Literature DB >> 33245749

Novel antisense therapy targeting microRNA-132 in patients with heart failure: results of a first-in-human Phase 1b randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study.

Jörg Täubel1,2, Wilfried Hauke3, Steffen Rump3, Janika Viereck3, Sandor Batkai3, Jenny Poetzsch3, Laura Rode3, Henning Weigt4, Celina Genschel3, Ulrike Lorch1, Carmen Theek5, Arthur A Levin6, Johann Bauersachs7, Scott D Solomon8, Thomas Thum3,9.   

Abstract

AIMS: Cardiac microRNA-132-3p (miR-132) levels are increased in patients with heart failure (HF) and mechanistically drive cardiac remodelling processes. CDR132L, a specific antisense oligonucleotide, is a first-in-class miR-132 inhibitor that attenuates and even reverses HF in preclinical models. The aim of the current clinical Phase 1b study was to assess safety, pharmacokinetics, target engagement, and exploratory pharmacodynamic effects of CDR132L in patients on standard-of-care therapy for chronic ischaemic HF in a randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind, dose-escalation study (NCT04045405). METHODS AND
RESULTS: Patients had left ventricular ejection fraction between ≥30% and <50% or amino terminal fragment of pro-brain natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP) >125 ng/L at screening. Twenty-eight patients were randomized to receive CDR132L (0.32, 1, 3, and 10 mg/kg body weight) or placebo (0.9% saline) in two intravenous infusions, 4 weeks apart in four cohorts of seven (five verum and two placebo) patients each. CDR132L was safe and well tolerated, without apparent dose-limiting toxicity. A pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic dose modelling approach suggested an effective dose level at ≥1 mg/kg CDR132L. CDR132L treatment resulted in a dose-dependent, sustained miR-132 reduction in plasma. Patients given CDR132L ≥1 mg/kg displayed a median 23.3% NT-proBNP reduction, vs. a 0.9% median increase in the control group. CDR132L treatment induced significant QRS narrowing and encouraging positive trends for relevant cardiac fibrosis biomarkers.
CONCLUSION: This study is the first clinical trial of an antisense drug in HF patients. CDR132L was safe and well tolerated, confirmed linear plasma pharmacokinetics with no signs of accumulation, and suggests cardiac functional improvements. Although this study is limited by the small patient numbers, the indicative efficacy of this drug is very encouraging justifying additional clinical studies to confirm the beneficial CDR132L pharmacodynamic effects for the treatment of HF.
© The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the European Society of Cardiology.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Cardiac remodelling; Clinical trial Phase 1b study; Heart failure; microRNAs

Year:  2021        PMID: 33245749      PMCID: PMC7954267          DOI: 10.1093/eurheartj/ehaa898

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur Heart J        ISSN: 0195-668X            Impact factor:   29.983


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Introduction

Heart failure (HF) is a chronic progressive condition, to date largely irreversible, that continues to impose important global morbidity and cost burdens. Despite some progress in the therapy of HF reported in recent outcome trials, current management of HF remains largely symptomatic, focused principally on reducing cardiac load by shielding the heart against secondary neuro-hormonal overdrive and volume retention. A major unmet need exists for treatments addressing HF pathophysiology at the organ level that target fundamental pathophysiological processes. The microRNA-132-3p (miR-132) is a regulatory (noncoding) RNA that, in response to cardiomyocyte stress, is upregulated in cardiac tissue., Preclinical studies, have shown miR-132 to affect signalling pathways involved in cardiomyocyte growth, autophagy, calcium handling, and contractility. In particular, it downregulates expression of the anti-hypertrophic, pro-autophagic transcription factor Forkhead box O3 (FOXO3) and also suppresses the expression of genes involved in intracellular calcium handling and contractility, e.g. Sarcoplasmic/endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ ATPase 2A (SERCA2A) leading to cardiac remodelling. Over-activation of miR-132 in cardiac tissue drives progressive adverse cardiac remodelling leading to HF. Thus, miR-132 appears as a potentially promising molecular pathophysiological target in HF treatment., CDR132L, a synthetic locked nucleic acid antisense oligonucleotide (ASO) inhibitor with a fully phosphorylated backbone, is a first-in-class miR-132 inhibitor. Preclinical investigations, including large randomized, placebo-controlled studies in validated porcine models of subacute and chronic HF after myocardial infarction, found a favourable safety profile, efficient drug delivery to cardiac tissue, and potent, dose-dependent target reduction in myocardium and plasma. The results suggested a strong effect of CDR132L against adverse cardiac remodelling, a dose-dependent improvement in left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF), and a reduction in the amino terminal fragment of pro-brain natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP) concentrations. In addition, positive effects on relevant echocardiographic, electrophysiological, and biochemical parameters of disease severity showed improved cardiac systolic and diastolic function.,, These promising preclinical observations and the elaborated toxicological profile of ASOs led us to conduct this first-in-human study straight in patients with stable chronic HF of ischaemic origin. Main objectives were to evaluate safety, pharmacokinetics of ascending single and repeated intravenous doses of CDR132L and exploratorily analysing target engagement as well as HF relevant pharmacodynamic parameters. Here, we report the results of the first clinical trial of an ASO therapy targeting a specific microRNA as a major culprit for HF pathophysiology at the cellular level.

Methods

Study design, patients, and ethics

This FiH Phase 1b, prospective, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, dose-ranging study (NCT04045405) of intravenous CDR132L was performed from June 2019 to March 2020 at Richmond Pharmacology Ltd research unit, London, UK. We recruited patients 30–80 years old with New York Heart Association class 1–3 chronic HF with LVEF between ≥30% and <50% or NT-pro BNP >125 ng/L at screening, and the body mass index of 18–28 kg/m2. Patients had to remain on guideline-directed standard-of-care therapy for HF,, and on stable medication for comorbidities. Main exclusion criteria comprised previously decompensated HF or HF of non-ischaemic origin, i.e. hypertensive heart disease, myocarditis, alcoholic cardiomyopathy, or cardiac dysfunction due to atrial fibrillation with rapid ventricular rate. A full list of in-/exclusion criteria is found in the Supplementary material online. The study was approved by the concerned ethics committee and regulatory agency [Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA)]. No patient underwent any study-related activity before giving written informed consent to study participation. This trial followed the precepts of Good Clinical Practice and the Declaration of Helsinki.

Study treatment, randomization, and blinding

Patients were randomized 5:2 to CDR132L or placebo (0.9% saline). Under a guideline-recommended sentinel dosing strategy, consecutive seven-patient cohorts received one of the four pre-specified ascending dosages, 0.32, 1, 3, or 10 mg/kg body weight, contingent on safety review. Study treatment was given twice, via one 15 min intravenous (i.v.) infusion each on Days 1 and 28. For an abundant safety margin, the initial CDR132L dosage, 0.32 mg/kg, was selected to be approximately one-tenth of the ‘no observed adverse events level (NOAEL)’ (20 mg/kg) in animal toxicology studies of repeated CDR132L dosing, considering allometric scaling of factor 6.2 according to the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) guidance. Consecutive dosages ascended by factors of 3, based on regulators’ recommendations. Participants, investigators, laboratory staff, employees of the sponsor, and additional clinical research organization staff were blinded to treatment assignments. The patient individual study medication was prepared by non-blinded pharmacists according to the random list and neutrally labelled (details appear in the Supplementary material online).

Study outcomes

The primary outcome was safety evaluated in terms of treatment emergent adverse events (TEAE) and change in laboratory values, while the secondary outcome was pharmacokinetic profiles for single and repeated ascending CDR132L doses. Exploratory outcomes included CDR132L target engagement projected by plasma miR-132 levels, and pharmacodynamic effects on LVEF, blood biomarker levels, and electrocardiographic variables. A further important evaluation was the calculation of anticipated therapeutic dose ranges (ATD) to be used in upcoming clinical studies. These ATD calculations for monthly or quarterly HF therapy were based on a novel pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic modelling scheme combining human data from this clinical trial with plasma and cardiac tissue measurement from preclinical large animal studies., Details appear in the Supplementary material online.

Study schedule and procedures

Overall study duration was 4 months for each patient (Figure ). After a screening period of 6 weeks, patients were hospitalized on Day 1, discharged on Day 4, and re-admitted on Day 27 for another 3 days; they were monitored as outpatients on Days 10–14, 56, 84, and 112 (end of study). Study profile. All patients underwent physical examination, vital signs, standard haematology, biochemistry, and coagulation determinations at pre-specified time points throughout the study. Adverse events were recorded at all study visits and graded using Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events version 4.0. In a blinded evaluation, investigators classified relationship of adverse events to study treatment (CDR132L or placebo). A comprehensive echocardiographic examination, including LVEF measurement, was performed at screening, baseline, and Days 56 and 112 to assess the safety and explore pharmacodynamics of CDR132L. Furthermore, HF relevant blood biomarker were assessed at pre-specified time points: plasma miR-132, circulating concentrations of analytes of HF severity (NT-proBNP), heart injury (high-sensitivity troponin T, TnT), kidney injury (kidney injury molecule-1, KIM-1), HF mortality risk, cardiac remodelling, and cardiac fibrosis (galectin-3, Gal-3; lipocalin-2, NGAL; suppression of tumourgenicity-2, ST-2; matrix metallopeptidase-1, MMP-1) (details in the Supplementary material online). Holter electrocardiograms (24 h) were recorded at screening, 12-lead real-time electrocardiograms (continuous telemetry), from 1 h pre-dose to 24 h post-dose, and additional 12-lead resting electrocardiograms at time points matching pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic sampling. QRS narrowing index was calculated as described in the Supplementary material online. Electrocardiographic data were reviewed by a blinded cardiologist, who provided expert manual adjudication of measured intervals. Blood for pharmacokinetic assessments of CDR132L was drawn shortly before treatment administration at 9 and 60 min and 3, 9, 24, and 48 h post-infusion.

