This was a multinational, open-label study to assess the safety and efficacy of AVR-RD-02 in approximately 8 to 16 subjects (male or female) who are ≥18 and ≤50 years of age and post pubertal at Screening with a confirmed diagnosis of Type 1 Gaucher disease (based on clinical phenotype, genotyping, and deficient GCase enzyme activity in whole blood).
Five study periods (Screening, Baseline, Pre-gene Therapy Infusion, Gene Therapy Infusion, and Post-gene Therapy Infusion Follow-up) comprised the study. During the Screening Period (approximately 60 days), written informed consent was obtained and the subject completed other Screening procedures to confirm study eligibility. Once study eligibility was confirmed, subjects entered the Baseline Period (up to 7 days) during which time assessments were performed to establish Pre-gene Therapy Infusion baseline. Once baseline assessments were completed, the subject entered the Pre-gene Therapy Infusion Period (approximately 8 to 10 weeks) during which time mobilization, apheresis, AVR-RD-02 investigational product preparation and testing for release, busulfan conditioning regimen administration took place. Enzyme replacement therapy was discontinued at least 2 weeks before the scheduled Gene Therapy Infusion Day. Following completion of the Pre-gene Therapy Infusion Period, the subject entered the Gene Therapy Infusion Period (1 day) during which AVR-RD-02 infusion took place. After AVR-RD-02 Gene Therapy Infusion, the subject entered the Post-gene Therapy Infusion Follow-up Period (approximately 52 weeks) during which time periodic safety and efficacy assessments were performed to assess measures of safety, engraftment, and clinical response following AV-RD-02 infusion. In August 2023, the study was terminated early by the Sponsor, which was not based on any safety or medical reasons and therefore, one subject did not complete the study (i.e., Week 52). Subsequently, in August 2023, the sponsor's long-term follow-up study (AVRO-RD-02-LTF01), was also terminated early for the same reason as the AVRO-RD-02-201 study, and therefore, no subjects completed the 15-year long-term follow-up study.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
8
AVR-RD-02 Drug product: active substance is autologous CD34+ enriched hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) that have been genetically modified ex vivo with a lentiviral vector (LV) to contain a ribonucleic acid (RNA) transcript that, after reverse transcription, results in codon-optimized, complementary deoxyribonucleic acid (cDNA) that, upon its integration into human genome, encodes for functional human glucocerebrosidase (GCase).
University of California San Diego
San Diego, California, United States
University of Iowa
Iowa City, Iowa, United States
Hackensack University Medical Center
Hackensack, New Jersey, United States
UPMC Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States
Number of Clinically Significant Adverse Events (AEs) and Serious Adverse Events (SAEs) of AVR-RD-02
An AE was any untoward medical occurrence in a participant who received study drug without regard to possibility of causal relationship. An SAE is an AE resulting in any of the following outcomes or deemed significant for any other reason: death; initial or prolonged inpatient hospitalization; life threatening experience (immediate risk of dying); persistent or significant disability/incapacity; congenital anomaly. The AE/SAE are also inclusive of any abnormalities in Clinical Laboratory Tests, Vital Signs and in Electrocardiographs (ECGs). AE/SAE can either be related to AVR-RD-02 infusion or attributed to the conditioning agent, mobilization agent(s), study procedures, and the underlying disease.
Time frame: Baseline to 52 weeks post-AVR-RD-02 treatment follow-up
Vector Copy Number (VCN) in Peripheral Blood as Assessed by Quantitative Polymerase Chain Reaction (qPCR) and/or Droplet Digital Polymerase Chain Reaction (ddPCR)
VCN, defined as the average number of copies of the therapeutic gene (transgene) in a sample of cells, is conventionally reported as the number of vector copies found in a sample, relative to copies of a reference gene in the human genome. This is an estimate of the number of integration sites per cell (on average). A VCN of 1 would signify that a sample of cells evaluated contains on average at least one \[working\] copy of the therapeutic transgene per cell. This measurement was for VCN in a sample of progenitor cells obtained from a peripheral blood sample.
Time frame: Baseline to 52 weeks post-AVR-RD-02 treatment follow-up
Vector Copy Number (VCN) in Bone Marrow as Assessed by Quantitative Polymerase Chain Reaction (qPCR) and/or Droplet Digital Polymerase Chain Reaction (ddPCR)
VCN is defined as the average number of copies of the therapeutic gene (transgene) in a sample of cells and is a measurement of the number of copies of the vector found in a sample, relative to copies of a reference gene in the human genome. This is an estimate of the number of integration sites per cell (on average). A VCN of 1 would signify that a sample of cells evaluated contains on average at least one \[working\] copy of the therapeutic transgene per cell. This measurement was for VCN in a sample of bone marrow progenitor cells obtained from an aspirate.
This platform is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional.
University Health Network
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Time frame: Baseline to 52 weeks post-AVR-RD-02 treatment follow-up
Change From Baseline in Spleen Volume Assessed by Abdominal MRI
Percent change in spleen volume = (\[spleen volume at Week 52 minus spleen volume at baseline\] divided by \[spleen volume at baseline\]) multiplied by 100. A reduction in the percent change from baseline (%CFB) in spleen volume (mL) is a positive indicator of efficacy.
Time frame: Baseline to 52 weeks post-AVR-RD-02 treatment follow-up
Change From Baseline in Liver Volume Assessed by Abdominal MRI
Percent change in liver volume = (\[liver volume at Week 52 minus liver volume at baseline\] divided by \[liver volume at baseline\]) multiplied by 100. A reduction in the percent change from baseline (%CFB) in liver volume (mL) is a positive indicator of efficacy.
