4.8 Article

Inhibiting Plasma Kallikrein for Hereditary Angioedema Prophylaxis

Journal

NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE
Volume 376, Issue 8, Pages 717-728

Publisher

MASSACHUSETTS MEDICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1056/NEJMoa1605767

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. Dyax
  2. Alnylam Pharmaceuticals
  3. Shire
  4. CSL Behring
  5. Salix Pharmaceuticals
  6. BioCryst Pharmaceuticals
  7. Salix Pharmaceuticals/Pharming Group
  8. Swedish Orphan Biovitrum
  9. Ionis Pharmaceuticals
  10. Global Blood Therapeutics
  11. Arrowhead Pharmaceuticals
  12. Pharming Group
  13. Relypsa
  14. Arsanis
  15. Forum Pharmaceuticals
  16. Seres Therapeutics

Ask authors/readers for more resources

BACKGROUND Hereditary angioedema with C1 inhibitor deficiency is characterized by recurrent, unpredictable swelling episodes caused by uncontrolled plasma kallikrein generation and excessive bradykinin release resulting from cleavage of high-molecular-weight kininogen. Lanadelumab (DX-2930) is a new kallikrein inhibitor with the potential for prophylactic treatment of hereditary angioedema with C1 inhibitor deficiency. METHODS We conducted a phase 1b, multicenter, double-blind, placebo-controlled, multiple-ascending- dose trial. Patients with hereditary angioedema with C1 inhibitor deficiency were randomly assigned in a 2: 1 ratio to receive either lanadelumab (24 patients) or placebo (13 patients), in two administrations 14 days apart. Patients assigned to lanadelumab were enrolled in sequential dose groups: total dose of 30 mg (4 patients), 100 mg (4 patients), 300 mg (5 patients), or 400 mg (11 patients). The pharmacodynamic profile of lanadelumab was assessed by measurement of plasma levels of cleaved high-molecular-weight kininogen, and efficacy was assessed by the rate of attacks of angioedema during a prespecified period (day 8 to day 50) in the 300-mg and 400-mg groups as compared with the placebo group. RESULTS No discontinuations occurred because of adverse events, serious adverse events, or deaths in patients who received lanadelumab. The most common adverse events that emerged during treatment were attacks of angioedema, injection-site pain, and headache. Dose-proportional increases in serum concentrations of lanadelumab were observed; the mean elimination half-life was approximately 2 weeks. Lanadelumab at a dose of 300 mg or 400 mg reduced cleavage of high-molecular-weight kininogen in plasma from patients with hereditary angioedema with C1 inhibitor deficiency to levels approaching that from patients without the disorder. From day 8 to day 50, the 300-mg and 400-mg groups had 100% and 88% fewer attacks, respectively, than the placebo group. All patients in the 300-mg group and 82% (9 of 11) in the 400-mg group were attack-free, as compared with 27% (3 of 11) in the placebo group. CONCLUSIONS In this small trial, administration of lanadelumab to patients with hereditary angioedema with C1 inhibitor deficiency reduced cleavage of high-molecular-weight kininogen and attacks of angioedema.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available