Statistics

No formal sample size calculation was performed for this Phase 1b study. All participants receiving at least one dose of CDR132L or placebo were included in safety analysis, while all patients receiving their planned study treatment were eligible for pharmacokinetic and exploratory analyses. No substitutions were made for missing or technically inevaluable data. Safety data are presented using descriptive statistics. Non-compartmental analysis was used to estimate the following pharmacokinetic variables: maximum concentration (Cmax), time to Cmax (Tmax), area under the plasma concentration curve from time zero to the last quantifiable concentration or to infinity (respectively, AUC0– and AUC0–inf), terminal elimination half-life (t½), terminal rate constant (λ), volume of distribution (Vd), and blood clearance (CL). Individual plasma concentration data and actual times of CDR132L administration and blood sampling were used to calculate these values. AUC0– and AUC0–inf were calculated using the linear/log trapezoidal method; other pharmacokinetic variables were calculated using standard methodology. The underlying modelling assumption was that the logarithms of each pharmacokinetic variable and each respective dose were linearly related. All analyses of PD parameters were strictly exploratory mainly displaying results in a descriptive manner. The analysis was performed according to the intention-to-treat principle. Statistical analyses were performed using SAS 9.3 (SAS Institute, Cary, NC, USA), Phoenix WinNonLin 8.2.0.4383 (Pharsight, St. Louis, MO, USA), and Prism 8 (GraphPad Software, San Diego, CA, USA).

Results

CDR132L treatment is safe and well tolerated

A total of 116 patients with HF were screened. Figure  summarizes patient disposition. Twenty-eight met eligibility criteria, of whom 20 were randomized to CDR132L and 8 to placebo. All patients completed the study as planned. One patient inadvertently received his first CDR132L, 0.32 mg/kg, administration paravasally. This patient was included in the study, except the first dosing that was not considered for the PK analysis. Another patient withdrew from study for personal reasons after Day 4 and received only the first administration of CDR132L, 3 mg/kg. This patient remained in the safety collective and with the first dosing in the PK collective, but was excluded for PD analysis since no relevant data could be obtained. Study participant flow chart. Patients’ baseline characteristics by treatment group are displayed in Table . No relevant intergroup differences were apparent potentially affecting CDR132L safety or pharmacokinetics. Participants were predominantly elderly (mean age: 65.9 ± 8.8 years), male (27/28 patients), and Caucasian (25/28) and were on average overweight. Reflecting inclusion criteria, LVEF was reduced and NT-proBNP elevated and, as expected, showed heterogeneity among individuals and treatment groups. The mean time since HF diagnosis was 11.9 ± 8.2 years in CDR132L-treated patients and 8.8 ± 6.6 years in the placebo group; cardiac comorbidities, a history of cardiac procedures, hypertension, diabetes, and polypharmacy were frequent but heterogeneous. Baseline patient characteristics by treatment group Data are mean (SD) or n (%). ACE, angiotensin-converting enzyme; LVEF, left ventricular ejection fraction; NT-proBNP, amino terminal fragment of pro-brain natriuretic peptide; SD, standard deviation. One case of acute myocardial infarction. Three cases of acute myocardial infarction. Treatment with CDR132L, 0.32–10 mg/kg, was safe and well tolerated (Supplementary material online, and ). No serious TEAE were reported; no patient died during the study. No adverse event occasioned any delay or cancellation of a study infusion or caused study withdrawal. Altogether, 53 adverse events were reported in 22/28 patients (79%). All events were mild in severity, except two rated moderate, neither considered study treatment related. No signs or symptoms of injection site reaction were reported. Notably, no local adverse reaction was seen in the patient inadvertently administered one dose of CDR132L, 0.32 mg/kg, paravasally. TEAE were less frequent and affected a lesser percentage of patients in the CDR132L group, compared to the placebo group: 33 events in 15/20 patients vs. 20 events in 7/8 patients. Adverse events considered to be at least possibly CDR132L-related were observed in only 2/20 patients receiving CDR132L and comprised single mild episodes of dizziness (during infusion) and euphoric mood during the first dosing period in 1 patient given 3 mg/kg and of dizziness and diarrhoea during the second dosing period in 1 patient given 10 mg/kg (Supplementary material online, ). Dizziness or euphoric mood during the first dosing period was observed in 1 patient each given placebo and, in blinded evaluation, was classified as study treatment related. All study treatment-related adverse events resolved without specific therapy. Thrombocytopenia, pre-specified as a potential adverse event of special interest (AESI) due to experience with certain first-generation ASOs, was not observed: platelet counts remained normal and stable throughout (Figure ). Laboratory assessments of liver and kidney function including KIM-1 and creatinine determinations (Figure ) revealed no signs of hepatic or renal toxicity for the tested doses. No clinically significant out-of-range values were recorded in all other laboratory values. Selected safety variables over time. Data are mean (95% confidence interval). KIM-1, kidney injury molecule-1; QTc, corrected QT interval; bpm, beats per minute. No clinically significant changes from baseline values were seen in high-sensitivity troponin T concentration, monitored as a safety marker of ischaemic injury (Figure ). No clinically significant out-of-range values that could not be explained by an individual’s ischaemic HF were noted in any electrocardiographic variable. No participant had clinically relevant changes in QT interval corrected for heart rate (QTc), i.e. QTc of >500 ms according to Fridericia’s formula or a >60 ms change from baseline (Figure ); absence of QT prolongation, a highly sensitive marker of pro-arrthythmic properties, suggested low likelihood of pro-arrhythmic effects of CDR132L. Heart rate and systolic and diastolic blood pressure appeared not to be influenced by study treatment (Figure ), and no study treatment-related syncope was reported.

