4.5 Article

Disease burden in patients with acute hepatic porphyria: experience from the phase 3 ENVISION study

Journal

ORPHANET JOURNAL OF RARE DISEASES
Volume 17, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13023-022-02463-x

Keywords

Acute hepatic porphyria; Givosiran; Disease burden; Porphyria attack; Chronic symptoms; Quality of life

Funding

  1. Alnylam Pharmaceuticals

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Acute hepatic porphyria (AHP) is a rare genetic disease with worsening severity over time. The use of givosiran has been found to alleviate the disease burden of AHP patients, reducing the number and severity of attacks and improving the quality of life.
Background Acute hepatic porphyria (AHP) is a family of four rare genetic diseases, each involving deficiency in a hepatic heme biosynthetic enzyme. Resultant overproduction of the neurotoxic intermediates delta-aminolevulinic acid (ALA) and porphobilinogen (PBG) leads to disabling acute neurovisceral attacks and progressive neuropathy. We evaluated the AHP disease burden in patients aged >= 12 years in a post hoc analysis of the Phase 3, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled ENVISION trial of givosiran (NCT03338816), an RNA interference (RNAi) therapeutic that targets the enzyme ALAS1 to decrease ALA and PBG production. We analyzed baseline AHP severity via chronic symptoms between attacks, comorbidities, concomitant medications, hemin-associated complications, and quality of life (QOL) and evaluated givosiran (2.5 mg/kg monthly) in patients with and without prior hemin prophylaxis on number and severity of attacks and pain scores during and between attacks. Results Participants (placebo, n = 46; givosiran, n = 48) included patients with low and high annualized attack rates (AARs; range 0-46). At baseline, patients reported chronic symptoms (52%), including nausea, fatigue, and pain; comorbidities, including neuropathy (38%) and psychiatric disorders (47%); concomitant medications, including chronic opioids (29%); hemin-associated complications (eg, iron overload); and poor QOL (low SF-12 and EuroQol visual analog scale scores). A linear relationship between time since diagnosis and AAR with placebo suggested worsening of disease over time without effective treatment. Givosiran reduced the number and severity of attacks, days with worst pain scores above baseline, and opioid use versus placebo. Conclusions Patients with AHP, regardless of annualized attack rates, have considerable disease burden that may partly be alleviated with givosiran.

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