| Literature DB >> 35459248 |
Dirk Jacobus Blom1, Adrian David Marais2, Rajen Moodley3, Nico van der Merwe4, Alet van Tonder5, Frederick Johan Raal6.
Abstract
This review focuses on antisense oligonucleotides and small interfering ribonucleic acid therapies approved or under development for the management of lipid disorders. Recent advances in RNA-based therapeutics allow tissue-specific targeting improving safety. Multiple potential target proteins have been identified and RNA-based therapeutics have the potential to significantly improve outcomes for patients with or at risk for atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease. The advantages of RNA-based lipid modifying therapies include the ability to reduce the concentration of almost any target protein highly selectively, allowing for more precise control of metabolic pathways than can often be achieved with small molecule-based drugs. RNA-based lipid modifying therapies also make it possible to reduce the expression of target proteins for which there are no small molecule inhibitors. RNA-based therapies can also reduce pill burden as their administration schedule typically varies from weekly to twice yearly injections. The safety profile of most current RNA-based lipid therapies is acceptable but adverse events associated with various therapies targeting lipid pathways have included injection site reactions, inflammatory reactions, hepatic steatosis and thrombocytopenia. While the body of evidence for these therapies is expanding, clinical experience with these therapies is currently limited in duration and the results of long-term studies are eagerly awaited.Entities:
Keywords: Antisense oligonucleotides; LDL-C; Lipid disorders; Lipid-lowering; RNA-based therapies; Small interfering RNA
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35459248 PMCID: PMC9034497 DOI: 10.1186/s12944-022-01649-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Lipids Health Dis ISSN: 1476-511X Impact factor: 4.315
Fig. 1Development of RNA-based therapies for the treatment of cardiovascular and other disorders. AsO: antisense oligonucleotides; FDA: Food and Drug Administration; EMA: European Medicines Agency; CV: cardiovascular; HoFH: homozygous familial hypercholesterolemia; siRNA: small interfering ribonucleic acids; hATTR: hereditary transthyretin amyloidosis; Lp(a): lipoprotein(a)
Fig. 2Graphic depiction of antisense oligonucleotide and RNA interference mechanism of actions
FDA-approved RNA-based therapies
| Molecule | Approval date | Therapeutic area |
|---|---|---|
| Fomivirsen [ | 1998 | Cytomegalovirus retinitis |
| Pegaptinib [ | 2004 | Neovascular age-related macular degeneration |
| Mipomersen [ | 2013 | Familial hypercholesterolemia |
| Eteplirsen [ | 2016 | Duchenne muscular dystrophy |
| Defibrotide [ | 2016 | Hepatic veno-occlusive disease |
| Patisiran [ | 2018 | Polyneuropathy in hereditary transthyretin-mediated amyloidosis |
| Givosiran [ | 2019 | Acute hepatic porphyria |
| Inclisiran [ | 2021 | Heterozygous familial hypercholesterolemia or clinical atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease |
RNA-based therapies discussed in this review
| RNA-based therapy | Target | Type | Modification |
|---|---|---|---|
| CiVi007 [ | PCSK9 | AsO | LNA |
| Inclisiran [ | PCSK9 | siRNA | GalNAc conjugate |
| Mipomersen [ | Apolipoprotein B100 | AsO | Ribose modified with addition of 2′- |
| Pelacarsen [ | Apo(a) | AsO | GalNAc conjugate |
| Olpasiran [ | Apo(a) | siRNA | GalNAc conjugate |
| Vupanorsen [ | ANGPTL3 | AsO | GalNAc conjugate |
| ARO-ANG3 [ | ANGPTL3 | siRNA | GalNAc conjugate |
| Volanesorsen [ | ApoC3 | AsO | Ribose modified with addition of 2′- |
| ARO-APOC3 [ | ApoC3 | siRNA | GalNAc conjugate |
LNA locked nucleic acid, GalNAc N-acetylgalactosamine, PCSK9 proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 9
A summary of the most recently completed clinical trials for each gene therapy discussed
| Molecule | Trial name | Treatment arms | Primary outcome | Study duration | Patient population | Number of patients | Results: primary outcome | Safety reports1 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Inclisiran (siRNA)1 | ORION-9 [ | Inclisiran 300 mg or placebo every six months | 1. Between-group %∆ in LDL-C from baseline to day 510 2. Time-adjusted %∆ in baseline LDL-C between day 90 and day 540 | 18 months | HeFH | 482 | 1. -47.9% between-group difference in LDL-C at day 510 (95% CI, −53.5 to −42.3; 2. -44.3% between-group difference in LDL-C between day 90 and day 540 (95% CI, −48.5 to −40.1; | Injection site reactions, gastroenteritis, back pain and nasopharyngitis |