CDR132L is associated with largely consistent, predictable, linearly dose-dependent pharmacokinetics

CDR132L exposure from Days 1 and 28 administrations was consistent (Figure ), and intra-patient variability was generally within the expected physiological norm (<30%). CDR132L was quantifiable in the plasma of all patients in the respective cohorts until 9 h after all intravenous infusions of 0.32 mg/kg, until 24 h after all infusions of 1 mg/kg, and until at least 48 h, the last measurement point, after all infusions of 3 or 10 mg/kg. No evidence of drug accumulation was seen in any CDR132L dosage group after the second (Day 28) administration, in line with short observed t½ (Supplementary material online, ). Plasma CDR132L concentrations through 48 h after CDR132L administrations. Data are mean (95% confidence interval). Measurements were taken 9 min and 1, 3, 9, 24, and 48 h after CDR132L administration. *CDR132L concentration fell below the lower limit of quantification at subsequent time points. The relationship between dose and CDR132L concentration was almost linear with slightly increasing slope over time up to 9 h and then again decreasing (Supplementary material online, ). Statistical evaluation of dose proportionality supported the high linearity of Cmax with dose. When the power model was fitted to dose-normalized Cmax, the slope [90% confidence interval (CI)] was −0.023 (−0.068 to 0.021); inclusion of 0 in this CI suggested dose proportionality. Mean tmax was relatively consistent across doses, generally occurring ∼0.4 h after the start of the 15-min infusion (Supplementary material online, ). Statistical evaluation of dose proportionality of dose-normalized AUC0– or AUC0–inf suggested a greater than dose-proportional increase in exposure with increasing CDR132L dose. For example, when the power model was fitted to dose-normalized AUC0–inf, the slope (90% CI), 0.264 (0.225–0.302), excluded 0, suggesting non-proportionality. Mean CDR132L t½ in plasma was estimated at ∼4 h for doses ≥1 mg/kg. The corresponding value for the 0.32 mg/kg dose was ∼1 h (Supplementary material online, ). This shorter t½ reflects the briefer post-infusion period of CDR132L quantifiability in plasma and is more likely to reflect drug distribution than elimination. For all studied dosages, CDR132L showed a small mean V, suggesting drug delivery largely to the vascular space and surrounding extravascular fluid. However, the V seemingly accounted for the short t½ in plasma, since mean CL generally remained protracted, at ∼2–5 L/h, slowing as dosage increased (Supplementary material online, ). These data are in line with the results from the non-clinical pig studies that provided sufficient distribution into the heart tissue to achieve therapeutic levels.

CDR132L administration provides beneficial add-on effect on cardiac function and fibrosis

