BAX 335 hemophilia B gene therapy clinical trial results: potential impact of CpG sequences on gene expression

Author:

Konkle Barbara A.12ORCID,Walsh Christopher E.3,Escobar Miguel A.4,Josephson Neil C.2,Young Guy5ORCID,von Drygalski Annette6,McPhee Scott W. J.7,Samulski R. Jude8ORCID,Bilic Ivan9,de la Rosa Maurus9ORCID,Reipert Birgit M.9ORCID,Rottensteiner Hanspeter9,Scheiflinger Friedrich9,Chapin John C.10,Ewenstein Bruce10,Monahan Paul E.810ORCID

Affiliation:

1. BloodWorks Northwest, Seattle, WA;

2. Division of Hematology, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, WA;

3. Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY;

4. McGovern Medical School and Gulf States Hemophilia and Thrombophilia Center, University of Texas Health Science Center Houston Medical School, Houston, TX;

5. Children’s Hospital Los Angeles, University of Southern California Keck School of Medicine, Los Angeles, CA;

6. Hemophilia and Thrombosis Treatment Center, University of California, San Diego, CA;

7. Asklepios BioPharmaceutical and Chatham Therapeutics, Chapel Hill, NC;

8. Gene Therapy Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Medicine, Chapel Hill, NC;

9. Baxalta Innovations GmbH, a member of the Takeda group of companies, Vienna, Austria; and

10. Baxalta US Inc., a member of the Takeda group of companies, Cambridge, MA

Abstract

Abstract Gene therapy has the potential to maintain therapeutic blood clotting factor IX (FIX) levels in patients with hemophilia B by delivering a functional human F9 gene into liver cells. This phase 1/2, open-label dose-escalation study investigated BAX 335 (AskBio009, AAV8.sc-TTR-FIXR338Lopt), an adeno-associated virus serotype 8 (AAV8)–based FIX Padua gene therapy, in patients with hemophilia B. This report focuses on 12-month interim analyses of safety, pharmacokinetic variables, effects on FIX activity, and immune responses for dosed participants. Eight adult male participants (aged 20-69 years; range FIX activity, 0.5% to 2.0%) received 1 of 3 BAX 335 IV doses: 2.0 × 1011; 1.0 × 1012; or 3.0 × 1012 vector genomes/kg. Three (37.5%) participants had 4 serious adverse events, all considered unrelated to BAX 335. No serious adverse event led to death. No clinical thrombosis, inhibitors, or other FIX Padua–directed immunity was reported. FIX expression was measurable in 7 of 8 participants; peak FIX activity displayed dose dependence (32.0% to 58.5% in cohort 3). One participant achieved sustained therapeutic FIX activity of ∼20%, without bleeding or replacement therapy, for 4 years; in others, FIX activity was not sustained beyond 5 to 11 weeks. In contrast to some previous studies, corticosteroid treatment did not stabilize FIX activity loss. We hypothesize that the loss of transgene expression could have been caused by stimulation of innate immune responses, including CpG oligodeoxynucleotides introduced into the BAX 335 coding sequence by codon optimization. This trial was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT01687608.

Publisher

American Society of Hematology

Subject

Cell Biology,Hematology,Immunology,Biochemistry

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