AVROBIO Reports Positive Data From Phase 1/2 Clinical Trial of Investigational Gene Therapy for Cystinosis, Including New Interim Data on Neurocognitive Measures
AVROBIO (NASDAQ: AVRO) reported promising interim data from a Phase 1/2 clinical trial of AVR-RD-04, a gene therapy for cystinosis, showing stabilized or improved visual motor integration and coordination in five patients. All patients remain off oral cysteamine following treatment. The therapy demonstrated a favorable safety profile with no related adverse events. Key findings indicate a systemic distribution of functional cystinosin and reductions in cystine crystal accumulation in multiple tissues. A company-sponsored trial is planned for 2023, following positive proof-of-concept results.
- All five dosed patients remain off oral cysteamine after gene therapy.
- Demonstrated safety profile with no adverse events related to the drug product.
- Stabilization or improvement in visual motor integration and motor coordination measures post gene therapy.
- Reductions in cystine crystals in blood, skin, and gastrointestinal mucosa observed.
- Cystinosin production documented across multiple tissues, indicating systemic efficacy.
- No significant negative aspects reported.
New early data show key visual motor integration, visual perception and motor coordination measures impacted by cystinosis stabilized or improved post gene therapy
Systemic reach of AVR-RD-04 observed across multiple other measures
All five dosed patients remain off oral cysteamine post gene therapy
Continued favorable safety profile with no adverse events related to drug product to date
Clinical proof-of-concept in adult patients lays groundwork for
The collaborator-sponsored Phase 1/2 clinical trial is evaluating the safety and efficacy of AVR-RD-04 in adult patients diagnosed with the infantile form of cystinosis who previously had been treated with the current standard of care (SOC) cysteamine. AVR-RD-04 genetically modifies patients’ own hematopoietic stem cells (HSC) to express a functional version of cystinosin, the protein that is deficient in people living with cystinosis. Preliminary data suggest that post gene therapy, functional cystinosin has been produced throughout the body as evidenced by clinical measures in multiple tissues, including the eyes, skin, gastrointestinal mucosa and neurocognitive system. No adverse events (AEs) related to the drug product have been reported to date.
“We’re thrilled with our progress in this first and only gene therapy trial for cystinosis, a devastating genetic disease with unmet medical needs that impact the daily lives of patients and their families,” said
“All five patients dosed to date remain off oral cysteamine. We believe the results to date for this investigational gene therapy show its potential to stabilize or reduce impact of cystinosis on different tissues with a single dose,” she added.
The collaborator-sponsored Phase 1/2 clinical trial of AVR-RD-04 is funded in part by grants to
“We believe the interim data from this ongoing clinical trial demonstrate the potential of gene therapy using patient’s own hematopoietic stem cells to impact the body head-to-toe by restoring functional cystinosin and reducing the accumulation of cystine crystals systemically,” said
Key motor coordination and visual perception measures stabilize or show positive trends post gene therapy
Visual motor integration (VMI) measured with the Beery – Buktenica Developmental Test of VMI, a standardized test evaluating the ability of the brain to interpret and translate visual information into an exact motor response, has been shown to be a consistent indicator of visual spatial and visual motor dysfunction in patients with cystinosis. These measures do not generally improve over time in this population.
Early data indicate that post gene therapy the two patients with data to date show stabilization of scores on the Beery – Buktenica Developmental Test of VMI and importantly, improvement in the subtests of motor coordination and visual perception, suggesting a potential impact on the neuropathology of the disease. In patient #1, an approximate 20-point improvement was evident in both visual perception and motor coordination, and in patient #3 a 5-point increase in visual perception was detected, with motor coordination rising by 45 points in the first 6 months post treatment and a more modest rise thereafter.
In addition, following discontinuation of cysteamine, average hand grip strength remained stable up to 27 months after dosing.
Systemic reach of AVR-RD-04 also seen across measurements of blood, eye, skin and gastrointestinal mucosa
Early data indicate that post gene therapy, patients have been able to produce and distribute functional cystinosin protein throughout the body, which prevents the pathological accumulation of cystine crystals. In blood, the leukocyte cystine levels decreased measurably, with the three patients out more than 12 months post gene therapy stabilizing near 1.0 nmol/mg protein.
Photophobia, or extreme visual sensitivity to light, is a hallmark of cystinosis. In a patient-reported outcome scale of photophobia severity, the first three patients for which data are available, reported improved or stable photophobia scores. Patient #1, who entered the trial with a higher level of cystine crystal accumulation in the eye, reported a two-point photophobia score improvement 24 months post gene therapy. Patients #2 and #3, who both entered the trial with relatively lower cystine crystal accumulation in the eye, reported stable photophobia scores, both at 12 months post gene therapy. Patients #1, #3, #4 and #5 remain off cysteamine eye drops.