HF patients show high miR-132 expression in cardiac tissue and elevated plasma concentrations associated to NYHA class., CDR132L administration achieved rapid and, especially at higher dose levels ≥1 mg/kg, sustained and sharp reduction in plasma miR-132 over the 4-month course of the study. This observation was demonstrated by decreases from baseline in median plasma miR-132 levels (Figure  and Supplementary material online, ). By contrast, patients receiving placebo showed relatively constant, much higher median plasma miR-132 concentrations over the same period. Circulating miR-132 levels were dose-dependently decreased in CDR132L patients when compared to concentrations in the placebo group at study endpoint (Day 112). We also assessed miR-132 in plasma samples from healthy volunteers obtained from a blood bank (n = 30) since the study was carried out in HF patients. Interestingly, patients treated with 3 or 10 mg/kg CDR132L showed sustained low plasma miR-132 levels similar to the range in healthy volunteers (median level: 0.0004) (Figure  and Supplementary material online, ). Relative to placebo, two infusions of CDR132L, 0.32 mg/kg, reduced median miR-132 concentration by 36%, and of CDR132L, 1 mg/kg, by 67%. Two infusions of the highest studied CDR132L doses, 3 and 10 mg/kg, suppressed median plasma miR-132 levels by 81% and 93%, respectively, relative to placebo, differences that attained statistical significance (P ≤ 0.0061, Mann–Whitney U test; Figure ). As tissue sampling by invasive myocardial biopsy for pharmacokinetic or miR-132 quantification was not considered to be ethically justified or acceptable to the potential study participants, we developed a pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic (PK/PD) modelling approach to predict effective CDR132L dose levels. Therefore, PK/PD data from cardiac tissue and plasma measurements in CDR132L studies in large animal models of HF with relatively large sample sizes, were combined with plasma miR-132 measurements from the present study regarding CDR132L PK and target engagement (Figures  and Supplementary material online, and ) to estimate dose ranges likely to deliver sufficient drug to suppress excess target in cardiac tissue. Methodological details appear in the Supplementary material online. Based on this modelling approach, monthly intravenous CDR132L doses of 1–5 mg/kg or quarterly doses of 9–14 mg/kg would appear to provide sufficient cardiac miR-132 reduction (see Supplementary material online, ) and, presumably, related clinical benefits; such dosages may be appropriate for further clinical studies in HF patients. Plasma miR-132 levels in patients after CDR132L treatment. (A) Median with 25%/75% interquartile ranges of plasma miR-132 levels in patients over the study course (pre = immediately before, post = 1h after administration). (B) Individual median miR-132 levels in healthy subjects (n = 30; blood bank samples) and in patients (n = 25) at study end (Day 112). P-value: Mann–Whitney U test comparing to the placebo group. Based on the PK/PD modelling approach described above, we categorized all patients into 'pharmacodynamically active' (PD active) and ‘non-pharmacodynamically active’ (non-PD active) study treatment groups following the above described target engagement data. Pharmacodynamic activity was classified based on plasma miR-132 reduction in large animal studies and in the present Phase 1b trial on LVEF changes and other pharmacodynamic variables in the animal studies. From this we pooled patients receiving 1, 3, or 10 mg/kg (PD active: n = 14) and compared with the pooled placebo and the lowest dose of 0.32 mg/kg groups (non-PD active: n = 13). NT-proBNP levels showed a median relative decrease in the PD active group with 23.3% from baseline to end of study (Day 112), whereas the non-PD active group showed in contrast a median relative increase of 0.9% (P = 0.2519, Fisher’s exact test; odds ratio: 2.9167; Figure  and Supplementary material online, ). Both groups were additionally compared regarding a combined endpoint consisting of patients with a >10% relative decrease in NT-proBNP levels and/or a >2% absolute increase in LVEF from baseline to Day 112. The combined endpoint was met by 11/14 (79%) in the active group vs. 6/13 (46%) in the non-active group (P = 0.1201, Fisher’s exact test; odds ratio: 4.2778; Figure  and Supplementary material online, ). These efficacy data are supported by markedly lower end-of-study plasma miR-132 concentrations in the active group relative to the non-active group (Figure ). Changes in exploratory pharmacodynamic variables, before first study treatment vs. end of study (Day 112). ‘Non-PD active’: patients receiving placebo or the 0.32 mg/kg CDR132L, ‘PD active’: patients receiving 1, 3, or 10 mg/kg CDR132L. (A) Median (circles) and 25%/75% interquartile ranges (bars) for relative changes in NT-proBNP from baseline to Day 112. (B) Percentages of patients with a >2% absolute increase in left ventricular ejection fraction and a >10% reduction in NT-proBNP, or both. (C) Corresponding mean ± SEM end-of-study plasma miR-132 levels. (D) Mean ± SEM changes in galectin-3, suppression of tumourgenicity-2, lipocalin-2, and matrix metallopeptidase-1. (E) Mean ± SEM changes in QRS narrowing normalized to pre-dosing measurements. P-values: Fisher's exact test (A, B, D, and E) or Mann–Whitney U test (C) comparing to ‘non-PD active’. Gal-3, galectin-3; MMP-1, matrix metallopeptidase-1; NGAL, lipocalin-2; ST-2, suppression of tumourgenicity-2. This first-in-human study confirmed that the novel treatment concept with an antisense oligonucleotide directed against miR-132 is safe and well-tolerated and provided indicative beneficial pharmacodynamic effects for the treatment of heart failure. Additional biomarkers related to HF and cardiac fibrosis including GAL-3, ST-2, NGAL, and MMP-1 were measured in this study (odds ratios for these parameters: >1; Figure  and Supplementary material online, ). From baseline until end of study, the active group had modest relative decreases in median concentrations of 4/5 of these biomarkers and NT-proBNP, suggesting amelioration of disease. The non-active group displayed a diametrically opposite pattern of changes in these biomarkers. Likely due at least partly to the small subgroup size, none of the changes for either group was statistically significant. Previous HF large animal data suggested positive effects on the shortening of prolonged action potential. Indeed, QRS complex narrowing is an electrocardiographic variable predicting beneficial treatment effects in patients with HF. HF patients with the initial abnormal durations of >120 ms within the non-PD active group showed a further widening of the QRS complex between baseline and study endpoint, while the PD active group showed a substantial narrowing leading to an intergroup difference of 5% (Figure  and Supplementary material online, ). When placebo patients and patients receiving CDR132L were compared, the effect on QRS narrowing by CDR132L administration was statistically significant (Supplementary material online, , P = 0.0333, Mann–Whitney U test).

