Therapeutics

GRF6019

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Overview

Name: GRF6019
Therapy Type: Other
Target Type: Inflammation (timeline), Other (timeline), Unknown
Condition(s): Alzheimer's Disease
U.S. FDA Status: Alzheimer's Disease (Phase 2)
Company: Alkahest, Inc., Grifols Biologicals Inc.

Background

GRF6019 is a proprietary plasma fraction of about 400 proteins, developed by Alkahest and manufactured by Grifols. It represents a second-generation product of earlier clinical research infusing young adult plasma to treat age-related neurodegenerative disease (see Young Plasma). This treatment approach grows out of mouse parabiosis studies indicating a rejuvenating effect of young blood on the aging brain (e.g., Nov 2009 newsMay 2014 conference news). The rationale behind GRF6019 is that the components of young blood that counteract inflammatory and other age-related degenerative processes in the brain can be enriched and delivered as a plasma-derived product that does not require matching donor and recipient blood types.

In February 2019, responding to reports of commercial delivery of young plasma as a purported treatment for various conditions including memory loss, the FDA issued a statement warning the public of the potential risks of this practice. GRF6019 is a plasma fraction from which clotting factors and immunoglobulins have been removed to reduce those risks. 

Findings

In April 2018, Alkahest started a Phase 2 trial in 47 people with clinical diagnoses of mild to moderate AD; biomarkers to confirm underlying molecular pathology were not required. The study compared two doses of 100 ml or 250 ml GRF6019, given as five once-daily intravenous infusions in week one, and again in week 13, primarily on safety measures. Secondary outcomes include six-month change on some widely used cognitive and clinical batteries—MMSE, ADAS-Cog11, CDR-SB, ADCS-ADL, ADCS Clinical Global Impression of Change, NPI Questionnaire—as well as on some individual tests, e.g., the Grooved Pegboard and Category Fluency tests. There was no placebo group for comparison. The trial ran at nine U.S. sites, and finished in May 2019. In August, top-line data were announced. According to the company press release, GRF6019 was safe and well-tolerated, participants showed no decline on the ADAS-Cog11 or MMSE, and "negligible decline" on the CDR-SB and ADCS-ADL over six months. Results were published after peer review (Hannestad et al., 2020).

From January to December 2019, Alkahest ran a placebo-controlled Phase 2 trial in 26 people with clinically diagnosed AD and advanced dementia, i.e., an MMSE score below 10. Participants received infusions of 250 ml GRF6019 or placebo daily for five days, followed by a month of observation. Primary outcomes were safety and tolerability; secondary outcomes included change in MMSE, ADCS-ADL, and other measures of cognitive impairment and neuropsychiatric symptoms. According to a presentation at CTAD 2020, the treatment was safe and well-tolerated. Neither treatment nor placebo groups worsened on secondary cognition and functional endpoints, and there were no differences between the groups. In a plasma proteome biomarker analysis, the company reported post-treatment changes in proteins involved in complement and coagulation, nervous system development, apoptosis, axon guidance, and synapse function, that were not detected after placebo treatment. Results were subsequently published (Hannestad et al., 2021).

Alkahest is developing a second plasma fraction, GRF6021, for Parkinson's disease dementia.

In 2021, Alkahest became a wholly owned subsidiary of Grifols.

For all clinical trials of GRF6019, see clinicaltrials.gov.

Clinical Trial Timeline

  • Phase 2
  • Study completed / Planned end date
  • Planned end date unavailable
  • Study aborted
Sponsor Clinical Trial 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026 2027 2028 2029 2030 2031 2032 2033 2034 2035
Alkahest, Inc. NCT03520998
N=40

Last Updated: 19 Jul 2021

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Therapeutics

BIIB080

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Overview

Name: BIIB080
Synonyms: IONIS-MAPTRx, ISIS 814907
Therapy Type: DNA/RNA-based
Target Type: Tau (timeline)
Condition(s): Alzheimer's Disease
U.S. FDA Status: Alzheimer's Disease (Phase 1)
Company: Biogen, IONIS Pharmaceuticals

