Long‐term safety and efficacy of velmanase alfa treatment in children under 6 years of age with alpha‐mannosidosis: A phase 2, open label, multicenter study

Author:

Guffon Nathalie1ORCID,Konstantopoulou Vassiliki2,Hennermann Julia B.3,Muschol Nicole4,Bruno Irene5,Tummolo Albina6,Ceravolo Ferdinando7,Zardi Giulia8,Ballabeni Andrea7,Lund Allan910

Affiliation:

1. Reference Centre of Inherited Metabolic Diseases, CERLYMM, HCL Lyon France

2. Department of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine Medical University of Vienna Vienna Austria

3. Center for Pediatric and Adolescent Medicine, Villa Metabolica University Medical Center Mainz Mainz Germany

4. Department of Pediatrics, International Center for Lysosomal Disorders (ICLD) University Medical Center Hamburg‐Eppendorf Hamburg Germany

5. Institute for Maternal and Child Health‐IRCCS Burlo Garofolo Trieste Italy

6. Department of Metabolic Diseases and Clinical Genetics Bari Italy

7. Chiesi Farmaceutici Parma Italy

8. CROS NT S.r.l Verona Italy

9. Centre for Inherited Metabolic Diseases, Department of Paediatrics and Adolescent Medicine and Department of Clinical Genetics Copenhagen University Hospital, Rigshospitalet Copenhagen Denmark

10. Department of Clinical Medicine, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences University of Copenhagen Copenhagen Denmark

Abstract

AbstractAlpha‐mannosidosis (AM) is a rare, autosomal recessive, lysosomal storage disorder caused by alpha‐mannosidase deficiency that leads to the accumulation of mannose‐rich oligosaccharides. AM symptoms and severity vary among individuals; consequently, AM is often not diagnosed until late childhood. Velmanase alfa (VA), a recombinant human lysosomal alpha‐mannosidase product, is the first enzyme replacement therapy indicated to treat non‐neurological symptoms of AM in Europe. Previous studies suggested that early VA treatment in children may produce greater clinical benefit over the disease course than starting treatment in adolescents or adults; however, long‐term studies in children are limited, and very few studies include children under 6 years of age. The present phase 2, multicenter, open‐label study evaluated the safety and efficacy of long‐term VA treatment in children under 6 years of age with AM. Five children (three males) received VA weekly for ≥24 months, and all children completed the study. Four children experienced adverse drug reactions (16 events) and two experienced infusion‐related reactions (12 events). Most (99.5%) adverse events were mild or moderate, and none caused study discontinuation. Four children developed antidrug antibodies (three were neutralizing). After VA treatment, all children improved in one or more efficacy assessments of serum oligosaccharide concentrations (decreases), hearing, immunological profile, and quality of life, suggesting a beneficial effect of early treatment. Although the small study size limits conclusions, these results suggest that long‐term VA treatment has an acceptable safety profile, is well tolerated, and may provide potential benefits to patients with AM under 6 years of age.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Genetics

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