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Effects of triheptanoin (UX007) in patients with long‐chain fatty acid oxidation disorders: Results from an open‐label, long‐term extension study

Long‐chain fatty acid oxidation disorders (LC‐FAOD) are autosomal recessive conditions that impair conversion of long‐chain fatty acids into energy, leading to significant clinical symptoms. Triheptanoin is a highly purified, 7‐carbon chain triglyceride approved in the United States as a source of c...

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Autores principales: Vockley, Jerry, Burton, Barbara, Berry, Gerard, Longo, Nicola, Phillips, John, Sanchez‐Valle, Amarilis, Chapman, Kimberly, Tanpaiboon, Pranoot, Grunewald, Stephanie, Murphy, Elaine, Lu, Xiaoxiao, Cataldo, Jason
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley & Sons, Inc. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7891391/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32885845
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jimd.12313
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author Vockley, Jerry
Burton, Barbara
Berry, Gerard
Longo, Nicola
Phillips, John
Sanchez‐Valle, Amarilis
Chapman, Kimberly
Tanpaiboon, Pranoot
Grunewald, Stephanie
Murphy, Elaine
Lu, Xiaoxiao
Cataldo, Jason
author_facet Vockley, Jerry
Burton, Barbara
Berry, Gerard
Longo, Nicola
Phillips, John
Sanchez‐Valle, Amarilis
Chapman, Kimberly
Tanpaiboon, Pranoot
Grunewald, Stephanie
Murphy, Elaine
Lu, Xiaoxiao
Cataldo, Jason
author_sort Vockley, Jerry
collection PubMed
description Long‐chain fatty acid oxidation disorders (LC‐FAOD) are autosomal recessive conditions that impair conversion of long‐chain fatty acids into energy, leading to significant clinical symptoms. Triheptanoin is a highly purified, 7‐carbon chain triglyceride approved in the United States as a source of calories and fatty acids for treatment of pediatric and adult patients with molecularly confirmed LC‐FAOD. CL202 is an open‐label, long‐term extension study evaluating triheptanoin (Dojolvi) safety and efficacy in patients with LC‐FAOD. Patients rolled over from the CL201 triheptanoin clinical trial (rollover); were triheptanoin‐naïve (naïve); or had participated in investigator‐sponsored trials/expanded access programs (IST/other). Results focus on rollover and naïve groups, as pretreatment data allow comparison. Primary outcomes were annual rate and duration of major clinical events (MCEs; rhabdomyolysis, hypoglycemia, and cardiomyopathy events). Seventy‐five patients were enrolled (24 rollover, 20 naïve, 31 IST/other). Mean study duration was 23.0 months for rollover, 15.7 months for naïve, and 34.7 months for IST/other. In the rollover group, mean annualized MCE rate decreased from 1.76 events/year pre‐triheptanoin to 0.96 events/year with triheptanoin (P = .0319). Median MCE duration was reduced by 66%. In the naïve group, median annualized MCE rate decreased from 2.33 events/year pre‐triheptanoin to 0.71 events/year with triheptanoin (P = .1072). Median MCE duration was reduced by 80%. The most common related adverse events (AEs) were diarrhea, abdominal pain/discomfort, and vomiting, most mild to moderate. Three patients had serious AEs (diverticulitis, ileus, rhabdomyolysis) possibly related to drug; all resolved. Two patients had AEs leading to death; neither drug related. Triheptanoin reduced rate and duration of MCEs. Safety was consistent with previous observations.
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spelling pubmed-78913912021-03-02 Effects of triheptanoin (UX007) in patients with long‐chain fatty acid oxidation disorders: Results from an open‐label, long‐term extension study Vockley, Jerry Burton, Barbara Berry, Gerard Longo, Nicola Phillips, John Sanchez‐Valle, Amarilis Chapman, Kimberly Tanpaiboon, Pranoot Grunewald, Stephanie Murphy, Elaine Lu, Xiaoxiao Cataldo, Jason J Inherit Metab Dis Original Articles Long‐chain fatty acid oxidation disorders (LC‐FAOD) are autosomal recessive conditions that impair conversion of long‐chain fatty acids into energy, leading to significant clinical symptoms. Triheptanoin is a highly purified, 7‐carbon chain triglyceride approved in the United States as a source of calories and fatty acids for treatment of pediatric and adult patients with molecularly confirmed LC‐FAOD. CL202 is an open‐label, long‐term extension study evaluating triheptanoin (Dojolvi) safety and efficacy in patients with LC‐FAOD. Patients rolled over from the CL201 triheptanoin clinical trial (rollover); were triheptanoin‐naïve (naïve); or had participated in investigator‐sponsored trials/expanded access programs (IST/other). Results focus on rollover and naïve groups, as pretreatment data allow comparison. Primary outcomes were annual rate and duration of major clinical events (MCEs; rhabdomyolysis, hypoglycemia, and cardiomyopathy events). Seventy‐five patients were enrolled (24 rollover, 20 naïve, 31 IST/other). Mean study duration was 23.0 months for rollover, 15.7 months for naïve, and 34.7 months for IST/other. In the rollover group, mean annualized MCE rate decreased from 1.76 events/year pre‐triheptanoin to 0.96 events/year with triheptanoin (P = .0319). Median MCE duration was reduced by 66%. In the naïve group, median annualized MCE rate decreased from 2.33 events/year pre‐triheptanoin to 0.71 events/year with triheptanoin (P = .1072). Median MCE duration was reduced by 80%. The most common related adverse events (AEs) were diarrhea, abdominal pain/discomfort, and vomiting, most mild to moderate. Three patients had serious AEs (diverticulitis, ileus, rhabdomyolysis) possibly related to drug; all resolved. Two patients had AEs leading to death; neither drug related. Triheptanoin reduced rate and duration of MCEs. Safety was consistent with previous observations. John Wiley & Sons, Inc. 2020-09-14 2021-01 /pmc/articles/PMC7891391/ /pubmed/32885845 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jimd.12313 Text en © 2020 The Authors. Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of SSIEM. This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Articles
Vockley, Jerry
Burton, Barbara
Berry, Gerard
Longo, Nicola
Phillips, John
Sanchez‐Valle, Amarilis
Chapman, Kimberly
Tanpaiboon, Pranoot
Grunewald, Stephanie
Murphy, Elaine
Lu, Xiaoxiao
Cataldo, Jason
Effects of triheptanoin (UX007) in patients with long‐chain fatty acid oxidation disorders: Results from an open‐label, long‐term extension study
title Effects of triheptanoin (UX007) in patients with long‐chain fatty acid oxidation disorders: Results from an open‐label, long‐term extension study
title_full Effects of triheptanoin (UX007) in patients with long‐chain fatty acid oxidation disorders: Results from an open‐label, long‐term extension study
title_fullStr Effects of triheptanoin (UX007) in patients with long‐chain fatty acid oxidation disorders: Results from an open‐label, long‐term extension study
title_full_unstemmed Effects of triheptanoin (UX007) in patients with long‐chain fatty acid oxidation disorders: Results from an open‐label, long‐term extension study
title_short Effects of triheptanoin (UX007) in patients with long‐chain fatty acid oxidation disorders: Results from an open‐label, long‐term extension study
title_sort effects of triheptanoin (ux007) in patients with long‐chain fatty acid oxidation disorders: results from an open‐label, long‐term extension study
topic Original Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7891391/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32885845
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jimd.12313
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