Discussion

This is the first study report of an ASO inhibiting a miRNA in HF patients. The FiH study demonstrated a selective, dose-dependent, and potent reduction in miR-132 expression by the selective inhibitor CDR132L. The mechanism of action of CDR132L is to prevent and revert pathological cardiac remodelling as described earlier.,, A summary of the mode of action is provided in the . Since novel generation ASOs are widely considered as safe treatment due to the high target selectivity and a well-established PK, we performed the FiH study already in the target indication HF as advised in meetings with regulators [Bundesinstitut für Arzneimittel und Medizinprodukte (BfArM), MHRA, FDA]. Involving healthy volunteers would not add new and relevant information to what is already known from other ASOs of the same chemical class., Although this study was designed primarily to assess the safety and pharmacokinetics of four ascending dosages of CDR132L, exploratory analysis of pre-planned pharmacodynamic endpoints revealed positive and encouraging effects demonstrating the translation of findings from various animal HF models into HF patients., Overall, intravenous administration of escalating dose levels from 0.32 up to 10 mg/kg of CDR132L demonstrated a consistent safety profile in the target HF population as already seen in preclinical animal studies., Thrombocytopenia was defined in the study protocol as potential AESI since some ASOs have been associated with effects on platelet number and function. Thorough analysis of platelets and other coagulation parameters did not show any abnormalities and remained well within normal ranges in all treatment groups. The safety of CDR132L is confirming of what is known from that of other locked nucleic acid ASOs,, given the apparent inability of ASO chemistries like CDR132L’s to cross the intact blood–brain barrier, and given suggestions in preclinical studies of possible beneficial effects of miR-132 suppression in the diseased liver or kidney. One main outcome of this study was that CDR132L reliably demonstrated target engagement with, and potent reduction in its molecular target, miR-132, in plasma. The results showed a dose-dependent, statistically significant reduction in plasma miR-132 as already seen in preclinical animal studies., Since taking cardiac biopsies were seen unethical in this Phase 1b study, no data were gleaned on tissue PK or direct target engagement in human cardiac tissue. However, extensive pig studies, found strong correlations between plasma and cardiac tissue concentrations of miR-132. In addition, linear inverse correlation was seen between CDR132L and miR-132 concentrations in the porcine heart and a positive correlation between miR-132 and LVEF improvement post-treatment could be established. These findings were supported by an observational sub-study of a 953-patient subset of the GISSI Heart Failure Study, where a correlation between plasma miR-132 levels and HF severity could be demonstrated. A reduction in plasma miR-132 in the present study indeed reflects CDR132L activity against its molecular target in the diseased human heart. One might speculate that, in turn, increasing levels of activity against miR-132 excess in that tissue would correlate with the clinical improvement of HF. The target engagement data demonstrate the successful translation of preclinical (pig) target engagement by CDR132L treatment into HF patients. It also indicates that the assessment of circulating miR-132 is suitable to be used as target engagement monitoring biomarker in the context of further CDR132L clinical development. Results from our PK/PD modelling approach provide the opportunity to select a suitable CDR132L administration scheme and mode of administration with a high level of freedom to meet the needs for later clinical development. Our modelling approach allowed subgrouping of patients (n = 14, doses 1–10 mg/kg) receiving CDR132L associated with relatively high and prolonged plasma miR-132 reduction to be compared with those patients with absent or sub-optimal plasma miR-132 reduction (n = 13, placebo and 0.32 mg/kg). Interestingly, although small patient numbers, the study results for CDR132L are already suggesting some clinical benefit in chronic HF patients on the top of standard of care. This included an improvement in HF severity, reflected in a clinically meaningful median reduction in NT-proBNP and narrowing of the QRS complex. Even if the human data are to be interpreted with caution due to the small patient numbers, the pharmacodynamic findings are to be viewed as encouraging especially as they confirm the efficacy results seen in large animal studies.,

Data availability statement

The data underlying this article are available in the article and in the Supplementary material online.

Supplementary material

Supplementary material is available at European Heart Journal online. Click here for additional data file.
Table 1

