Targeting of Antithrombin in Hemophilia A or B with RNAi Therapy

John Pasi(Queen Mary University of London), Savita Rangarajan(Hampshire Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust), Pencho Georgiev(Medical University Plovdiv), Tim Mant(Centre of Biomedical Research), Michael Desmond Creagh(Royal Cornwall Hospital Trust), Toshko Lissitchkov(Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust), David Bevan(Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust), Steve Austin(St George’s University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust), C. R. M. Hay(Manchester Royal Infirmary), Inga Hegemann(Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust), Rashid Kazmi(University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust), Pratima Chowdary(University College London), Liana Gercheva(Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust), Vasily Mamonov(Federal State Institution Hematology Research Center), Margarita Timofeeva(Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust), Chang-Heok Soh(Alnylam Pharmaceuticals (United States)), Pushkal Garg(Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust), Akshay Vaishnaw(Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust), Akin Akinc(Alnylam Pharmaceuticals (United States)), Benny Sørensen(Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust), Margaret V. Ragni(Hemophilia Center of Western Pennsylvania)
New England Journal of Medicine
July 10, 2017
Cited by 356Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Current hemophilia treatment involves frequent intravenous infusions of clotting factors, which is associated with variable hemostatic protection, a high treatment burden, and a risk of the development of inhibitory alloantibodies. Fitusiran, an investigational RNA interference (RNAi) therapy that targets antithrombin (encoded by SERPINC1), is in development to address these and other limitations. METHODS: In this phase 1 dose-escalation study, we enrolled 4 healthy volunteers and 25 participants with moderate or severe hemophilia A or B who did not have inhibitory alloantibodies. Healthy volunteers received a single subcutaneous injection of fitusiran (at a dose of 0.03 mg per kilogram of body weight) or placebo. The participants with hemophilia received three injections of fitusiran administered either once weekly (at a dose of 0.015, 0.045, or 0.075 mg per kilogram) or once monthly (at a dose of 0.225, 0.45, 0.9, or 1.8 mg per kilogram or a fixed dose of 80 mg). The study objectives were to assess the pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic characteristics and safety of fitusiran. RESULTS: No thromboembolic events were observed during the study. The most common adverse events were mild injection-site reactions. Plasma levels of fitusiran increased in a dose-dependent manner and showed no accumulation with repeated administration. The monthly regimen induced a dose-dependent mean maximum antithrombin reduction of 70 to 89% from baseline. A reduction in the antithrombin level of more than 75% from baseline resulted in median peak thrombin values at the lower end of the range observed in healthy participants. CONCLUSIONS: Once-monthly subcutaneous administration of fitusiran resulted in dose-dependent lowering of the antithrombin level and increased thrombin generation in participants with hemophilia A or B who did not have inhibitory alloantibodies. (Funded by Alnylam Pharmaceuticals; ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT02035605 .).


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