| Literature DB >> 34591693 |
Matthis Synofzik1,2, Willeke M C van Roon-Mom3, Georg Marckmann4, Hermine A van Duyvenvoorde5, Holm Graessner6,7, Rebecca Schüle1,2, Annemieke Aartsma-Rus3.
Abstract
Antisense oligonucleotide (ASO) therapies present a promising disease-modifying treatment approach for rare neurological diseases (RNDs). However, the current focus is on "more common" RNDs, leaving a large share of RND patients still without prospect of disease-modifying treatments. In response to this gap, n-of-1 ASO treatment approaches are targeting ultrarare or even private variants. While highly attractive, this emerging, academia-driven field of ultimately individualized precision medicine is in need of systematic guidance and standards, which will allow global scaling of this approach. We provide here genetic, regulatory, and ethical perspectives for preparing n-of-1 ASO treatments and research programs, with a specific focus on the European context. By example of splice modulating ASOs, we outline genetic criteria for variant prioritization, chart the regulatory field of n-of-1 ASO treatment development in Europe, and propose an ethically informed classification for n-of-1 ASO treatment strategies and level of outcome assessments. To accommodate the ethical requirements of both individual patient benefit and knowledge gain, we propose a stronger integration of patient care and clinical research when developing novel n-of-1 ASO treatments: each single trial of therapy should inherently be driven to generate generalizable knowledge, be registered in a ASO treatment registry, and include assessment of generic outcomes, which allow aggregated analysis across n-of-1 trials of therapy.Entities:
Keywords: antisense oligonucleotides; ethics; n-of-1; policy; rare diseases; rare neurological diseases; regulatory
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34591693 PMCID: PMC9058873 DOI: 10.1089/nat.2021.0039
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nucleic Acid Ther ISSN: 2159-3337 Impact factor: 4.244
FIG. 1.Mechanisms of genetic variant types and their targeting by splice modulation ASOs (examples). Top panel: deep intronic pathogenic variants can result into part of an intron being aberrantly included into the mRNA transcripts, thus abolishing protein function. ASOs can prevent inclusion of these cryptic exons. Similarly, for some genes, alternative splicing occurs where an exon is included, which leads to nonproductive transcripts. ASOs can target these nonproductive splicing events, preventing inclusion of these alternative exons and thus increasing productive mRNA and protein (TANGO approach). Middle panel: pathogenic variants can disrupt the open reading frame. ASO-mediated exon skipping can restore the reading frame, allowing production of an internally deleted, partially functional protein. Bottom panel: pathogenic variants can result in the production of a toxic protein. Skipping the exon harboring the variant will result in the production of a shorter, nontoxic protein. ASO, antisense oligonucleotide. Color images are available online.
Overview of Different Methods Splice Modulating Antisense Oligonucleotides Can Be Used for Neurological Disorders
| Method | Example | Status |
|---|---|---|
| Exon inclusion to restore protein production | Nusinersen for spinal muscular atrophy | EMA and FDA approved |
| Exon skipping to induce production of partially functional protein | Eteplirsen, golodirsen, viltolarsen, and casimersen for Duchenne muscular dystrophy | FDA approved |
| Exon skipping to increase amount of productive transcript | STK-001 for Dravet syndrome | Phase 1 clinical trial (NCT04442295) |
| Exon skipping to reduce amount of toxic transcript or protein | Skipping toxic repeat containing exon 10 in ataxin-3 for spinocerebellar ataxia type 3 (SCA3) | Preclinical |
| Modulating alternative splicing from detrimental to protective isoform | Converting detrimental three repeat (3R) tau to beneficial 4R tau in frontotemporal dementia | Preclinical |
| Correction of cryptic splicing variants | Steric block to prevent the use of a cryptic splice site, for example, due to a deep intronic variant (milasen for cryptic splicing variant of CLN7 gene or deep intronic variant in BPAN or OPA1) or creation of a novel splice-donor (as in AT, atipeksen) or splice-acceptor site | IND given for milasen and atipeksen by FDA for individualized treatment; all other examples: preclinical |
Inclusion Criteria for Splice Modulation Antisense Oligonucleotide Therapy Development: Antisense Oligonucleotide Strategy/Mutation Mechanism
| DNA variant prioritization (most optimal from left to right) | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Activation of | Activation of | |||
|
| Prevent cryptic exon inclusion | Restore normal transcript | Exon exclusion to restore ORF | Exclusion of the exon containing the variant | Exclusion of the exon containing the variant |
|
| Target >50 bp from exon/intron boundary | Target >10 bp from canonical splice site | Excluded exon(s) do not disturb the ORF | Excluded exon(s) do not disturb the ORF | Excluded exon(s) do not disturb the ORF |
|
| Restore normal protein expression | Restore normal protein expression | Production of (internally) truncated protein that retains most important wild-type function | Production of (internally) truncated protein that retains most important wild type | Production of (internally) truncated protein that retains most important wild type |
FIG. 2.Regulatory framework for access to authorized and unlicensed medicinal products. Color images are available online.
