Status and phase
Conditions
Treatments
About
Title: Intrathecal Administration of scAAV9/JeT-GAN for the Treatment of Giant Axonal Neuropathy
Background:
- The Gigaxonin gene lets the body make a protein chemical called Gigaxonin. Nerves need Gigaxonin to work properly. Giant Axonal Neuropathy (GAN) causes a shortage of functional Gigaxonin. Nerves stop working normally in people with GAN. This causes problems with walking and sometimes with eating, breathing, and many other activities. GAN has no cure. Over time, GAN can shorten a person s life. Researchers want to see if a gene transfer treatment may help people with GAN.
Objectives:
- To see if a gene transfer is safe and shows potential to help people with GAN.
Eligibility:
- People age 3 and older with GAN.
Design:
Full description
This is an open-label and non-randomized first-in-human (Phase 1) clinical trial which incorporates an escalating single dose paradigm to assess safety of the gene transfer vector scAAV9/JeT-GAN administered intrathecally to target the brain and spinal cord of individuals with genetically confirmed Giant Axonal Neuropathy (GAN, OMIM #256850).
GAN is a chronic neurodegenerative autosomal recessive disease pathologically characterized by enlarged axons with disordered intermediate filaments and microtubules. The disease pathology is due to loss-of-function variants in the GAN gene, which encodes the protein gigaxonin. Gigaxonin plays a major role in the maintenance of orderly and functional intermediate filament (IF) architecture, which is critical for axonal function. Onset of symptoms, usually at three to four years of age, generally manifests with a clumsy and unsteady gait (sensory ataxia). In the peripheral nervous system, the disease progressively affects predominantly sensory and motor nerves. By the end of the second decade of life, patients typically are wheelchair dependent with limited use of the arms and little to no use of their legs. During the second decade a tracheostomy or other means of ventilation, as well as a feeding tube, are often necessary. Death normally occurs in the second or third decade of life. We recently identified a sub-cohort of patients with a milder and later onset, yet progressive form of GAN characterized by a prolonged preservation of ambulation and less extensive white matter changes on brain MRI restricted to the infratentorial regions. These individuals are good trial candidates given the increased prospect of benefit at milder disease stages. There are no statistics on the incidence of GAN, but it is considered extremely rare and does not have an approved treatment aside from supportive care. Intrathecal delivery of a gene transfer vector carrying a normal copy of the GAN to the spinal cord and brain offers a potentially effective treatment for GAN.
Primary objective: To assess the safety of scAAV9/JeT-GAN following intrathecal administration.
Primary endpoint: Incidence of SAEs and treatment emergent adverse events at least possibly related to scAAV9/JeT-GAN treatment.
Secondary objectives:
Secondary endpoints: include clinical and physiological assessment of motor and sensory function, possible rescue of disease pathology in peripheral nerves, examination of CSF in response to treatment, and assessment of vector shedding following administration. The primary efficacy endpoint is the Motor Function Measure 32 (MFM-32).
Summary of progress through protocol version 23
A total of 14 trial participants (all >= five years of age) have received a single dose of scAAV9/JeTGAN ranging from 3.5 x 10^13 vg (1x dose) to 3.5 x10^14 vg (10x dose). Dosed individuals include those predicted to be cross-reactive immunological material (CRIM) positive (residual gigaxonin expression, n= 10) or CRIM-negative (absence of gigaxonin expression, n= 4), based on their respective GAN variant(s). In CRIM-positive individuals, residual protein expression may allow for transgene immune tolerance whereas in CRIM-negative individuals, immune modulation is required. Since GAN is a progressive neurodegenerative condition, younger and milder affected individuals have a higher prospect of benefitting from treatment with scAAV9/JeT-GAN. The study will explore the safety and efficacy in up to 21 patients with GAN ages 3 years and older, with an emphasis on enrollment of patients who are younger or with a
milder phenotype and are independently ambulant.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
To participate in this study, subjects must meet the following criteria:
EXCLUSION/DEFERRAL CRITERIA:
To participate in this study, a patient MUST NOT have the following characteristics:
Pregnant or lactating patients
Forced vital capacity <= 50% of predicted value (if patient is >/= 5 years old; otherwise, baseline FVC is not required in those < 5 years old at time of enrollment)
Ventilator dependence to include daytime use of assisted ventilation
Current clinically significant infections including any requiring systemic treatment including but not limited to Human immunodeficiency virus, Hepatitis A, B, or C, Varicella zoster virus, or HTLV-1
Prior history of bacterial meningitis
Unwilling to undergo lumbar puncture at baseline and up to 2 to 3 times during follow up during the first year after treatment.
Clinically significant echocardiogram abnormality per PI, anesthesiologist, and cardiologist
Clinically significant electrocardiogram (ECG) abnormality per PI, anesthesiologist, and cardiologist
History of brain or spinal cord disease that would interfere with the LP procedures, CSF circulation, or safety assessments
Presence of an implanted shunt for the drainage of CSF or an implanted CNS catheter
Any prior participation in a study in which a gene therapy vector or stem cell transplantation was administered to avoid any ambiguity in the safety assessment resulting from lingering effects from a previous treatment.
Participation in an IND, IDE, or equivalent clinical study in the past six months.
History of or current chemotherapy, radiotherapy or other immunosuppressive therapy within the past 30 days. Corticosteroid treatment may be permitted at the discretion of the PI.
Immunizations of any kind in the month prior to the study to avoid lingering immune effects that could be confusing in the safety assessment of the trial.
Current use of medication (e.g., levothyroxine, vitamin A supplementation, oral contraceptive use, tetracycline, Diamox etc) that could potentially lead to changes in intracranial pressure
Known sensitivity or adverse reaction to anesthetic medications likely to be used in the peri-operative period per the anesthesiologist s evaluation
GAN subjects without quantifiable weakness or functional loss
Evidence of cardiomyopathy on history, exam, or additional testing (echocardiogram or electrocardiogram) or other cardiac disease that in the opinion of the investigator would deem the subject unsafe to participate in the trial
History of diabetes or clinically significant abnormality of glucose tolerance test, fasting blood sugar
Positive purified protein derivative testing for tuberculosis
Abnormal laboratory values considered clinically significant per the investigator:
Failure to thrive, defined as:
Falling 20 percentiles (20/100) in body weight in the 3 months preceding Screening/Baseline
In patients below the 3rd percentile, any further drop in body weight percentile in the 3 months preceding Screening/Baseline
Weight less than < 3rd percentile predicted for age and gender based upon WHO criteria
Any anticipated need for major surgery in the next 12 - 18 months (including scoliosis correction surgery)
Ongoing medical condition that is deemed by the Principal Investigator to interfere with the conduct or assessments of the study
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
14 participants in 4 patient groups
Loading...
Central trial contact
Christopher J Mendoza; Carsten G Bonnemann, M.D.
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal