Covering the 13th
Annual Huntington’s Disease Therapeutics Conference left me with immense
hope about potential treatments but also, as in the past, a whirlwind of emotions regarding the disorder that killed my mother and
threatens the lives of tens of thousands of HD patients and presymptomatic gene
carriers like me.
The conference began on
February 26 with a remarkable keynote speaker invited by sponsor CHDI Foundation, Inc.: Nora Guthrie, the daughter of iconic folk singer and
activist Woody Guthrie, who died of HD in 1967, and his late wife
Marjorie. In 1967, Marjorie founded what would become the Huntington’s Disease Society of America (HDSA).
“We are the hopers
and the changers,” said Nora Guthrie, quoting her father, to the audience of
350 scientists, drug company representatives, and family advocates. “The note
of hope is the only note than can help us or save us from falling to the
bottom.”
CHDI keynoters, who
always come from HD-affected families, aim to inspire researchers’ quest for
treatments. (I led off the 2011 event.) Guthrie
interweaved her father’s music – he wrote “This Land is Your Land,” performed at
President Barack Obama’s 2009 inaugural celebration – with the family’s
struggles with HD.
CHDI Chief Scientific Officer Robert Pacifici, Ph.D., with Nora Guthrie (photo by Gene Veritas)
As reported in my
previous article, the conference closed
with the “best news since the discovery of the gene” in 1993: the Ionis
Pharmaceuticals drug IONIS-HTTRx lowered mutant huntingtin protein an
average of 40 percent, with a maximum reduction of 60 percent, in patients’ cerebrospinal
fluid in a Phase 1/2a clinical trial (testing mainly safety and tolerability).
Based on animal
studies, that translates into reductions in the cerebral cortex ranging from
55-85 percent. Ionis partner Roche, a major pharmaceutical firm based in
Switzerland, confirmed that it would take the unusual step of skipping a Phase
2 trial (testing efficacy for the first time) and going directly to a Phase 3
(test and confirming efficacy in hundreds of participants).
I was elated to meet
Nora, hear the Phase 1/2a results, and interview Roche representatives about
the next steps in the clinical trial program for RG6042, the drug’s new name. (Roche and HDSA
will update the HD community on Phase 3 eligibility criteria and other
details.)
Upcoming articles
will feature my interviews with the Roche officials and Guthrie.
Erik Lundgren (left), lifecycle leader of the Roche HD program, Gene Veritas (aka Kenneth P. Serbin), Mai-Lise Nguyen, patient partnership director of the Roche HD program, and Lauren Boak, Ph.D., Roche global development team leader (selfie by Erik Lundgren, Roche)
How early does HD start?
With several dozen
presentations over 72 hours, the conference was a barrage of information about
HD. Despite the positive news, like the six previous CHDI conferences I’ve
attended, this event brought a stark reminder of the devastation caused by HD
and the community’s urgent need for treatments.
I tested positive for
the HD gene in 1999 and will, unfortunately, inevitably develop symptoms – unless
a treatment becomes available soon. Watching the scientists’ presentations – many
referred to the havoc caused in HD-affected brains – felt like getting a
preview of how I’ll decline and die.
Sandrine Humbert,
Ph.D., of the Université Grenoble Alpes (France), discussed the role of the
huntingtin protein in the development of the cortex (the largest portion of the
brain) of mice. Her research explores HD as a possible “developmental
disorder,” that is, the progression of symptoms from the earliest stages of
life, given that people like me are born with the genetic defect.
Dr. Humbert said that
subtle signs of the disease appear “years before” the appearance of involuntary
motor movements, which doctors until recent years used as the indicator of
onset. Perhaps drugs targeting the “abnormal development” of the brain will be needed
to “delay disease onset,” she concluded.
Further research is
needed in this new area of HD science. Still, Dr. Humbert’s presentation and
the subsequent Q & A with scientists made me wonder: as I push 60, are the memory
lapses and other cognitive changes I’m experiencing because of ordinary aging –
or HD?
In the video below
you can watch the discussion of this point. For Dr. Humbert’s complete
presentation, click here.
‘A bucket of cold water’
My interactions with physicians,
scientists, and HD family members further reminded me of my “race against the genetic clock” and the challenges faced by HD
families.
Despite the air of
excitement about the Ionis Phase 1/2a results, one doctor familiar with my
story cautioned me about the extensive time needed for Phase 3: “It’s a little
bit naive to not consider that you might not be ready for the Ionis drug.”
“I feel like you’ve
just thrown a bucket of cold water on me,” I told her.