Clinical Care and Research Strategies for n-of-1 Treatments: A Conceptual Framework
| Characteristic | “Trial of therapy” | N-of-1 trial | Aggregated “trials of therapy” | Aggregated n-of-1 trials |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Optimize individual patient care >> gain generalizable knowledge | Gain generalizable knowledge > optimize individual care | Optimize individual care (treatment) ≈ | Gain generalizable knowledge >> optimize individual care | |
|
| Clinical care | Prospective experimental trial design | Clinical care; | Prospective experimental trial design |
|
| No | Yes | Yes | Yes |
|
| Clinical need | Research requirements (inclusion/exclusion criteria) > clinical need | Clinical need (treatment) < = > | Research requirements (inclusion/exclusion criteria) >> clinical need |
| Individualized | Standardized | Individualized | Standardized | |
|
| Systematic for individual treatment decisions | Standardized for knowledge gain (including individual treatment) | Systematic for individual treatment decisions (treatment) ≈ standardized for knowledge gain across individuals (analysis) | Standardized for knowledge gain across individuals |
|
| Individual level | Individual level | Individual and aggregated level | Individual and aggregated level |
|
| IC to treatment | IC to treatment and trial participation | IC to treatment and observational study | IC to treatment and trial participation |
|
| HEC | HEC > IRB | IRB (analysis) and HEC (treatment) | IRB |
|
| yes (case reports and/or registry) | yes (case reports and/or registry) | Yes | Yes |
This table provides an elaboration and modification of an earlier, yet different version of classifying n-of-1 treatments [36].
HEC, hospital ethics committee; IRB, institutional review board, IC, informed consent.
An n-of-1 Antisense Oligonucleotide Registry: Scientific and Ethical Advantages (Adapted and Refined from [44])
| • accumulate evidence for potential beneficial effects |
| • aggregate information on adverse events |
| • collect long-term data (eg, also pharmacovigilance data after possible publication of the initial results) |
| • collect data on ineffective “trials of therapy” or failed n-of-1 trials |
| • reduce publication bias, which is of particular importance in this emerging field where standard clinical trials are not possible (ie, failed n-of-1 treatments would otherwise likely not be published and made public) |
| • help to inform and prepare other n-of-1 treatments and larger research trials |
| • create transparency about ongoing n-of-1 activities which would otherwise be scattered in small numbers around the world |
| • facilitate coordination of research trials and research groups |
| • attract pharma companies by informing them in an aggregated fashion about promising versus ineffective disease targets, outcome measures capturing efficacy, etc. |
FIG. 3.Outcome parameters for individualized therapies. Like in standard clinical trials, outcome evaluation in n-of-1 treatments can include several modalities, including clinician-reported (ClinRO) or patient-reported (PRO) outcomes, performance outcomes (PerfO), digital outcomes (eg, imaging, sensor-based movement or activity analysis, etc.), and molecular outcomes (eg, fluid biomarkers). Each of these outcome modalities may be tailored to a certain level of specificity: disease specific, specific for a group of diseases, or generic. Color images are available online.