FDA Places Partial Clinical Hold on Some Trials of Novartis Gene Therapy | Virus World | Scoop.it

The FDA has imposed a partial hold on clinical trials for intrathecal administration of the Novartis gene therapy AVXS-101, which won the FDA's first approval for treating some forms of spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) in May under the name Zolgensma® (onasemnogene abeparvovec-xioi). The partial hold does not affect the marketing of Zolgensma or clinical trials assessing intravenous (IV) delivery of AVXS-101, Novartis emphasized. However, the hold affects studies assessing AVXS-101 administered as an injection into the spinal canal in patients with SMA Type 2.

 

As a result of the hold, enrollment in the high dose cohort has been stopped in the Phase I STRONG trial (NCT03381729), an ongoing, open-label, dose-comparison, multi-center trial designed to evaluate the efficacy, safety, and tolerability of one-time intrathecal administration of AVXS-101. The low- and mid-dose cohort enrollment has previously been completed and interim results have been presented. The pharma giant said the partial hold followed AveXis, A Novartis Company, alerting authorities and clinical trial investigators about animal findings from a small, AveXis-launched preclinical study showing dorsal root ganglia (DRG) mononuclear cell inflammation, sometimes accompanied by neuronal cell body degeneration or loss.

 

“The clinical significance of the DRG inflammation observed in this preclinical animal study is not known and was not seen in prior animal studies with AVXS-101,” Novartis said in a statement, adding that DRG inflammation can be associated with sensory effects. “We have completed a thorough review of human safety data from all available sources to date and no adverse effects related to sensory changes have been seen in AVXS-101 intrathecal or Zolgensma. We are working with health authorities to confirm further guidance to clinical investigators.”  Novartis also said it will continue to closely monitor for any reports of related safety events in patients, adding: “We remain confident that the overall benefit-risk profile for patients on treatment is favorable.”

 

The partial clinical hold comes a month after another safety issue related to the gene therapy. Last month, Novartis acknowledged the death of a six-month-old patient treated with Zolgensma in the European Phase III clinical trial STRIVE-EU (NCT03461289)—but insisted that the death was not the result of toxicity within the gene therapy. “According to the coroner’s report, the immediate cause of death was hypoxic-ischemic brain damage with respiratory tract infection as the underlying cause,” AveXis stated on September 19. “SMA Type 1 was indicated as the underlying cause for the respiratory tract infection. In addition, there was no evidence of an inflammatory CNS process or a toxic or a treatment-related brain damage.” Zolgensma is an adeno-associated virus vector-based gene therapy that won FDA approval on May 24. Zolgensma is indicated for the treatment of SMA in pediatric patients less than two years of age with SMA with bi-allelic mutations in the survival motor neuron 1 (SMN1) gene.....