PROPEL Study - A Study Comparing ATB200/AT2221 With Alglucosidase/Placebo in Adult Subjects With LOPD
Status: | Recruiting |
---|---|
Conditions: | Diabetes |
Therapuetic Areas: | Endocrinology |
Healthy: | No |
Age Range: | 18 - Any |
Updated: | 3/27/2019 |
Start Date: | December 4, 2018 |
End Date: | January 2021 |
Contact: | For Site |
Email: | PompeSiteInfo@amicusrx.com |
Phone: | 609-662-2000 |
A Phase 3 Double-blind Randomized Study to Assess the Efficacy and Safety of Intravenous ATB200 Co-administered With Oral AT2221 in Adult Subjects With Late Onset Pompe Disease Compared With Alglucosidase Alfa/Placebo
This is a phase 3 double-blind randomized study to study the efficacy and safety of
intravenous ATB200 Co-administered with oral AT2221 in adult subjects with Late Onset Pompe
Disease compared with Alglucosidase Alfa/placebo.
intravenous ATB200 Co-administered with oral AT2221 in adult subjects with Late Onset Pompe
Disease compared with Alglucosidase Alfa/placebo.
This is a double-blind, randomized, multicenter, international study of ATB200/AT2221 in
adult subjects with late-onset Pompe disease (LOPD) who have received enzyme replacement
therapy with alglucosidase alfa (ie, ERT-experienced) or who have never received ERT (ie, ERT
naïve) compared with alglucosidase alfa/placebo.
The study will consist of a screening period up to 30 days, a 12-month treatment period, and
a 30 day safety follow-up period. Subjects who complete this study will have the option to
participate in an open label extension study to receive ATB200/AT2221 under a separate
protocol.
Enzyme replacement therapy-experienced subjects will continue to take alglucosidase alfa
during the screening period; treatment with alglucosidase alfa will then be replaced by study
drug (ATB200/AT2221 or alglucosidase alfa/placebo) on the same schedule without interruption
(ie, every 2 weeks).
Infusion visits will be scheduled every 2 weeks throughout the study; assessments (eg,
clinical laboratory tests) for initial safety monitoring will be performed at these visits
for the first 6 weeks of the study. Study visits that include efficacy, safety, and other
assessments will be scheduled approximately every 3 months and may occur over 2 days,
provided all study assessments and procedures (with the exception of pharmacokinetic [PK]
sample collection) are performed before administration of study drug.
Efficacy assessments (ie, functional assessments) include evaluation of ambulatory function
(6MWT), motor function tests (Gait, Stair, Gower, and Chair maneuver [GSGC] test and Timed Up
and Go [TUG] test), muscle strength (manual muscle testing and quantitative muscle testing),
and pulmonary function tests (forced vital capacity [FVC], slow vital capacity [SVC], maximal
inspiratory pressure [MIP], maximal expiratory pressure [MEP], and sniff nasal inspiratory
pressure [SNIP]). Patient reported outcomes (Rasch-built Pompe-specific Activity [R PAct]
Scale, EuroQol 5 Dimensions 5 Levels Instrument [EQ-5D-5L], Patient-Reported Outcomes
Measurement Information System [PROMIS®] instruments for physical function, fatigue, dyspnea,
and upper extremity, and Subject's Global Impression of Change). The Physician's Global
Impression of Change will also be performed.
Pharmacodynamic assessments include measurement of biomarkers of muscle injury (creatine
kinase [CK]) and disease substrate (urinary hexose tetrasaccharide [Hex4]). Blood samples
will be collected for determination of total GAA protein levels and AT2221 concentrations in
plasma for a population PK analysis. Safety assessments include monitoring of adverse events
(AEs), including infusion associated reactions (IARs), clinical laboratory tests (chemistry,
hematology, and urinalysis), vital signs, physical examinations including weight,
electrocardiograms (ECGs), and immunogenicity. Concomitant medications and nondrug therapies
will also be recorded.
adult subjects with late-onset Pompe disease (LOPD) who have received enzyme replacement
therapy with alglucosidase alfa (ie, ERT-experienced) or who have never received ERT (ie, ERT
naïve) compared with alglucosidase alfa/placebo.
The study will consist of a screening period up to 30 days, a 12-month treatment period, and
a 30 day safety follow-up period. Subjects who complete this study will have the option to
participate in an open label extension study to receive ATB200/AT2221 under a separate
protocol.
Enzyme replacement therapy-experienced subjects will continue to take alglucosidase alfa
during the screening period; treatment with alglucosidase alfa will then be replaced by study
drug (ATB200/AT2221 or alglucosidase alfa/placebo) on the same schedule without interruption
(ie, every 2 weeks).
Infusion visits will be scheduled every 2 weeks throughout the study; assessments (eg,
clinical laboratory tests) for initial safety monitoring will be performed at these visits
for the first 6 weeks of the study. Study visits that include efficacy, safety, and other
assessments will be scheduled approximately every 3 months and may occur over 2 days,
provided all study assessments and procedures (with the exception of pharmacokinetic [PK]
sample collection) are performed before administration of study drug.
