4.5 Article

Maralixibat for the treatment of PFIC: Long-term, IBAT inhibition in an open-label, Phase 2 study

Journal

HEPATOLOGY COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 6, Issue 9, Pages 2379-2390

Publisher

JOHN WILEY & SONS LTD
DOI: 10.1002/hep4.1980

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Mirum Pharmaceuticals

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The study found that maralixibat has certain efficacy and safety in children with FIC1 or BSEP deficiencies. Some patients with nt-BSEP deficiency responded to maralixibat, showing significant reductions in pruritus and improvements in growth and quality of life. However, maralixibat had poor efficacy in patients with FIC1 deficiency or t-BSEP deficiency.
Children with progressive familial intrahepatic cholestasis, including bile salt export pump (BSEP) and familial intrahepatic cholestasis-associated protein 1 (FIC1) deficiencies, suffer debilitating cholestatic pruritus that adversely affects growth and quality of life (QoL). Reliance on surgical interventions, including liver transplantation, highlights the unmet therapeutic need. INDIGO was an open-label, Phase 2, international, long-term study to assess the efficacy and safety of maralixibat in children with FIC1 or BSEP deficiencies. Thirty-three patients, ranging from 12 months to 18 years of age, were enrolled. Eight had FIC1 deficiency and 25 had BSEP deficiency. Of the latter, 6 had biallelic, protein truncating mutations (t)-BSEP, and 19 had >= 1 nontruncating mutation (nt)-BSEP. Patients received maralixibat 266 mu g/kg orally, once daily, from baseline to Week 72, with twice-daily dosing permitted from Week 72. Long-term efficacy was determined at Week 240. Serum bile acid (sBA) response (reduction in sBAs of > 75% from baseline or concentrations <102.0 mu mol/L) was achieved in 7 patients with nt-BSEP, 6 during once-daily dosing, and 1 after switching to twice-daily dosing. sBA responders also demonstrated marked reductions in sBAs and pruritus, and increases in height, weight, and QoL. All sBA responders remained liver transplant-free after > 5 years. No patients with FIC1 deficiency or t-BSEP deficiency met the sBA responder criteria during the study. Maralixibat was generally well-tolerated throughout the study. Conclusion: Response to maralixibat was dependent on progressive familial intrahepatic cholestasis subtype, and 6 of 19 patients with nt-BSEP experienced rapid and sustained reductions in sBA levels. The 7 responders survived with native liver and experienced clinically significant reductions in pruritus and meaningful improvements in growth and QoL. Maralixibat may represent a well-tolerated alternative to surgical intervention.

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