| Literature DB >> 32618366 |
Robert D S Pitceathly1, Nandaki Keshavan2,3, Joyeeta Rahman2, Shamima Rahman2,3.
Abstract
Primary mitochondrial diseases represent some of the most common and severe inherited metabolic disorders, affecting ~1 in 4,300 live births. The clinical and molecular diversity typified by mitochondrial diseases has contributed to the lack of licensed disease-modifying therapies available. Management for the majority of patients is primarily supportive. The failure of clinical trials in mitochondrial diseases partly relates to the inefficacy of the compounds studied. However, it is also likely to be a consequence of the significant challenges faced by clinicians and researchers when designing trials for these disorders, which have historically been hampered by a lack of natural history data, biomarkers and outcome measures to detect a treatment effect. Encouragingly, over the past decade there have been significant advances in therapy development for mitochondrial diseases, with many small molecules now transitioning from preclinical to early phase human interventional studies. In this review, we present the treatments and management strategies currently available to people with mitochondrial disease. We evaluate the challenges and potential solutions to trial design and highlight the emerging pharmacological and genetic strategies that are moving from the laboratory to clinical trials for this group of disorders.Entities:
Keywords: antioxidants; clinical trial; gene therapy; mitochondrial biogenesis; mitophagy; nucleosides; primary mitochondrial disease; treatment
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Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32618366 PMCID: PMC8432143 DOI: 10.1002/jimd.12281
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Inherit Metab Dis ISSN: 0141-8955 Impact factor: 4.982
Ongoinga clinical trials targeting primary mitochondrial disease
| Therapy | Clinical trial identifier | Phase | Mechanism of action | Disorder | Age range (years) | Primary outcomes measure(s) | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| EPI‐743 | NCT01370447 | II | Mitochondrial Redox Modulator | PMD | 1+ | Change in neuromuscular function, IAE, NPMDS | Active, not recruiting |
| Vatiquinone (PTC743, EPI‐743) | NCT04378075 | II | Mitochondrial Redox Modulator | PMD with Refractory Epilepsy | ≤18 | Change from baseline in number of observable motor seizures per 28 days, number of disease‐related hospital days, number of participants with status epilepticus | Not yet recruiting |
| Vincerinone (EPI‐743) | NCT02352896 | II | Mitochondrial Redox Modulator | Leigh Syndrome | 1–18 | Long term effect on disease severity measured by NPMDS | Active, not recruiting |
| KH176 (Sonlicromanol) | NCT04165239 | II | Mitochondrial Redox Modulator | MELAS, MIDD, MM, PMD | 18+ | Cognitive function: attention domain | Recruiting |
| Idebenone (Raxone) | NCT02774005 | IV | Mitochondrial Redox Modulator | LHON | 12+ | Proportion of eyes with clinically relevant recovery of visual acuity from baseline | Active, not recruiting |
| Idebenone (Raxone) | NCT02771379 | PASS | Mitochondrial Redox Modulator | LHON | Child, Adult, Older Adult | Long‐term safety profile ‐ IAE | Recruiting |
| Nicotinamide Riboside | NCT03432871 | N/A | NAD Modulator Mitochondrial Biogenesis Enhancer | MELAS, MM, PEO, PMD | 18‐70 |
Bioavailability—pharmacokinetics. Safety—IAE, change in blood analytes, temperature, blood pressure, pulse. Mitochondrial biogenesis | Recruiting |
| KL1333 | NCT03888716 | I |
NAD Modulator Mitochondrial Biogenesis Enhancer | MELAS, MM, MRCD, PMD, HV | 18‐75 | IAE, ECG, incidence of abnormal vital signs, incidence of abnormal physical examinations | Recruiting |
| REN001 | NCT03862846 | I | Mitochondrial Biogenesis Enhancer | MM | 16+ | IAE | Active, not recruiting |
| ABI‐009 (Nab‐sirolimus) | NCT03747328 | II | Inhibition of Mitophagy |
Leigh/ Leigh‐like Syndrome | 2–17 | IAE, GMFM | Not yet recruiting |
| L‐Citrulline | NCT03952234 | I | Nitric Oxide Precursor | MELAS | 18‐65 | Maximal tolerable dose, IAE | Not yet recruiting |
| Sodium Phenylbutyrate | NCT03734263 | I/II | Inhibition of Pyruvate Dehydrogenase Kinase | PDHC Deficiency | 0.25‐18 | Blood lactate levels | Recruiting |
| Dichloroacetate | NCT02616484 | III | Inhibition of Pyruvate Dehydrogenase Kinase | PDHC Deficiency | 0.5‐17 | Observer Reported Outcome (ObsRO) measure of health, IAE | Recruiting |
| Thymidine and Deoxycytidine | NCT03639701 | I/II | Nucleosides |
Myopathic Thymidine Kinase 2 Deficiency | All | Liver transaminase levels, lymphocyte count, creatinine, ECG, incidence of diarrhoea | Enrolling by invitation |
| EE‐TP | NCT03866954 | II | Erythrocyte Encapsulated ERT | MNGIE | 12+ |
Safety—IAE, laboratory indices, vital signs. Pharmacodynamics—changes in plasma and urine thymidine and deoxyuridine levels. Efficacy— change in body mass index. | Not yet recruiting |
