First in man study of intravitreal tripeptidyl peptidase 1 for CLN2 retinopathy

Author:

Wawrzynski JamesORCID,Martinez Ana Rodriguez,Thompson Dorothy AnnORCID,Ram Dipak,Bowman Richard,Whiteley Rebecca,Gan Chin,Harding Louise,Mortensen Amanda,Mills Philippa,Gissen PaulORCID,Henderson Robert H.ORCID

Abstract

Abstract Background/Objectives CLN2 Batten Disease is a fatal neurodegenerative condition of childhood associated with retinal dystrophy and blindness. Intracerebroventricular infusion of rhTPP1 greatly slows the rate of neurodegenerative decline but not retinopathy. Intravitreal rhTPP1 is known to slow retinal degeneration in a canine model of CLN2. We report a first-in-man controlled clinical trial of intravitreal rhTPP1 for CLN2 associated retinal dystrophy. Subjects/methods 8 children aged 5–9 with CLN2 Batten Disease were prospectively enroled. Severely affected patients were preferentially selected, provided that vision was better than no perception of light. Children underwent 8 weekly intravitreal injections of rhTPP1 (0.2 mg in 0.05 ml) into the right eye for 12–18 months. The left eye was untreated and acts as a paired control. The primary outcome was safety based on the clinical detection of complications. A secondary outcome was paracentral macular volume (PMV) measured by spectral domain OCT. Linear regression/paired t tests were used to compare rates of decline. Results No severe adverse reactions (uveitis, raised IOP, media opacity) occurred. The mean baseline PMV was 1.28 mm3(right), 1.27 mm3(left). 3 of the youngest patients exhibited bilateral progressive retinal thinning (p < 0.05), whereas retinal volume was stable in the remaining 5 patients. In the 3 patients undergoing retinal degeneration, the rate of PMV loss was slower in the treated vs. untreated eye (p = 0.000042, p = 0.0011, p = 0.00022). Conclusions Intravitreal rhTPP1 appears to be a safe and effective treatment for CLN2 related retinopathy however commencement of treatment early in the course of disease is more likely to be efficacious.

Funder

The non-NHS funded clinical work described was funded by the Batten Disease Family Association.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Ophthalmology

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