With
potential Huntington’s disease treatments on the horizon, I am looking forward
to the 13th Annual HD Therapeutics Conference with great anticipation.
Although a
powerful reminder of my gene-carrier status, the opportunity to watch world-class
academic and pharmaceutical researchers present their latest findings always
leaves me with increased hope that I won’t die from HD like my mother.
Sponsored
by CHDI Foundation, Inc., the conference takes place at the Parker Palm Springs
hotel in Palm Springs, CA, February 26-March 1. It will be my seventh,
including an appearance as the keynote speaker in 2011.
The conference will assess progress towards HD treatments and point to future paths for research and clinical trials.
Gene Veritas (aka Kenneth P. Serbin) before the CHDI logo in 2012 (photo by Lev Blumenstein)
A report on the Ionis trial
I’m
especially eager to learn about the latest data from the highly successful
Ionis Pharmaceuticals Phase 1/2a gene-silencing clinical trial, aimed at
reducing the amount of harmful huntingtin protein in brain cells. The project received an initial infusion of about $10
million from CHDI, later repaid by Ionis.
With the
end of Phase 1/2a last December, Ionis officials commented only briefly on the
demonstrated safety and tolerability of its gene-silencing drug IONIS-HTTRx,
reserving a more thorough update for scientific meetings.
In the
final talk – perhaps saving the best for last – IONIS-HTTRx trial
administrators Anne Smith, Ph.D. (Ionis) and Sarah Tabrizi, FRCP, Ph.D.
(University College of London) will present “Development of IONIS-HTTRx:
From first principles to the first successful HTT-lowering drug trial.”
I’m hoping
that Drs. Smith and Tabrizi will elaborate on the brief report from Ionis
scientists in December that the drug did indeed safely and substantially lower
the amount of mutant huntingtin protein, as measured in trial volunteers’
cerebrospinal fluid. That was only a first step, but an important one.
As a result,
the Ionis scientists stated, clinical trial partner Roche, now the
license-holder for IONIS-HTTRx, could skip the usual Phase 2 of the
clinical trial program, going directly to a full-blown Phase 3. Phases 2 and 3
measure a drug’s efficacy. In consultation with the Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) (and regulatory agencies in other countries), a drug
company can shape the trial program as it sees fit.
I plan to
interview Roche officials in Palm Springs, including Thomas Wiese, M.D., the
Patient Partnership Director for the firm’s HD program.
‘The more the merrier’
"Wow,
this is truly big news and very exciting news for the whole HD community since
it tells us that the drug can do what it is designed to do!” HD specialist Jody Corey-Bloom, M.D., Ph.D., commented via e-mail in mid-December regarding
the trial. “Now the hard part – can it make HD better?”
Also
impressed, Martha A. Nance, M.D. pointed to the need for deeper clinical
research: “Will people taking this treatment stabilize clinically, or
improve? And what about the long-term
safety? Will there be any unanticipated
problems six months or five years later?
These are the questions that will require additional larger studies to
answer, before the drug is understood well enough to use as a treatment in the
clinic.”
“The IONIS
results are ushering in a new and more hopeful era,” remarked LaVonne Goodman,
M.D., the founder of HDDrugWorks.
“With the demonstrated safety (thus far) of the drug, and the urgency of
our Huntington’s family needs, it makes a lot of sense to be going next to a Phase
3 trial. Let’s hope the regulators think
so too.”
Dr. Goodman
added that the Cambridge, MA-based Wave Life Sciences is also currently enrolling
patients in clinical trials of two gene-silencing drugs that, like Ionis’s
effort, use strands of artificial DNA known as antisense oligonucleotides
(ASOs) to decrease the huntingtin protein.
She reflected
on the fact that, the greater the number of clinical trials, the greater the
chances of finding effective treatments for this still untreatable condition.
“Competition
is good,” Dr. Goodman said. “The more the merrier.”
Wave's unique approach
Just as
the Ionis trial has made history, so might the Wave program. Whereas IONIS-HTTRx
reduces both the mutant and
normal huntingtin that all HD patients have, Wave’s ASOs attack just the mutant
by targeting two specific genetic variations found in 70 percent of the HD
population.
“We’re
able to use the Wave technology to selectively lower the mutant huntingtin,
while leaving the wild type, or healthy, huntingtin relatively alone,”
explained Wave HD researcher Serena Hung, M.D., in a February 7 webinar
sponsored by the Huntington’s Disease Society of America (HDSA) (click here to
view). “This is a very
unique approach, and this is probably the main difference between the Wave approach
and other approaches.”
So far, the
trial is enrolling participants in Canada and Poland. During the webinar, Dr.
Hung indicated that other countries could be included, but did not mention the
U.S. (Recruitment information for clinical trials worldwide is available at https://clinicaltrials.gov/).
For years,
researchers have studied and debated the benefits and drawbacks of these
different approaches. The distinctive IONIS and Wave trials could provide
valuable answers.
At the
CHDI conference, Wave’s Michael Panzara, M.D., MPH, will give a presentation on the firm’s program immediately before
the talk on the Ionis effort.
Landmarks and a lucky year
In his
welcome letter to conference participants, CHDI Chief Scientific Officer Robert
Pacifici, Ph.D., notes that 2017 marked HDSA’s 50th anniversary.
“This year [2018] also marks the 25th anniversary of the identification of the huntingtin gene, a
landmark accomplishment (for biology generally, not just HD) that of course
could not have been achieved without the generous participation of HD families
who volunteered their family history and donated their DNA.”
Dr. Robert Pacifici (photo by Gene Veritas)
The
participation of thousands of HD family members in genetic research and other
projects has helped shape CHDI and the HD field’s focus in the quest for
treatments. That includes the “exciting new area” of DNA repair and handling, a
theme of this year’s conference.
In addition
to the popular, ever-expanding conference poster session, this year’s
conference will include a resource fair, an innovation introduced at the 2017
conference in Malta. (Every fourth year, the conference is held in Europe.) The
fair will display scientific tools and technologies useful in HD research.
“We are
delighted to return to our ‘home’ here at the Parker Hotel in Palm Springs for
lucky number 13!” Dr. Pacifici quips in his letter.
I
officially became an advocate two decades ago this April by joining the board
of HDSA-San Diego, where I served for twelve and a half years.
Blessed to have avoided symptoms so far, and observing the vast progress in HD research over these past two decades, I believe that 2018 could indeed be a lucky year for our community.
(Disclosure: I hold a symbolic amount of Ionis shares.)
1 comment:
Ken - thanks for the write up. I’ll be in Palm Springs next week representing HDYO and the young people worldwide impacted by HD. I look forward to connecting sometime during the conference! -BJ Viau
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