Efficacy and Safety of N-Acetyl- l -Leucine in Children and Adults With GM2 Gangliosidoses

Kyriakos Martakis, Jens Claassen, Jordi Gascon-Bayari, Nicolina Goldschagg, Andreas Hahn, Anhar Hassan, Anita Hennig, Simon Jones, Richard Kay, Heather Lau, Susan Perlman, Reena Sharma, Susanne Schneider, Tatiana Bremova-Ertl

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Background and ObjectivesGM2 gangliosidoses (Tay-Sachs and Sandhoff diseases) are rare, autosomal recessive, neurodegenerative diseases with no available symptomatic or disease-modifying treatments. This clinical trial investigated N-acetyl-l-leucine (NALL), an orally administered, modified amino acid in pediatric (≥6 years) and adult patients with GM2 gangliosidoses.MethodsIn this phase IIb, multinational, open-label, rater-blinded study (IB1001-202), male and female patients aged ≥6 years with a genetically confirmed diagnosis of GM2 gangliosidoses received orally administered NALL for a 6-week treatment period (4 g/d in patients ≥13 years, weight-tiered doses for patients 6-12 years), followed by a 6-week posttreatment washout period. For the primary Clinical Impression of Change in Severity analysis, patient performance on a predetermined primary anchor test (the 8-Meter Walk Test or the 9-Hole Peg Test) at baseline, after 6 weeks on NALL, and again after a 6-week washout period was videoed and evaluated centrally by blinded raters. Secondary outcomes included assessments of ataxia, clinical global impression, and quality of life.ResultsThirty patients between the age of 6 and 55 years were enrolled. Twenty-nine had an on-treatment assessment and were included in the primary modified intention-to-treat analysis. The study met its CI-CS primary end point (mean difference 0.71, SD = 2.09, 90% CI 0.00, 1.50, p = 0.039), as well as secondary measures of ataxia and global impression. NALL was safe and well tolerated, with no serious adverse reactions.DiscussionTreatment with NALL was associated with statistically significant and clinically relevant changes in functioning and quality of life in patients with GM2 gangliosidosis. NALL was safe and well tolerated, contributing to an overall favorable risk:benefit profile. NALL is a promising, easily administered (oral) therapeutic option for these rare, debilitating diseases with immense unmet medical needs.Trial Registration InformationThe trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT03759665; registered on November 30, 2018), EudraCT (2018-004406-25), and DRKS (DRKS00017539). The first patient was enrolled on June 7, 2019.Classification of EvidenceThis study provides Class IV evidence that NALL improves outcomes for patients with GM2 gangliosidoses.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)E1072-E1083
JournalNeurology
Volume100
Issue number10
DOIs
StatePublished - Mar 7 2023

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Clinical Neurology

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