 Baseline patient characteristics by treatment group

Cohort 1 (0.32 mg/kg CDR132L)(n = 5)Cohort 2 (1 mg/kg CDR132L) (n = 5)Cohort 3 (3 mg/kg CDR132L) (n = 5)Cohort 4 (10 mg/kg CDR132L)(n = 5)Placebo(n = 8)
Demographic data
 Age73.4 (3.5)69.0 (6.0)66.8 (5.4)61.0 (13.1)61.6 (8.6)
 Sex ratio, men to women5:05:05:05:07:1
 Race, n (%)
  Caucasian5 (100)4 (80)5 (100)5 (100)6 (75)
  Black African01 (20)000
  Asian00001 (13)
  Others00001 (13)
 Body mass index (kg/m2)25.8 (1.9)25.6 (3.4)26.8 (2.6)26.0 (2.3)25.6 (2.9)
Relevant medical and surgical history, n (%)
 Myocardial infarction2 (40)a2 (40)2 (40)3 (60)b4 (50)
 Myocardial ischaemia2 (40)1 (20)04 (80)2 (25)
 Angina unstable001 (20)01 (13)
 Atrial fibrillation or flutter2 (40)01 (20)2 (40)0
 Hypertension (essential or secondary)1 (20)3 (60)2 (40)2 (40)4 (50)
 Type 2 diabetes mellitus2 (40)2 (40)1 (20)01 (13)
 Coronary arterial stent insertion2 (40)001 (20)1 (13)
 Coronary artery bypass2 (40)1 (20)2 (40)1 (20)2 (25)
 Percutaneous coronary intervention including angioplasty2 (40)3 (60)1 (20)2 (40)7 (88)
 Stent placement2 (40)0001 (13)
 LVEF, n (%)
  31–39%1 (20)1 (20)1 (20)2 (40)0
  41–45%2 (40)1 (20)1 (20)2 (40)3 (38)
  47–49%02 (40)3 (60)1 (20)2 (25)
  52–56%2 (40)1 (20)003 (38)
 NT-proBNP, median (25th to 75th percentiles) (pg/mL)737 (576-926)125 (103-165)463 (319.5-1493.5)170 (122-632)125 (111-344)
Concomitant medication for HF, n (%)
 ACE inhibitors, plain3 (60)2 (40)2 (40)3 (60)4 (50)
 Angiotensin II receptor blockers, plain or in combination with medication of other classes03 (60)1 (20)1 (20)2 (25)
 Aldosterone antagonists2 (40)2 (40)1 (20)3 (60)3 (38)
 Alpha-blockers and beta-blockers0001 (20)0
 Beta blocking agents, selective or non-selective5 (100)5 (100)3 (60)4 (80)5 (63)
 Dihydropyridine derivatives1 (20)1 (20)002 (25)
 Platelet aggregation inhibitors (excl. heparin)4 (80)2 (40)4 (80)3 (60)7 (88)

Data are mean (SD) or n (%). ACE, angiotensin-converting enzyme; LVEF, left ventricular ejection fraction; NT-proBNP, amino terminal fragment of pro-brain natriuretic peptide; SD, standard deviation.

One case of acute myocardial infarction.

Three cases of acute myocardial infarction.

  23 in total

1.  International Conference on Harmonisation; guidance on E14 Clinical Evaluation of QT/QTc Interval Prolongation and Proarrhythmic Potential for Non-Antiarrhythmic Drugs; availability. Notice.

Authors: 
Journal:  Fed Regist       Date:  2005-10-20

Review 2.  Safety of antisense oligonucleotide and siRNA-based therapeutics.

Authors:  Xuan Chi; Philip Gatti; Thomas Papoian
Journal:  Drug Discov Today       Date:  2017-01-31       Impact factor: 7.851

3.  2016 ESC Guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment of acute and chronic heart failure: The Task Force for the diagnosis and treatment of acute and chronic heart failure of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC). Developed with the special contribution of the Heart Failure Association (HFA) of the ESC.

Authors:  Piotr Ponikowski; Adriaan A Voors; Stefan D Anker; Héctor Bueno; John G F Cleland; Andrew J S Coats; Volkmar Falk; José Ramón González-Juanatey; Veli-Pekka Harjola; Ewa A Jankowska; Mariell Jessup; Cecilia Linde; Petros Nihoyannopoulos; John T Parissis; Burkert Pieske; Jillian P Riley; Giuseppe M C Rosano; Luis M Ruilope; Frank Ruschitzka; Frans H Rutten; Peter van der Meer
Journal:  Eur J Heart Fail       Date:  2016-05-20       Impact factor: 15.534

4.  Mipomersen, an apolipoprotein B synthesis inhibitor, for lowering of LDL cholesterol concentrations in patients with homozygous familial hypercholesterolaemia: a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial.

Authors:  Frederick J Raal; Raul D Santos; Dirk J Blom; A David Marais; Min-Ji Charng; William C Cromwell; Robin H Lachmann; Daniel Gaudet; Ju L Tan; Scott Chasan-Taber; Diane L Tribble; Joann D Flaim; Stanley T Crooke
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2010-03-20       Impact factor: 79.321

Review 5.  Heart failure drug treatment.

Authors:  Patrick Rossignol; Adrian F Hernandez; Scott D Solomon; Faiez Zannad
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2019-03-09       Impact factor: 79.321

6.  Circulating microRNA-132 levels improve risk prediction for heart failure hospitalization in patients with chronic heart failure.

Authors:  Serge Masson; Sandor Batkai; Julia Beermann; Christian Bär; Angelika Pfanne; Sabrina Thum; Michela Magnoli; Giovanna Balconi; Gian Luigi Nicolosi; Luigi Tavazzi; Roberto Latini; Thomas Thum
Journal:  Eur J Heart Fail       Date:  2017-10-12       Impact factor: 15.534

Review 7.  RNA-based diagnostic and therapeutic strategies for cardiovascular disease.

