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Eteplirsen for the Treatment of Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy (DMD) (S42.001)

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TLDR
The present study used a double‐blind placebo‐controlled protocol to test eteplirsen's ability to induce dystrophin production and improve distance walked on the 6‐minute walk test.
Abstract
Objective: Phosphorodiamidate morpholino oligomers (PMOs) are synthetic nucleic acid analogs that can be designed to sequence-specifically block spliceosomes from binding to dystrophin pre-mRNA, resulting in omission of the targeted exon from the transcript and restoration of the reading frame with the goal of enabling synthesis of internally-shortened dystrophin. Background: DMD, a rare, X-linked genetic disease results in progressive muscle degeneration and premature death. DMD is primarily caused by whole exon deletions in the dystrophin gene resulting in a shift of the mRNA reading frame that prevents production of functional dystrophin protein. Design/Methods: As of June 3, 2016, 81 of 150 treated patients had received weekly eteplirsen for ≥1 year. Results: PMO eteplirsen received accelerated approval in the US for patients with a dystrophin gene mutation amenable to exon 51 skipping based on an increase in dystrophin in skeletal muscle in some patients. Mean dystrophin increases as measured by Western blot were observed following 180 weeks of treatment in the pivotal Phase II Studies 201/202 when compared to untreated DMD controls (N=11; +0.85%, p=0.007) and at Week 48 in Phase III Study PROMOVI when compared to baseline (N=12; +0.28%, p=0.008). Immunohistochemistry analysis at Week 180 in Study 201/202 also showed mean increases in dystrophin as measured by % dystrophin-positive fibers (N=11; +16.27%, p 4.5 years of treatment. Conclusions: Eteplirsen is the first exon skipping therapy approved for the treatment of Duchenne muscular dystrophy amenable to exon 51 skipping. Lessons learned from the eteplirsen clinical development program can aid in development of PMO therapies targeting additional exons. Study Supported by: Sarepta Therapeutics, Inc. Disclosure: Dr. Charleston has received personal compensation for activities with Sarepta Therapeutics as an employee. Dr. Schnell has received personal compensation for activities with Sarepta Therapeutics as a full time employee. Dr. Dworzak has received personal compensation for activities with Sarepta Therapeutics as an employee. Dr. Donoghue has received personal compensation for activities with Sarepta Therapeutics as an employee. Dr. Lynch has received personal compensation for activities with Sarepta Therapeutics, Inc. as an employee. Dr. Lewis has nothing to disclose. Dr. Chen has nothing to disclose. Dr. Rodino-Klapac has nothing to disclose. Dr. Sahenk has nothing to disclose. Dr. Voss has received personal compensation for activities with Sarepta Therapeutics as an employee. Dr. DeAlwis has received personal compensation for activities with Sarepta Therapeutics as an employee. Dr. Frank has received personal compensation for activities with Sarepta Therapeutics, Inc. as an employee. Dr. Eliopoulos has received personal compensation for activities with Sarepta Therapeutics as an employee. Dr. Mendell has received personal compensation for activities with Sarepta Therapeutics, Inc.

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Muscle membrane integrity in Duchenne muscular dystrophy: recent advances in copolymer-based muscle membrane stabilizers

TL;DR: The scientific premise, design, and structure-function analysis of chemical-based muscle membrane stabilizing block copolymers are reviewed here for applications in striated muscle membrane injury, including Duchenne muscular dystrophy and potentially other biomedical applications in which membrane integrity is compromised.
Journal ArticleDOI

Exon skipping restores dystrophin expression, but fails to prevent disease progression in later stage dystrophic dko mice

TL;DR: The PPMO treatment alleviated the disease pathology and significantly prolonged the life span of the mice receiving treatment at younger age with mild phenotype, however, restoration of high levels of dystrophin expression failed to prevent disease progression to the mice received treatment when disease was already at advanced stage.
Journal ArticleDOI

Antisense oligonucleotide therapeutics in clinical trials for the treatment of inherited retinal diseases.

TL;DR: Antisense oligonucleotides hold great therapeutic potential for numerous other inherited retinal diseases with common deep-intronic and dominant gain-of-function mutations, and would complement viral vector-mediated gene augmentation which is generally limited by the size of the transgene and to the treatment of recessive diseases.
Journal ArticleDOI

The emperor's new dystrophin: finding sense in the noise

TL;DR: The inability to induce meaningful levels of dystrophin does not mean that dystophin expression as an end point is irrelevant, nor that induced exon skipping as a strategy is flawed, but demands that drug safety and efficacy, and study parameters be addressed, rather than questioning the strategy or the validity of dyStrophin as a biomarker.
Journal Article

Use of epitope libraries to identify exon-specific monoclonal antibodies for characterization of altered dystrophins in muscular dystrophy.

TL;DR: This work has shown that a Duchenne patient with a frameshift deletion of exons 42 and 43 makes a truncated dystrophin encoded by exons 1-41, and it is shown that this can be detected in the sarcolemma by mAbs up to and including those specific for exon 41 epitopes but not by m Abs specific forExon 43 or later epitopes.
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