Efficacy assessments (ie, functional assessments) include evaluation of ambulatory function
(6MWT), motor function tests (Gait, Stair, Gower, and Chair maneuver [GSGC] test and Timed Up
and Go [TUG] test), muscle strength (manual muscle testing and quantitative muscle testing),
and pulmonary function tests (forced vital capacity [FVC], slow vital capacity [SVC], maximal
inspiratory pressure [MIP], maximal expiratory pressure [MEP], and sniff nasal inspiratory
pressure [SNIP]). Patient reported outcomes (Rasch-built Pompe-specific Activity [R PAct]
Scale, EuroQol 5 Dimensions 5 Levels Instrument [EQ-5D-5L], Patient-Reported Outcomes
Measurement Information System [PROMIS®] instruments for physical function, fatigue, dyspnea,
and upper extremity, and Subject's Global Impression of Change). The Physician's Global
Impression of Change will also be performed.
Pharmacodynamic assessments include measurement of biomarkers of muscle injury (creatine
kinase [CK]) and disease substrate (urinary hexose tetrasaccharide [Hex4]). Blood samples
will be collected for determination of total GAA protein levels and AT2221 concentrations in
plasma for a population PK analysis. Safety assessments include monitoring of adverse events
(AEs), including infusion associated reactions (IARs), clinical laboratory tests (chemistry,
hematology, and urinalysis), vital signs, physical examinations including weight,
electrocardiograms (ECGs), and immunogenicity. Concomitant medications and nondrug therapies
will also be recorded.
Inclusion Criteria:
1. Subject must provide signed informed consent prior to any study-related procedures
being performed.
2. Male and female subjects are ≥ 18 years old and weigh ≥ 40 kg at screening.
3. Female subjects of childbearing potential and male subjects must agree to use
medically accepted methods of contraception during the study and for 90 days after the
last dose of study drug.
4. Subject must have a diagnosis of LOPD based on documentation of one of the following:
1. deficiency of GAA enzyme
2. GAA genotyping
5. Subject is classified as one of the following with respect to ERT status:
1. ERT-experienced, defined as currently receiving standard of care ERT
(alglucosidase alfa) at the recommended dose and regimen (ie, 20 mg/kg dose every
2 weeks) for ≥ 24 months
2. ERT-naïve, defined as never having received investigational or commercially
available ERT
6. Subject has a sitting FVC ≥ 30% of the predicted value for healthy adults (National
Health and Nutrition Examination Survey III) at screening.
7. Subject performs two 6MWTs at screening that are valid, as determined by the clinical
evaluator, and that meet all of the following criteria:
1. both screening values of 6MWD are ≥ 75 meters
2. both screening values of 6MWD are ≤ 90% of the predicted value for healthy adults
3. the lower value of 6MWD is within 20% of the higher value of 6MWD
Exclusion Criteria
1. Subject has received any investigational therapy or pharmacological treatment for
Pompe disease, other than alglucosidase alfa, within 30 days or 5 half-lives of the
therapy or treatment, whichever is longer, before Day 1 or is anticipated to do so
during the study.
2. Subject has received gene therapy for Pompe disease
3. Subject is taking any of the following prohibited medications within 30 days before
Day 1:
- miglitol (eg, Glyset)
- miglustat (eg, Zavesca)
- acarbose (eg, Precose or Glucobay)
- voglibose (eg, Volix, Vocarb, or Volibo)
Note: None of these medications have a half-life that, when multiplied by 5, is longer
than 30 days.
4. Subject requires the use of invasive or noninvasive ventilation support for > 6 hours
per day while awake.
5. Subject has a hypersensitivity to any of the excipients in ATB200, alglucosidase alfa,
or AT2221.
6. Subject has a medical condition or any other extenuating circumstance that may, in the
opinion of the investigator or medical monitor, pose an undue safety risk to the
subject or may compromise his/her ability to comply with or adversely impact protocol
requirements. This includes clinical depression (as diagnosed by a psychiatrist or
other mental health professional) with uncontrolled or poorly controlled symptoms.
7. Subject, if female, is pregnant or breastfeeding at screening.
8. Subject, whether male or female, is planning to conceive a child during the study.
9. Subject does not have documentation of diagnosis of Pompe disease and refuses to
undergo genetic testing.
We found this trial at
13
sites
660 S Euclid Ave
Saint Louis, Missouri 63110
Saint Louis, Missouri 63110
(314) 362-5000
Washington University School of Medicine Washington University Physicians is the clinical practice of the School...
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University of Pittsburgh The University of Pittsburgh is a state-related research university, founded as the...
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The Ohio State University, Wexner Medical Center Located in Columbus, The Ohio State University Wexner...
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Hackensack University Medical Center Hackensack University Medical Center, part of the Hackensack University Health Network,...
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University of California, Irvine Since 1965, the University of California, Irvine has combined the strengths...
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