A decline in cystine crystals was observed in skin and gastrointestinal mucosa biopsies from the first three patients. Patients with cystinosis accumulate cystine crystals in cells, which leads to tissue and organ damage and results in debilitating co-morbidities. In the skin, reductions in average intracytoplasmic crystals per cell ranged from
Darker pigmentation observed may be a sign of multi-functional cystinosin activity post gene therapy
Patients with cystinosis frequently exhibit blond or lighter-colored hair and fair complexion because of reduced levels of melanin in their skin. In vitro studies have demonstrated that cystinosin is located in melanosomes of melanocytes and when functional cystinosin is absent or reduced, melanin pigment synthesis is inhibited.
New early quantitative data suggest that gene therapy-derived cystinosin may restore melanin production. Twelve months after infusion, two patients exhibited progressively darkening hair color, as measured by a
Sustained engraftment demonstrated with stable VCN for patients beyond 12 months
Importantly, sustained engraftment has been observed in the first three patients, as evidenced by stable vector copy number (VCN) levels. At 17- to 27-months post gene therapy, their VCN is between 1.0 and 2.0 per diploid genome. The recently dosed fourth and fifth patient have a VCN of 0.7 and 1.3 per diploid genome at three-months and one-month post gene therapy, respectively.
Safety and tolerability profile remains strong
Safety data from the five patients dosed to date indicate no AEs related to drug product. All AEs were related to myeloablative conditioning, stem cell mobilization, underlying disease or pre-existing conditions. The majority of AEs were mild or moderate and resolved without clinical sequelae.
Further details on the collaborator-sponsored Phase 1/2 trial (NCT03897361) are available on clinicaltrials.gov. For more information on the cystinosis trial data presented at ASGCT, please see data slides here.
Based on the data reported today, combined with feedback provided by the
About cystinosis
Cystinosis is a rare, progressive disease marked by the accumulation of cystine in cellular organelles known as lysosomes. This buildup causes progressive organ damage and debilitating corneal damage, swallowing dysfunction, chronic kidney disease leading to end-stage renal disease and muscle wasting leading to a shortened lifespan. Currently, more than
About
Our vision is to bring personalized gene therapy to the world. We aim to prevent, halt or reverse disease throughout the body with a single dose of gene therapy designed to drive durable expression of therapeutic protein, even in hard-to-reach tissues and organs including brain, muscle and bone. AVROBIO’s pipeline is powered by our industry-leading plato® gene therapy platform, our foundation designed to deliver gene therapy worldwide. It includes clinical programs in cystinosis and Gaucher disease type 1, as well as preclinical programs in Gaucher disease type 3, Hunter syndrome and Pompe disease. We are headquartered in
Forward-Looking Statements
This press release contains forward-looking statements, including statements made pursuant to the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These statements may be identified by words and phrases such as “aims,” “anticipates,” “believes,” “could,” “designed to,” “estimates,” “expects,” “forecasts,” “goal,” “intends,” “may,” “plans,” “possible,” “potential,” “seeks,” “will,” and variations of these words and phrases or similar expressions that are intended to identify forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements include, without limitation, statements regarding our business strategy for and the potential therapeutic benefits of our product candidates, including AVR-RD-04 for the treatment of cystinosis, the design, commencement, enrollment and timing of ongoing or planned clinical trials, clinical trial results, product approvals and regulatory pathways, anticipated benefits of our gene therapy platform including potential impact on our commercialization activities, timing and likelihood of success, the expected benefits and results of our implementation of the plato platform in our clinical trials and gene therapy programs, and the expected safety profile of our investigational gene therapies. Any such statements in this press release that are not statements of historical fact may be deemed to be forward-looking statements. Results in preclinical or early-stage clinical trials may not be indicative of results from later stage or larger scale clinical trials and do not ensure regulatory approval. You should not place undue reliance on these statements, or the scientific data presented.
Any forward-looking statements in this press release are based on AVROBIO’s current expectations, estimates and projections about our industry as well as management’s current beliefs and expectations of future events only as of today and are subject to a number of risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially and adversely from those set forth in or implied by such forward-looking statements. These risks and uncertainties include, but are not limited to, the risk that any one or more of AVROBIO’s product candidates, including AVR-RD-04 for the treatment of cystinosis, will not be successfully developed or commercialized, the risk of cessation or delay of any ongoing or planned clinical trials of
i Collaborator-sponsored Phase 1/2 clinical trial of AVR-RD-04 is funded in part by grants to
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