Time frame: Baseline to 52 weeks post-AVR-RD-02 treatment follow-up
Change From Baseline in Hemoglobin Concentration
Ratio to baseline indicates the percent change in hemoglobin concentration. The baseline value is defined as 1 or 100%. A ratio to Baseline \<1 indicates a reduction in hemoglobin concentration and a ratio to Baseline \>1 indicates an increase in hemoglobin concentration.
Time frame: Baseline to 52 weeks post-AVR-RD-02 treatment follow-up
Change From Baseline in Platelet Count
Ratio to baseline indicates the percent change in platelet count. The Baseline value is defined as 1 or 100%. A ratio to Baseline \<1 indicates a reduction in platelet count and a ratio to Baseline \>1 indicates an increase in platelet count.
Time frame: Baseline to 52 weeks post-AVR-RD-02 treatment follow-up
Change From Baseline in Plasma Lyso-Gb1 Levels by Liquid Chromatography Tandem Mass Spectrometry (LC/MS/MS)
Glucosylsphingosine (lyso-Gb1) is the substrate that accumulates in the lysosomes of patients affected by Gaucher disease as a result of deficiencies in GCase enzyme activity. Treatment with AVR-RD-02 is intended to replace the missing GCase enzymatic activity, which allows degradation of accumulated lyso-Gb1 substrate in the lysosomes. Negative values (decrease from Baseline) are an indicator of efficacy.
Time frame: Baseline to 52 weeks post-AVR-RD-02 treatment follow-up
Change From Baseline in GCase Enzyme Activity Level in Plasma
Treatment-naïve Gaucher patients are deficient in glucosylcerebrosidase (GCase) enzyme activity due to mutations in the GBA gene. AVR-RD-02 is intended to increase the amount of GCase enzyme activity in the lysosomes of treated subjects. A positive value (increase from Baseline in GCase enzyme activity) is a positive indicator of efficacy.
Time frame: Weeks 13, 26, 39, and 52
Change From Baseline in GCase Enzyme Activity Level in Peripheral Blood Leukocytes
Treatment-naïve Gaucher patients are deficient in glucosylcerebrosidase (GCase) enzyme activity due to mutations in the GBA gene. AVR-RD-02 is intended to increase the amount of GCase enzyme activity in the lysosomes of treated subjects. A positive value (increase from Baseline in GCase enzyme activity) is a positive indicator of efficacy.
Time frame: Weeks 13, 26, 39, and 52
Number of Subjects Who Restarted ERT
The absence of the need to re-start ERT post treatment is a positive indicator of efficacy.
Time frame: Between Week 26 and Week 52 post-AVR-RD-02 treatment
Change From Baseline in Presence of Anti-GCase Total Antibodies
Number of subjects with changes in anti-GCase antibodies from Baseline to post infusion timepoints. Unit of measure: Number of subjects negative at baseline but positive at post-treatment timepoints. A negative or zero result (titer lower or unchanged at post-infusion timepoints compared to Baseline) indicates no immune response to the therapeutic protein.
Time frame: At Weeks 5, 13, 26, 39, and 52
Change From Baseline in Bone Mineral Density (BMD) Assessed by Bone Density Scan (DXA)
An increase in BMD is a positive indicator of efficacy. Subjects had T-scores reported for change from baseline in Bone Mineral Density in the Femoral Neck and Lumbar Spine regions assessed by Bone Mineral Density (DXA). The T-score on the subject's bone density report shows how many standard deviations the subject's bone mass differs from the bone mass of an average healthy 30-year-old adult. If the bones are more dense than the average 30-year-old adult, the bone mass will be indicated as a positive T-score. Higher positive T-score indicates greater bone density. If the bones are less dense than the average 30-year-old adult, the bone mass will be indicated as a negative T-score. Lower negative T-score indicates lesser bone density.
Time frame: Baseline to 52 weeks post-AVR-RD-02 treatment follow-up
Change From Baseline in Bone Mineral Density (BMD) Assessed by Bone Density Scan (DXA)
An increase in BMD is a positive indicator of efficacy. Subjects had Z-scores reported for change from baseline in Bone Mineral Density in the Femoral Neck and Lumbar Spine regions assessed by Bone Mineral Density (DXA). A Z-score compares the subject's bone density to the average bone density of people their own age and gender. If the bones more dense than the average person their own age and gender, the bone mass will be indicated as a positive Z-score. Higher positive Z-score indicates greater bone density. If the bones are less dense than the average person their own age and gender, the bone mass will be indicated as a negative Z-score. Lower negative Z-score indicates lesser bone density.
Time frame: Baseline to 52 weeks post-AVR-RD-02 treatment follow-up
Change From Baseline in Plasma Chitotriosidase Activity Levels Measured by Fluorometric Enzyme Assay
Chitotriosidase enzyme is part of an inflammatory response originating in macrophages, which are the primary cell type affected in Gaucher disease. Gaucher disease patients typically have elevated Chitotriosidase enzyme activity in their plasma compared to healthy population. A reduction from Baseline in chitotriosidase enzyme activity is a positive indicator of efficacy.
Time frame: Baseline to 52 weeks post-AVR-RD-02 treatment follow-up
Change From Baseline in Bone Marrow Burden (BMB) Score as Assessed by Bone Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)
Bone Marrow Burden Score is a semi-quantitative MRI scoring system for assessing the extent of bone marrow involvement in Gaucher disease. A BMB score from 0 to 8 could be given for the lumbar spine, and a BMB score from 0 to 8 could be given to the femurs. Thus, a total BMB score of up to 16 is obtained by adding the lumbar and femoral BMB scores. A higher total BMB-score indicates more severe bone marrow involvement. A reduction in BMB score is a positive indicator of efficacy.
Time frame: Baseline to 52 weeks post-AVR-RD-02 treatment follow-up