| ORION-10 [ | Inclisiran 300 mg or placebo every six months | 1. Between-group %∆ in LDL-C from baseline to day 510 2. Time-adjusted %∆ in baseline LDL-C between day 90 and day 540 | 18 months | Established ASCVD | 1561 | 1. −52.3% between-group difference in LDL-C at day 510 (95% CI, −55.7 to −48.8; 2. -53.8% between-group difference in LDL-C between day 90 and day 540 (95% CI, −56.2 to −51.3; | Death from cardiovascular causes, fatal or nonfatal stroke, fatal or nonfatal MI, injection site reactions, diabetes mellitus, bronchitis, dyspnea, upper respiratory tract infections | |
| ORION-11 [ | Inclisiran 300 mg or placebo every six months | 1. Between-group %∆ in LDL-C from baseline to day 510 2. Time-adjusted %∆ in baseline LDL-C between day 90 and day 540 | 18 months | Established ASCVD and ASCVD risk equivalents | 1617 | 1. -49.9% between-group difference in LDL-C at day 510 (95% CI, −53.1 to −46.6; 2. -49.2% between-group difference in LDL-C between day 90 and day 540 (95% CI, −51.6 to − 46.8; | Injection site reaction, arthralgia | |
| Mipomersen (AsO) | Phase 3 (NCT00607373) [ | 200 mg SC QW or placebo | %∆ in LDL-C levels from baseline to week 26 | 26 weeks | HoFH | 51 | −24.7% mean LDL-C change in mipomersen group 1. -3.3% mean LDL-C change in placebo group | Injection site reaction |
Phase 3 (NCT00794664) [ | 200 mg SC QW or placebo | %∆ in LDL-C from baseline to 2 weeks after last dose | 26 weeks | Severe hypercholesterolemia | 58 | −35.9% mean LDL-C change in mipomersen group 1. + 12.5% mean LDL-C change in placebo group | Injection site reaction Flu-like symptoms | |
| Pelacarsen (AsO) | Phase 2 (NCT03070782) [ | 20 mg QW or Q2W or Q4W, 40 mg Q4W, 60 mg Q4W or placebo | %∆ in fasting Lp(a) level from baseline to month 6 | 6–12 months | Established CVD and Lp(a) > 60 mg/dL | 286 | −72% in 60 mg Q4W group − 80% in 20 mg QW group | Injection site reaction |
| Olpasiran (siRNA) | Phase 1 [ | 3, 9, 30, 75, or 225 mg olpasiran once off or placebo | 1. Treatment-emergent adverse events 2. Safety laboratory analytes 3. Vital signs 4. ECGs | ⁓ 7 months | Lp(a) ≥ 70 nmol/L | 64 | −80% mean reduction in Lp(a) at Day 113 | Headache Upper respiratory tract infection |
| Vupanorsen (AsO) | Phase 2 (NCT03371355) [ | 20 mg QW, 40 or 80 mg Q4W | %∆ in fasting triglycerides from baseline to week 24 | 24 weeks | Hypertriglyceridemia, Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus (T2DM), and Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease | 105 | − 53% reduction in triglycerides in 80 mg Q4W group | Injection site reaction |
| ARO-ANG3 (siRNA) | Phase 1 (NCT03747224) [ | 100, 200 or 300 mg ARO-ANG3 or placebo Q4W | • Number of participants with adverse events potentially related to treatment | 113 days | Healthy volunteers, FH and severe hypertriglyceridemia | 94 | −90% reduction in ANGPTL3 in healthy volunteers and patients with FH − 43% reduction in TG in FH patients | Headache, injection site reaction, upper respiratory tract infection |
| Volanesorsen (AsO) | APPROACH [ | Volanesorsen 300 mg QW or placebo | • %∆ in fasting triglyceride level from baseline to 3 months | 52 weeks | Familial chylomicronemia syndrome | 66 | −77% or − 19.3 mmol/L in fasting TG from baseline to month 3 (95% CI, 15.0–23.6 mmol/L, | Injection site reaction, thrombocytopenia |
| COMPASS [ | Volanesorsen 300 mg QW or placebo | • %∆ in fasting triglyceride level from baseline to 3 months | 26 weeks | Hypertriglyceridemia | 113 | − 72.7 ± 17.4% in TG from baseline to month 3 | Injection site reaction | |
| BROADEN [ | Volanesorsen 300 mg QW or placebo | • ∆ in fasting triglycerides from baseline | 52 weeks | Familial partial lipodystrophies | 40 | −88% in fasting TG in volanesorsen group −22% in fasting TG in placebo group | Injection site reaction, thrombocytopenia | |
| Olezarsen (AsO) | Phase 2 (NCT03385239) [ | 10 or 50 mg Q4W, 15 mg Q2W, 10 mg QW | • %∆ in fasting triglyceride level from baseline to 6 months | 12 months | Established ASCVD and hypertriglyceridemia | 114 | −60% in fasting TG with 10 mg QW and 50 mg Q4W vs 6% increase in placebo group | Injection site reaction |
| ARO-APOC3 (siRNA) | Phase 1 (NCT03783377) [ | 10, 25 or 50 mg ARO-APOC3 or placebo | • Number of participants with adverse events potentially related to treatment | 113 days | Healthy volunteers, hypertriglyceridemia and familial chylomicronemia syndrome | 80 | − 72% in TG for healthy volunteers −78% in TG for hypertriglyceridemia and familial chylomicronemia | Injection site reaction, headache, upper respiratory tract infection and two cases of transient elevated ALT |
Data from the most advanced trials in the clinical development program were included here