| Literature DB >> 32787971 |
Martin Tolar1, Susan Abushakra2, John A Hey2, Anton Porsteinsson3, Marwan Sabbagh4.
Abstract
The body of evidence suggesting a causative, initiating role of beta amyloid (Aβ) in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease (AD) is substantial. Yet, only a few anti-amyloid agents have shown meaningful efficacy in clinical trials. We evaluated the unifying characteristics of anti-amyloid agents with positive clinical or biomarker effects in long-duration trials and analyzed how pharmacological characteristics determine their clinical product profiles. Four agents with the potential for near term approval fulfill these criteria: the injectable antibodies, aducanumab, gantenerumab, and BAN2401, and a small molecule oral agent, ALZ-801. Aducanumab and BAN2401 showed significant efficacy on both clinical and biomarker outcomes; gantenerumab showed significant biomarker effects, with no clinical efficacy reported to date; and ALZ-801 showed significant clinical effects in the high-risk population of patients homozygous for the ε4 allele of apolipoprotein E gene (APOE4) and a dose-dependent preservation of hippocampal volume. We explored how the pharmacological properties of these agents, namely selectivity for Aβ oligomers, plasma half-life, brain penetration, and time to peak brain exposure, determine their clinical profiles. A crucial characteristic shared by these agents is their ability to engage neurotoxic soluble Aβ oligomers, albeit to various degrees. Aducanumab and gantenerumab partially target oligomers, while mostly clearing insoluble amyloid plaques; BAN2401 preferentially targets soluble protofibrils (large oligomers) over plaques; and ALZ-801 blocks the formation of oligomers without binding to plaques. The degree of selectivity for Aβ oligomers and brain exposure drive the magnitude and onset of clinical efficacy, while the clearance of plaques is associated with vasogenic brain edema. Only the highest doses of aducanumab and BAN2401 show modest efficacy, and higher dosing is limited by increased risk of vasogenic edema, especially in APOE4 carriers. These limitations can be avoided, and efficacy improved by small molecule agents that selectively inhibit the formation or block the toxicity of Aβ oligomers without clearing amyloid plaques. The most advanced selective anti-oligomer agent is ALZ-801, an optimized oral prodrug of tramiprosate, which demonstrated efficacy in homozygous APOE4/4 AD subjects. ALZ-801 selectively and fully inhibits the formation of Aβ42 oligomers at the clinical dose, without evidence of vasogenic edema, and will be evaluated in a phase 3 trial in homozygous APOE4/4 patients with early AD. In addition to clinical measures, the phase 3 trial will include cerebrospinal fluid, plasma, and imaging biomarkers to gain further insights into the role of soluble Aβ oligomers in the pathogenesis of AD and their impact on disease progression.Entities:
Keywords: ALZ-801; APOE4 genotype; Aducanumab; Alzheimer’s disease; Anti-amyloid antibodies; Anti-oligomer agents; BAN2401; Beta amyloid oligomers; Gantenerumab
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32787971 PMCID: PMC7424995 DOI: 10.1186/s13195-020-00663-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Alzheimers Res Ther Impact factor: 8.823
Late-stage anti-amyloid agents: selectivity for amyloid oligomers and clinical and biomarker effects in phase 2 and 3 studies
| Clinical and biomarker profile | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| +/− | +/− | ++ | +++ Blocks formation of oligomers | ||
Early AD All genotypes | Early AD All genotypes | Early AD All genotypes | Early AD APOE4 carriers | Mild AD APOE4/4 homozygotes | |
ADAS-cog (% benefit versus placebo) | 27% | No effect | 47% | 84% Not reported | 125% |
CDR-SB (% benefit versus placebo) | 22% | No effect | 26% | 60% Not reported | 81% |
