Activity of transgene-produced B-domain–deleted factor VIII in human plasma following AAV5 gene therapy

S. Rosén, Stefan Tiefenbacher(LabCorp (United States)), Mary Robinson(LabCorp (United States)), Mei Huang(BioMarin (United States)), Jaydeep K. Srimani(BioMarin (United States)), Donnie Mackenzie(BioMarin (United States)), Terri Christianson(BioMarin (United States)), John Pasi(National Health Service), Savita Rangarajan(University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust), Emily Symington(Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust), Adam Giermasz(University of California, Davis), Glenn F. Pierce, Benjamin Kim(BioMarin (United States)), Stephen J. Zoog(BioMarin (United States)), Christian Vettermann(BioMarin (United States))
Blood
September 11, 2020
Cited by 71Open Access
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Abstract

Adeno-associated virus (AAV)-based gene therapies can restore endogenous factor VIII (FVIII) expression in hemophilia A (HA). AAV vectors typically use a B-domain-deleted FVIII transgene, such as human FVIII-SQ in valoctocogene roxaparvovec (AAV5-FVIII-SQ). Surprisingly, the activity of transgene-produced FVIII-SQ was between 1.3 and 2.0 times higher in one-stage clot (OS) assays than in chromogenic-substrate (CS) assays, whereas recombinant FVIII-SQ products had lower OS than CS activity. Transgene-produced and recombinant FVIII-SQ showed comparable specific activity (international units per milligram) in the CS assay, demonstrating that the diverging activities arise in the OS assay. Higher OS activity for transgene-produced FVIII-SQ was observed across various assay kits and clinical laboratories, suggesting that intrinsic molecular features are potential root causes. Further experiments in 2 participants showed that transgene-produced FVIII-SQ accelerated early factor Xa and thrombin formation, which may explain the higher OS activity based on a kinetic bias between OS and CS assay readout times. Despite the faster onset of coagulation, global thrombin levels were unaffected. A correlation with joint bleeds suggested that both OS and CS assay remained clinically meaningful to distinguish hemophilic from nonhemophilic FVIII activity levels. During clinical development, the CS activity was chosen as a surrogate end point to conservatively assess hemostatic efficacy and enable comparison with recombinant FVIII-SQ products. Relevant trials are registered on clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT02576795 and #NCT03370913 and, respectively, on EudraCT (European Union Drug Regulating Authorities Clinical Trials Database; https://eudract.ema.europa.eu) as #2014-003880-38 and #2017-003215-19.


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