Authors:  Dongchao Lu; Thomas Thum
Journal:  Nat Rev Cardiol       Date:  2019-06-11       Impact factor: 32.419

8.  Engineered Circular RNA Sponges Act as miRNA Inhibitors to Attenuate Pressure Overload-Induced Cardiac Hypertrophy.

Authors:  Annadoray Lavenniah; Tuan Danh Anh Luu; Yiqing Peter Li; Tingsen Benson Lim; Jianming Jiang; Matthew Ackers-Johnson; Roger S-Y Foo
Journal:  Mol Ther       Date:  2020-04-14       Impact factor: 11.454

9.  Angiotensin II regulates microRNA-132/-212 in hypertensive rats and humans.

Authors:  Tilde V Eskildsen; Pia L Jeppesen; Mikael Schneider; Anne Y Nossent; Maria B Sandberg; Pernille B L Hansen; Charlotte H Jensen; Maria L Hansen; Niels Marcussen; Lars M Rasmussen; Peter Bie; Ditte C Andersen; Søren P Sheikh
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2013-05-27       Impact factor: 5.923

10.  CDR132L improves systolic and diastolic function in a large animal model of chronic heart failure.

Authors:  Sandor Batkai; Celina Genschel; Janika Viereck; Steffen Rump; Christian Bär; Tobias Borchert; Denise Traxler; Martin Riesenhuber; Andreas Spannbauer; Dominika Lukovic; Katrin Zlabinger; Ena Hašimbegović; Johannes Winkler; Rita Garamvölgyi; Sonja Neitzel; Mariann Gyöngyösi; Thomas Thum
Journal:  Eur Heart J       Date:  2021-01-07       Impact factor: 29.983

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  46 in total

1.  [MicroRNA-132 promotes atherosclerosis by inducing mitochondrial oxidative stressmediated ferroptosis].

Authors:  Z Liu; S Cao; Q Chen; F Fu; M Cheng; X Huang
Journal:  Nan Fang Yi Ke Da Xue Xue Bao       Date:  2022-01-20

Review 2.  Non-canonical features of microRNAs: paradigms emerging from cardiovascular disease.

Authors:  Donato Santovito; Christian Weber
Journal:  Nat Rev Cardiol       Date:  2022-03-18       Impact factor: 49.421

3.  The microRNA Expression Profiling in Heart Failure: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.

Authors:  Nan-Nan Shen; Jia-Liang Wang; Yong-Ping Fu
Journal:  Front Cardiovasc Med       Date:  2022-06-15

Review 4.  Pharmacokinetics and Proceedings in Clinical Application of Nucleic Acid Therapeutics.

Authors:  Markus Herkt; Thomas Thum
Journal:  Mol Ther       Date:  2020-11-12       Impact factor: 11.454

Review 5.  Leveraging clinical epigenetics in heart failure with preserved ejection fraction: a call for individualized therapies.

Authors:  Nazha Hamdani; Sarah Costantino; Andreas Mügge; Djamel Lebeche; Carsten Tschöpe; Thomas Thum; Francesco Paneni
Journal:  Eur Heart J       Date:  2021-05-21       Impact factor: 29.983

6.  Antagonism of miRNA in heart failure: first evidence in human.

Authors:  Andrew H Baker; Mauro Giacca
Journal:  Eur Heart J       Date:  2021-01-07       Impact factor: 29.983

Review 7.  MicroRNAs in Acute ST Elevation Myocardial Infarction-A New Tool for Diagnosis and Prognosis: Therapeutic Implications.

Authors:  Alina Ioana Scărlătescu; Miruna Mihaela Micheu; Nicoleta-Monica Popa-Fotea; Maria Dorobanțu
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2021-04-30       Impact factor: 5.923

8.  The C0-C1f Region of Cardiac Myosin Binding Protein-C Induces Pro-Inflammatory Responses in Fibroblasts via TLR4 Signaling.

Authors:  Athiththan Yogeswaran; Christian Troidl; James W McNamara; Jochen Wilhelm; Theresa Truschel; Laila Widmann; Muhammad Aslam; Christian W Hamm; Sakthivel Sadayappan; Christoph Lipps
Journal:  Cells       Date:  2021-05-26       Impact factor: 6.600

Review 9.  The role of extracellular vesicles in regulating local and systemic inflammation in cardiovascular disease.

Authors:  Lee Ohayon; Xinyi Zhang; Partha Dutta
Journal:  Pharmacol Res       Date:  2021-06-25       Impact factor: 10.334

Review 10.  Non-coding RNAs in cardiac regeneration: Mechanism of action and therapeutic potential.

Authors:  Yi Wang; Jinghai Chen; Douglas B Cowan; Da-Zhi Wang
Journal:  Semin Cell Dev Biol       Date:  2021-07-17       Impact factor: 7.499

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