The range of onset
for someone with my mother’s and my level of mutation is between the late 40s
and late 60s. She probably developed symptoms in her late 40s. She died at 68. At
58, I’m extremely lucky to have gotten this far without symptoms.
I can’t wait much
longer for a drug. If successful, RG6042 probably won’t reach the market for
five or six years – and that’s an optimistic scenario, since Phase 3 could
fail.
The physician reminded
me of the importance of planning carefully for the onset of symptoms, citing
the case of one patient who was able to remain at work after some adjustments
to his routine.
She did note that my advocacy and coverage
of the CHDI meetings might be delaying onset: they provide me with purpose and intellectual
enrichment.
Reliving the shock
At one lunch, I
briefly recounted my family’s HD story to a group of researchers and the Swiss
neurologist Jean-Marc Burgunder, M.D., who chairs the executive committee of
the European Huntington’s Disease Network, a CHDI-supported nonprofit
network for advancing research, facilitating clinical trials, and improving
patient care.
I explained that,
with no prior knowledge of HD, I received a bombshell in a phone call the day
after Christmas 1995. In the space of a few minutes, I learned of my mother’s
genetic test and diagnosis; my 50-50 chance of inheriting the gene; and the
potential risk for any child I might father.
Dr. Burgunder
observed that HD testing centers now have a protocol that includes notifying
potentially at-risk family members about genetic testing and counseling by
geneticists and psychologists.
Back then, however, all
I could do was to call my mother’s geneticist to get more information about HD
and genetic testing.
To relive the
emotional pain of that day and look back on the improved genetic testing
process made me feel as if I were going through an out-of-body experience.
Sadly, learning about
HD for the first time remains a shocking experience that won’t be eliminated
until we have effective treatments.
Listening to other HD
family members recall their stories of genetic testing of their children, I
also remembered the months-long, anxiety-ridden process of having our daughter tested in
the womb for HD. Luckily, she tested negative.
Research: ‘It’s for you guys’
Despite my renewed
fears about HD, the final, upbeat session on “huntingtin lowering” (reducing the amount of huntingtin protein in
brain cells) lifted my spirits. In addition to the Ionis news, it included an
update on another, recently started Phase 1b/2a gene-silencing clinical trial,
PRECISION-HD, run by Wave Life Sciences. (Click here to watch a video of the presentation.)
During that session,
I sat next to Scott Zeitlin, Ph.D., of the University of Virginia, whose
presentation concerned his research in transgenic HD mice, a common tool of
researchers, to measure the effects of lowering huntingtin. He described the
types of changes in the animals’ brains that also compromise the human brain.
I was heartened to
hear his conclusion.
“Many of these
earlier changes that we see can be reversed fairly quickly,” he said of the
experiment. “So I’m enthusiastic about this.”
Though the
presentation was based on unpublished research – scientists don’t like to get
“scooped” – Dr. Zeitlin gave permission to post it online (click here to watch).
“It’s for you guys,”
he said, referring to the HD community and echoing the ethos of the quest for
treatments.
Scott Zeitlin, Ph.D., with Sarah Tabrizi, FRCP, Ph.D., lead investigator of the Ionis Phase 1/2a trial (photo by Gene Veritas)
Personal and community milestones
I left the conference
at 10:45 p.m. on March 1, as the farewell banquet wound down. I had drunk a
couple of cups of strong black tea – normally something an HD gene carrier
should avoid but which I needed for the 140-mile drive to my home in San Diego.
I arrived at 1:10
a.m. the next morning and, wired from the tea and the conference, started work
on my article about the event. I finally went to bed at 5 a.m. – also not good
for an HD gene carrier but perhaps understandable given the circumstances.
It was titled: “The
best news for the Huntington's disease community since the discovery of the
gene: Ionis trial data revealed, Roche confirms jump to Phase 3” (click here to read more).
Appropriately, it was
entry number 250 in this blog: a personal milestone symbolic of my avoidance of
symptoms, of my advocacy, and of the hope for treatments or even a cure.
(Visit my Vimeo album for
other presentations and interviews at the conference.)
(Disclosure: I hold a symbolic amount of Ionis shares.)
2 comments:
I believe your activism is a protective factor in delaying the onset of symptoms, but I KNOW your activism is a protective factor for us in the HD community who need a booster shot of hope from time to time. Thanks!
The excessive duplication and production in the CAG string in Huntington is in some ways comparable to the excessive cell duplication in cancer. Additionally defective Huntington cells seems to escape cell system regulation like mismatch repair, a problem also present in cancer. It would seem obvious that approved chemotherapy drugs could possibly provide a benefit to patients without the tremendous costs involved in developing a new drugs, but that does not seem to have been tried.
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