Background

This investigational therapeutic is the first antisense oligonucleotide (ASO) targeting tau expression to enter clinical trials. Developed by IONIS in collaboration with Timothy Miller at Washington University, St. Louis, ASOs that inhibit the translation of tau mRNAs into protein have been shown to reduce toxin-induced seizures, neuronal loss, and neurofibrillary pathology in adult tau-transgenic mouse models. They also have been shown to normalize behavioral phenotypes and lengthen survival in such mice. Infusion of tau ASO into the CSF of cynomolgus monkeys was shown to reduce tau mRNA across different brain regions, and CSF tau levels following ASO exposure have been correlated to hippocampal tau levels (DeVos et al., 2013DeVos et al., 2017).

Previous ASO therapies—developed by IONIS against mutant SMA, SOD1, and huntingtin proteins—are delivered intrathecally to patients. The SMA, SOD1, and this tau-targeted ASO are partnered with Biogen; the ASO targeting huntingtin is partnered with Roche.

Findings

In October 2017, Ionis started a 13-week, multiple-ascending-dose study of monthly intrathecal BIIB080 injections. Conducted at 13 sites in Canada and Europe, this trial enrolled 46 people between age 50 and 74 whose mild AD was confirmed by CSF biomarkers. The primary outcome was adverse events; secondary outcomes included pharmacokinetic parameters such as trough and maximum concentrations reached in the CSF, time to maximal concentration and plasma elimination half-life, and concentration-time curves. The trial uses a sentinel design, whereby the first two participants in each dose group are randomized 1:1 to placebo and at least one week must pass between dosing in these patients and any other patients. The design called for four dose administrations and seven lumbar punctures (Lane et al., ANA 2017).

In March 2019, Biogen/Ionis added a one-year, open-label extension of quarterly injections for people who completed the randomized portion. At AAIC 2021, Ionis reported first data from this trial. There were no serious adverse events from intrathecal injection of either 10, 30, or 60 mg every month for three months, or two doses of 115 mg injected three months apart. The ASO produced a dose-dependent reduction in total tau and phosphoTau-181 in CSF by 30 to 50 percent (Aug 2021 conference news). The study finished in May 2022, and the company published complete results of the placebo-controlled portion (Mummery et al., 2023). CSF total tau and p-181 tau were reduced by 60 percent in the higher-dose cohorts, and stayed low for six months. The reductions were consistently seen in most or all people in each dose group. Mild adverse events were more common on drug, and included nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, fatigue, confusion, and musculoskeletal pain. There were three cases of mild tinnitus in treated patients, and none on placebo. No serious adverse events were reported.

First results from the long-term extension were shown at the 2023 AD/PD conference. In a tau PET substudy in 12 patients, quarterly 60 mg doses reduced tau aggregates below baseline levels in all brain regions examined (conference news). Full trial results, published after peer review, showed sustained reductions in ptau, p181 tau, and tau PET in the open-label period (Edwards et al., 2023).

At the October 2023 CTAD conference, a trend toward slower cognitive decline in the two higher-dose groups was reported for the placebo-controlled part of the trial, as was a trend toward slowing compared to historical controls during the open label extension (conference news).

In August 2022, Biogen started a Phase 2 trial testing two doses and two injection regimens against placebo in 735 people with mild cognitive impairment or mild dementia due to Alzheimer’s. At 54 sites across North America, Japan, Australia, and Europe, participants will receive high- or low-dose BIIB080 every 24 weeks, high dose every 12 weeks, or placebo, for 72 weeks. The primary outcome is the dose response in change of CDR-SB from baseline after 76 weeks. Secondary measures include ADCS-ADL-MCI, ADAS-Cog 13, MMSE, iADRS, ADCOMS, and adverse events. The trial is expected to finish in December 2026.

For all trials on this drug, see clinicaltrials.gov

Clinical Trial Timeline

  • Phase 1/2
  • Study completed / Planned end date
  • Planned end date unavailable
  • Study aborted
Sponsor Clinical Trial 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026 2027 2028 2029 2030 2031 2032 2033 2034 2035
IONIS Pharmaceuticals NCT03186989
N=44

Last Updated: 09 Nov 2023

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