| 15% | *31% | 13% | Not evaluated | ||
| Not reported | *CSF t-tau **CSF t-tau **CSF NfL | CSF neurogranin, CSF NfL | Preservation of hippocampal volume | ||
| +++ | +++ | +++ | No plaque interaction | ||
35% (all genotypes) 42% (APOE4) | $28%–#42% (all genotypes) | 10% (all genotypes) | 15% (APOE4) | 0% (all genotypes) 0% (APOE4) | |
Abbreviations: IV intravenous, SC subcutaneous, NS not significant, ADAS-cog Alzheimer’s Disease Assessment Scale—cognitive subscale, CDR-SB Clinical Dementia Rating—Sum of Boxes, ARIA-E amyloid-related imaging abnormalities with effusion or edema
Assessment of amyloid oligomer selectivity: relative binding activity for soluble oligomers and protofibrils was measured by Biacore surface plasmon resonance. BAN2401 showed differential binding (KD) at 1.32 nM versus aducanumab 138 nM [10]; gantenerumab displays comparable affinity for oligomers and fibrils, and about 10× lower affinity for monomers [12]; ALZ-801/tramiprosate fully inhibits the formation of oligomer in the brain at target clinical dose [15]
Data sources: aducanumab phase 3 studies [11, 19]; gantenerumab phase 3 studies at 225 mg SC and *DIAN-TU at mix of 225 mg SC and 1200 mg SC [13, 20, 21]; gantenerumab safety data: **phase 3 SCarlet RoAD study [13]; $Marguerite RoAD open-label extension study [22]; #amyloid PET open-label extension study [20]; BAN2401 phase 2 study [23]; ALZ-801: tramiprosate phase 3 study [15–18, 24]
Anti-amyloid antibodies in early AD trials: clinical efficacy, safety, and PET imaging effects
| Antibody | Antibody type | Target amyloid species | Clinical efficacy | PET imaging | Safety profile |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
IgG1 human N-terminal | Plaque, fibrils > > oligomers | ADAS-cog 27% CDR-SB 22% | Amyloid PET ~ 80% Tau PET: significant reduction | ARIA-E 35% ARIA-H 18% Headache 20% | |
IgG1 human N-terminal and central | Plaque, fibrils, and oligomers | ADAS-cog: no effect to date, phase 3 ongoing CDR-SB: no effect to date, phase 3 ongoing | Amyloid PET ~ 75% Tau PET: not evaluated | ARIA-E 28–42% ARIA-H 15–25% Injection site erythema 13% | |
IgG1 humanized N-terminal | Large oligomers (protofibrils) > plaque | ADAS-cog 47% CDR-SB 26% | Amyloid PET ~ 90% Tau PET: not evaluated | ARIA-E 10% ARIA-H: not reported Infusion reactions leading to discontinuations 2.5% |
Abbreviations: IgG immunoglobulin G, PET positron emission tomography, ARIA-E amyloid-related imaging abnormalities with effusion or edema, ARIA-H amyloid-related imaging abnormalities with hemosiderin deposits
Data sources for target amyloid species: aducanumab [10, 11]; gantenerumab [12, 13, 20]; BAN2401 [10, 14]. Data sources for clinical and imaging data: aducanumab [11, 19]; gantenerumab [13, 20–22]; BAN2401 [23, 25]
Late-stage anti-amyloid agents: phase 3 dosing regimens and pharmacokinetic profiles
| Agent | Dose per visit and total dose* | Route of administration, frequency, and dosing facility | Plasma half-life | Brain penetration | Time to peak brain steady state exposure** |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Aducanumab | 10 mg/kg IV 600–750 mg per month | IV infusion, monthly Titration over 6 months Infusion center | 21 days | < 1.5% | ~ 5 months |
Gantenerumab | 1200 mg SC 1200 mg per month | SC injection, monthly Titration over 6 to 10 months Clinic | 22 days | ~ 1% | ~ 5 months |
BAN2401 | 10 mg/kg IV 1200–1500 mg per month | IV infusion, twice per month No titration Infusion center | 5.3 days | ~ 0.5% | ~ 2.5 months |
ALZ-801 | 265 mg orally 530 mg daily | Oral tablet, twice daily Titration over 2 weeks Home | 36 h | ~ 40% | ~ 1 week |
Abbreviations: IV intravenous, SC subcutaneous
Data sources: [11, 14, 30, 34]
*Assumes adult average weight of 60–75 kg; **time to peak brain steady state concentration (without titration) = 5 times plasma t1/2 or 5 times dosing frequency, if dosing interval is longer than plasma t1/2