efficacy of the drug enema after 1, 3, and 6 months | At 1 month alicaforsen enema (4 mg/ml) was correlated with 70% of improved disease activity index compared to 28% with placebo, with statistical significant difference. This positive outcome was evidenced also after 3 and 6 months |
| ISIS 2302 (Alicaforsen) | A Phase II dose ranging, double-blind, placebo-controlled study of alicaforsen enema in subjects with acute exacerbation of mild to moderate left-sided ulcerative colitis (van Deventer et al., | Phase 2 | Patients with active distal UC (DAI 4–10) with disease flare | Double-blind, placebo-controlled study | 120 UC patients | The patients were randomized to five treatment arms: placebo, alicaforsen enema at a dosage of 120 mg daily for 10 days and then every other day, 240 mg every other day, 240 mg daily for 10 days and then every other day, 240 mg daily | Disease Activity Index at week 6 | No significant difference between alicaforsen and placebo enema was evidenced at week 6, but the arm of alicaforsen (240 mg with daily administration) evidenced a statistical benefit over placebo for prolonged reduction of DAI from the week 18 to week 30 |
| ISIS 2302 (Alicaforsen) | Safety and efficacy of two dose formulations of alicaforsen enema compared with mesalazine enema for treatment of mild to moderate left-sided ulcerative colitis: a randomized, double-blind, active-controlled trial (Miner et al., | / | Patients with active UC (DAI 4–10) | Double-blind, active-controlled study | 159 UC patients | The patients were randomized to alicaforsen enema at a dosage of 120 mg or 240 mg or to mesalazine enema at a dosage of 4 g. The enema was administered daily for 6 weeks | DAI at week 6 relative to baseline | No difference in reducing clinical activity was evidenced between the treatment strategies at week 6, but alicaforsen enema evidenced more prolonged response than mesalazine enema |
| ISIS 2302 (Alicaforsen) | An enema formulation of alicaforsen, an antisense inhibitor of intercellular adhesion molecule-1, in the treatment of chronic, unremitting pouchitis (Miner et al., | / | Patients with chronic, unremitting pouchitis with a Pouchitis Disease Activity Index (PDAI) score of ≥7 | Open-label, uncontrolled study | 12 patients affected by chronic unremitting pouchitis | The patients received daily administration of alicaforsen enema at a dosage of 240 mg for 6 weeks | Efficacy of alicaforsen enema in the treatment of chronic unremitting pouchitis | A significant benefit of alicaforsen enema was evidenced at week 6. The PDAI score resulted to be 6.83 at week 6 compared to 11.42 at baseline. This benefit was evidenced also for improvement of endoscopic activity |
CD, Crohn's disease; UC, ulcerative colitis; CDAI, Crohn's disease Activity Index; DAI, Disease Activity Index; PDAI, Pouchitis Disease Activity Index; ICAM1, Intercellular Cell Adhesion Molecule-1; /, phase indication not found.
Overview of clinical studies with mongersen.
| GED0301 | Phase I clinical trial of Smad7 knockdown using antisense oligonucleotide in patients with active Crohn's disease (Monteleone et al., | Phase 1 | CD patients with moderate to severe active disease (CDAI>220) | open-label study | 15 CD patients | The patients were randomized to three treatment groups: GED0301 at a dosage of 40, 80, or 160 mg. The drug was administered orally once daily for 7 days | Safety and tolerability of the drug | The study evidenced good tolerability and safety of the drug |
| GED0301 | A phase 1 open-label trial shows that smad7 antisense oligonucleotide (GED0301) does not increase the risk of small bowel strictures in Crohn's disease (Zorzi et al., | Phase 1 | CD patients with an inflammatory phenotype and dependence and/or resistance to steroids | open-label study | 15 CD patients | The patients were randomized to three treatment groups: GED0301 at a dosage of 40, 80, or 160 mg. The drug was administered orally once daily for 7 days | To evaluate whether GED0301 is associated with the formation of small bowel strictures | The treatment with GED0301 is not associated with the development of small bowel stricture as assessed by intestinal sonography |
| Mongersen (GED0301) | Mongersen, an oral SMAD7 antisense oligonucleotide, and Crohn's disease (Monteleone et al., | Phase 2 | CD patients with ileitis and/or right-sided colonic disease and moderate to severe active disease (CDAI 220–400) | Double-blind, placebo-controlled study | 166 CD patients | The patients were randomized to four treatment arms: mongersen at a dosage of 10 mg per day, 40 mg per day, 160 mg per day or placebo. The drug was administered orally once daily for 2 weeks | Clinical remission (CDAI < 150) at day 15 and maintenance of remission for at least 2 weeks | Clinical remission at day 15 and maintenance for 2 weeks was evidenced in 55% of the patients treated with 40 mg of the drug, 65% of those treated with 160 mg and in 10% of placebo patients. This difference was statistically significant. Clinical remission at days 28 and 84 was significantly higher in the patients treated with 40 or 160 mg of the drug than in the group treated with 10 mg of the drug or with placebo |
| Mongersen (GED0301) | Effects of mongersen (GED-0301) on endoscopic and clinical outcomes in patients with active Crohn's disease (Feagan et al., | Phase 1 | CD patients with active disease (CDAI≥220 to ≤ 450) | Double-blind study | 63 CD patients | The patients were randomized to three treatment groups: GED0301 at a dosage of 160 mg per day for 4 weeks, 160 mg per day for 8 weeks and 160 mg per day for 12 weeks. The drug was administered orally | To evaluate endoscopic outcomes at week 12 | The study evidenced endoscopic improvement (25% reduction SES-CD) in 37% of the patients with evaluable endoscopy at week 12. No significant difference was evidenced between treatment groups |
CDAI, Crohn's disease Activity Index; Smad7, Mothers against decapentaplegic homolog 7; CD, Crohn's disease.
Overview of clinical studies with cobitolimod.
| DIMS0150 | Topical treatment with the Toll-like receptor agonist DIMS0150 has potential for lasting relief of symptoms in patients with chronic active ulcerative colitis by restoring glucocorticoid sensitivity (Musch et al., | Phase 1 | UC patients with chronic active disease, with indication for for colectomy | Open-label study | 8 UC patients | 7 patients were treated with single topical administration of 30 mg of DIMS0150 and one patient with three doses of 30 mg of DIMS0150 with an interval of 4 weeks between doses | Efficacy of the drug at week 12 | 82% of clinical response and 71% of clinical remission were evidenced at week 12. After two years all but one of treated patients avoided colectomy |
| DIMS0150 (cobitolimod) | Clinical effects of a topically applied Toll-like receptor 9 agonist in active moderate-to-severe Ulcerative Colitis (Atreya et al., | Phase 3, COLLECT study | UC patients with moderate to severe disease (CAI≥9 with an endoscopic Mayo score ≥2) | Double-blind, placebo-controlled study | 131 UC patients | The patients were randomized to the treatment arm with DIMS0150 at a dosage of 30 mg or to placebo arm. The drug was administered topically during lower gastrointestinal endoscopy at baseline and at week 4 | Clinical remission (CAI ≤ 4) at week 12 | Clinical remission at week 12 was 44.4% in the group treated with DIMS0150 and 46.5% in the group treated with placebo. No significant difference in clinical remission was evidenced between the groups |
| DIMS0150 (cobitolimod) | Clinical efficacy of the Toll-like receptor 9 agonist cobitolimod using patient-reported-outcomes defined clinical endpoints in patients with ulcerative colitis (Atreya et al., | Post-hoc analysis of the COLLECT study (Atreya et al., | UC patients with moderate to severe disease (CAI≥9 with an endoscopic Mayo score ≥2) with available e-diary data at baseline | Retrospective analysis of the COLLECT study | 104 UC patients | The patients were randomized to the treatment arm with DIMS0150 at a dosage of 30 mg or to placebo arm. The drug was administered topically during lower gastrointestinal endoscopy at baseline and at week 4 | Post hoc analysis of Symptomatic remission (absence of blood in stool and a mean daily stool frequency < 4) at week 4, 8, and 12 | Symptomatic remission at week 4 was evidenced in 17.1% of the patients treated with cobitolimod and in 5.9% of those treated with placebo (p=0.13). At week 8 it was 35.7% vs. 17.6% (p = 0.07). At week 12 it was 38.6% vs. 17.6% (p = 0.04). |
| BL7040 | Ameliorating active ulcerative colitis via an orally available Toll-like receptor-9 modifier: A prospective open-label, multicenter phase II trial (Dotan et al., | Phase 2 | UC patients with moderate disease (Mayo score ≥5 and ≤ 9, endoscopic sub-score ≥2) | Open-label study | 22 UC patients | BL7040 was administered orally at a dosage of 12 mg per day for 19–21 days, followed by 40 mg of BL7040 per day for 14 days | To evaluate the efficacy and safety of BL7040 in patients affected by UC | The study evidenced efficacy and safety of the drug |
CAI, Clinical Activity Index; UC, ulcerative colitis.
Overview of clinical studies with STNM01.
| STNM01 | Phase 1 clinical study of siRNA targeting carbohydrate sulfotransferase 15 in Crohn's disease patients with active mucosal lesions (Suzuki et al., | Phase 1 | CD patients with active endoscopic disease (SES-CD: from 1 to 11) | Double-blind, placebo-controlled study | 18 CD patients | The patients were randomized to four different treatment arms: STNM01 at a dosage of 2.5 nM, STNM01 at a dosage of 25 nM, STNM01 at a dosage of 250 nM or placebo arm. The drug was administered endoscopically with a single dose submucosal injection | To evaluate the safety of STNM01 | The study evidenced the safety of the drug and reduced the segmental SES-CD score |
SES-CD, Simple Endoscopic Score for Crohn's disease; siRNA, silenceRNA; CD, Crohn's disease.