| CD34+ cells enriched with MNV‐BLD | NCT03384420 | I/II | Biological | PMD, PS | Child, Adult, Older Adult | IAE, IPMDS QoL questionnaire | Enrolling by invitation |
| scAAV2‐P1ND4v2 | NCT02161380 | I | Gene Therapy | LHON | 15+ | IAE | Recruiting |
| GS010 (rAAV2/2‐ND4) | NCT02064569 | I/II | Gene Therapy | LHON | 18+ | IAE | Active, not recruiting |
| GS010 (rAAV2/2‐ND4) | NCT03293524 | III | Gene Therapy | LHON | 15+ | BCVA | Active, not recruiting |
| GS010 (rAAV2/2‐ND4) | NCT03406104 | III | Gene Therapy | LHON | 15+ | Long term follow up of gene therapy—IAE | Recruiting |
| rAAV2‐ND4 | NCT03153293 | II/III | Gene Therapy | LHON | 10‐65 | BCVA, computerised visual field | Active, not recruiting |
Abbreviations: BCVA, best corrected visual acuity; CPET, cardiopulmonary exercise testing; ECG, electrocardiogram; ERT, enzyme replacement therapy; GMFM, gross motor function measure; HV, healthy volunteers; IAE: incidence of adverse events; IPMDS, international paediatric mitochondrial disease scale; LHON, Leber hereditary optic neuropathy; MDDS, mitochondrial DNA depletion syndrome; MELAS, mitochondrial encephalopathy lactic acidosis and stroke‐like episodes; MIDD, maternally inherited diabetes and deafness; MM, mitochondrial myopathy; MNGIE, mitochondrial neurogastrointestinal encephalopathy; MRCD, mitochondrial respiratory chain deficiency; MRS, magnetic resonance spectroscopy; NPMDS, Newcastle paediatric mitochondrial disease scale; PASS, post‐authorisation safety study; PDHC, pyruvate dehydrogenase complex; PEO, progressive external ophthalmoplegia; PS, Pearson syndrome; QoL, quality of life.
Selection of clinical trials for primary mitochondrial disease (PMD) listed in https://clinicaltrials.gov accessed May 22, 2020.
FIGURE 1Translational pipeline. Candidate drugs are first investigated in vitro for example, in patient cell lines before in vivo toxicity and efficacy studies in appropriate animal models of disease are undertaken. Clinical trials include phase I studies, in which the candidate therapy is administered to patients or healthy volunteers to assess safety and tolerability, as well as drug pharmacokinetics. Phase II studies assess safety and efficacy of the drug in a small number of patients. Phase III studies assess safety and efficacy of the drug in a larger number of patients with defined outcome measures
FIGURE 2Mechanisms of action of emerging therapies. Drugs affecting mitochondrial biogenesis act on the PGC1α pathway. PGC1α is a master transcriptional coactivator of several transcription factors including PPARα,δ,γ, NRF1,2, ERR and TFAM. PGC1α is activated by phosphorylation by AMPK and deacetylation by NAD+‐dependent sirtuin, and is also controlled by mTOR. Drugs acting on these pathways include AICAR which activates AMPK, resveratrol which activates sirtuin, NAD+ modulators and PARP1 inhibitors which increase NAD+ levels, rapamycin and ABI009 which act on mTORC1, bezafibrate which activates PPARα, REN001 which activates PPARδ, glitazones which activate PPARγ and omaveloxolone which activates NRF2. Gene therapy vectors for example, AAVs transduce target cells by first being endocytosed at the plasma membrane. The viral genome is released in the nucleus where it forms an episome and is transcribed by target cell transcriptional machinery. mRNAs are translated in the cytosol. The nascent protein contains a mitochondrial targeting sequence which enables entry into mitochondria by interacting with the TOM22/TIM23 complex. Nucleoside based trial drugs are currently only applicable to one subtype of MDDS, namely thymidine kinase 2 deficiency. Several candidate therapies act on pathways related to the production of ROS, such as superoxide and hydrogen peroxide. Their intermediates have important cellular signalling functions, but also contribute to disease pathophysiology and cell death in mitochondrial disease. Levels of ROS are controlled by the glutathione and peroxidoredoxin/thioredoxin pathways. EPI743 and idebenone are both CoQ analogues which are thought to affect glutathione levels and Sonlicromanol acts on the peroxidoredoxin/thioredoxin pathway. Key: AAV, adeno‐associated virus; cytc, cytochrome c; CoQ, coenzyme Q; AMPK, AMP activated protein kinase; GSH, glutathione (reduced); GSSG, glutathione (oxidised); ERR, oestrogen related receptor; MDDS, mitochondrial DNA depletion syndrome; mRNA, messenger RNA; mTORC1, mechanistic target of rapamycin complex 1; NAD, nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide; NRF, nuclear respiratory factor; PARP1, poly(ADP‐ribose) polymerase 1; PGC1α, peroxisome proliferator‐activated receptor gamma coactivator 1‐alpha; PPAR, peroxisome proliferator‐activated receptor; POLG, polymerase gamma; Prx, peroxiredoxin; ROS, reactive oxygen species; TCA, tricarboxylic acid; TFAM, transcription factor A, mitochondrial; TIM, translocase of inner membrane; TOM, translocase of outer membrane; Trx, thioredoxin
FIGURE 3Progress in clinical trial development for mitochondrial disorders including trials that have been completed and those that are currently recruiting