TY - JOUR
T1 - Two-year interim safety and efficacy of pegvaliase in Japanese adults with phenylketonuria
AU - Ishige, Mika
AU - Ito, Tetsuya
AU - Hamazaki, Takashi
AU - Kuwahara, Mitsuhiro
AU - Lee, Lawrence
AU - Shintaku, Haruo
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 The Authors
PY - 2023/11
Y1 - 2023/11
N2 - Phenylketonuria (PKU) is an inborn error of metabolism caused by deficiency of phenylalanine hydroxylase, resulting in high blood phenylalanine (Phe) concentrations with potential for impaired neurocognition. Pegvaliase, a pegylated recombinant phenylalanine ammonia lyase that metabolizes Phe, is approved for use in adults with PKU and high blood Phe despite prior management. In the Phase 3 PRISM studies conducted in the United States, pegvaliase induction/titration/maintenance dosing led to clinically meaningful and statistically significant blood Phe reductions versus placebo, with a manageable safety profile. Here we report the primary endpoint, change in blood Phe levels from baseline to Week 52, and 2-year interim efficacy and safety results (to Week 144; data cut-off March 31, 2022) of an ongoing, open-label study in a Japanese PKU population (JapicCTI-194,642). Participants were 12 adults with PKU from Japan aged 18–70 years with blood Phe levels >600 μmol/L. In Part 1, participants received subcutaneous 2.5 mg pegvaliase once weekly for 4 weeks (induction), followed by titration up to 20 mg/day, then dose adjustment to a maximum 40 mg/day to achieve blood Phe efficacy (≤360 μmol/L); this maintenance dose was continued to Week 52. In Part 2, participants continued pegvaliase with dose adjustments up to a maximum 60 mg/day for up to 168 weeks. Among 11 participants evaluable for efficacy, mean (standard deviation) blood Phe concentration decreased from 1025.9 (172.7) μmol/L at baseline to 448.3 (458.8) μmol/L at Week 52 (mean 57.5% decrease). Up to Week 104, all 11 (100%) efficacy-evaluable participants achieved blood Phe levels ≤600 μmol/L, 9 (81.8%) achieved ≤360 μmol/L, and 8 (72.7%) achieved ≤120 μmol/L. All 12 participants reported ≥1 adverse event (AE), most commonly injection site erythema and injection site swelling (n = 10, 83.3% each). The pegvaliase exposure-adjusted AE rate was 23.5 per person-years overall, 41.2 per person-years during induction/titration, and 13.5 per person-years during maintenance. All participants developed pegvaliase-induced antibody responses. There were no AEs leading to discontinuation, no deaths, and no anaphylaxis events. Although interim, these results support the use of pegvaliase in Japanese adults with PKU with elevated blood Phe levels and are consistent with results from the Phase 3 PRISM studies.
AB - Phenylketonuria (PKU) is an inborn error of metabolism caused by deficiency of phenylalanine hydroxylase, resulting in high blood phenylalanine (Phe) concentrations with potential for impaired neurocognition. Pegvaliase, a pegylated recombinant phenylalanine ammonia lyase that metabolizes Phe, is approved for use in adults with PKU and high blood Phe despite prior management. In the Phase 3 PRISM studies conducted in the United States, pegvaliase induction/titration/maintenance dosing led to clinically meaningful and statistically significant blood Phe reductions versus placebo, with a manageable safety profile. Here we report the primary endpoint, change in blood Phe levels from baseline to Week 52, and 2-year interim efficacy and safety results (to Week 144; data cut-off March 31, 2022) of an ongoing, open-label study in a Japanese PKU population (JapicCTI-194,642). Participants were 12 adults with PKU from Japan aged 18–70 years with blood Phe levels >600 μmol/L. In Part 1, participants received subcutaneous 2.5 mg pegvaliase once weekly for 4 weeks (induction), followed by titration up to 20 mg/day, then dose adjustment to a maximum 40 mg/day to achieve blood Phe efficacy (≤360 μmol/L); this maintenance dose was continued to Week 52. In Part 2, participants continued pegvaliase with dose adjustments up to a maximum 60 mg/day for up to 168 weeks. Among 11 participants evaluable for efficacy, mean (standard deviation) blood Phe concentration decreased from 1025.9 (172.7) μmol/L at baseline to 448.3 (458.8) μmol/L at Week 52 (mean 57.5% decrease). Up to Week 104, all 11 (100%) efficacy-evaluable participants achieved blood Phe levels ≤600 μmol/L, 9 (81.8%) achieved ≤360 μmol/L, and 8 (72.7%) achieved ≤120 μmol/L. All 12 participants reported ≥1 adverse event (AE), most commonly injection site erythema and injection site swelling (n = 10, 83.3% each). The pegvaliase exposure-adjusted AE rate was 23.5 per person-years overall, 41.2 per person-years during induction/titration, and 13.5 per person-years during maintenance. All participants developed pegvaliase-induced antibody responses. There were no AEs leading to discontinuation, no deaths, and no anaphylaxis events. Although interim, these results support the use of pegvaliase in Japanese adults with PKU with elevated blood Phe levels and are consistent with results from the Phase 3 PRISM studies.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.ymgme.2023.107697
DO - 10.1016/j.ymgme.2023.107697
M3 - Article
C2 - 37717412
AN - SCOPUS:85171427307
SN - 1096-7192
VL - 140
JO - Molecular Genetics and Metabolism
JF - Molecular Genetics and Metabolism
IS - 3
M1 - 107697
ER -