Indirect Comparison of Lenadogene Nolparvovec Gene Therapy Versus Natural History in Patients with Leber Hereditary Optic Neuropathy Carrying the m.11778G>A MT-ND4 Mutation.
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INTRODUCTION: Lenadogene nolparvovec is a promising novel gene therapy for patients with Leber hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON) carrying the m.11778G>A ND4 mutation (MT-ND4). A previous pooled analysis of phase 3 studies showed an improvement in visual acuity of patients injected with lenadogene nolparvovec compared to natural history. Here, we report updated results by incorporating data from the latest phase 3 trial REFLECT in the pool, increasing the number of treated patients from 76 to 174. METHODS: The visual acuity of 174 MT-ND4-carrying patients with LHON injected in one or both eyes with lenadogene nolparvovec from four pooled phase 3 studies (REVERSE, RESCUE and their long-term extension trial RESTORE; and REFLECT trial) was compared to the spontaneous evolution of an external control group of 208 matched patients from 11 natural history studies. RESULTS: Treated patients showed a clinically relevant and sustained improvement in their visual acuity when compared to natural history. Mean improvement versus natural history was - 0.30 logMAR (+ 15 ETDRS letters equivalent) at last observation (P < 0.01) with a maximal follow-up of 3.9 years after injection. Most treated eyes were on-chart as compared to less than half of natural history eyes at 48 months after vision loss (89.6% versus 48.1%; P < 0.01) and at last observation (76.1% versus 44.4%; P < 0.01). When we adjusted for covariates of interest (gender, age of onset, ethnicity, and duration of follow-up), the estimated mean gain was - 0.43 logMAR (+ 21.5 ETDRS letters equivalent) versus natural history at last observation (P < 0.0001). Treatment effect was consistent across all phase 3 clinical trials. Analyses from REFLECT suggest a larger treatment effect in patients receiving bilateral injection compared to unilateral injection. CONCLUSION: The efficacy of lenadogene nolparvovec in improving visual acuity in MT-ND4 LHON was confirmed in a large cohort of patients, compared to the spontaneous natural history decline. Bilateral injection of gene therapy may offer added benefits over unilateral injection. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBERS: NCT02652780 (REVERSE); NCT02652767 (RESCUE); NCT03406104 (RESTORE); NCT03293524 (REFLECT); NCT03295071 (REALITY).
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Funder: GenSight Biologics
Funder: patients’ organizations MITOCON and IFOND, and patients’ donations
Funder: Fight for Sight UK; doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100000615
Funder: Isaac Newton Trust; doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100004815
Funder: Addenbrooke’s Charitable Trust
Funder: National Eye Research Centre
Funder: International Foundation for Optic Nerve Disease
Funder: NIHR as part of the Rare Diseases Translational Research Collaboration
Funder: National Institute for Health Research Biomedical Research Centre at Moorfields Eye Hospital NHS Foundation Trust and UCL Institute of Ophthalmology; doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100012618
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2193-6528
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Italian Ministry of University and Research (20172T2MHH)
Telethon-Italy (GGP20115)
NIH/NEI (P30-EY06360)
NIH/NINDS (RO1NSO89694)
UK National Institute of Health Research (NIHR301696)
UK Medical Research Council (G1002570)
Moorfields Eye Charity (GR001376)
NIHR Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre (BRC-1215-20014)
Research Foundation - Flanders, Belgium (Senior Clinical Investigator 1803821N)
Concerted Research Action of the Special Research Fund Ghent University (BOF20/GOA/023)
German Network for Mitochondrial Disorders (mitoNET, 01GM1906A)
E-Rare project GENOMIT (01GM1920B)
Agence Nationale de la Recherche, Programme Investissements d'Avenir (ANR-18-IAHU-0001)
LabEx LIFESENSES (ANR-10-LABX- 65)