78 results on '"Juha-Matti Savola"'
Search Results
2. Safety of Deutetrabenazine for the Treatment of Tardive Dyskinesia and Chorea Associated with Huntington Disease
- Author
-
Samuel Frank, Karen E. Anderson, Hubert H. Fernandez, Robert A. Hauser, Daniel O. Claassen, David Stamler, Stewart A. Factor, Joohi Jimenez-Shahed, Hadas Barkay, Amanda Wilhelm, Jessica K. Alexander, Nayla Chaijale, Steve Barash, Juha-Matti Savola, Mark Forrest Gordon, and Maria Chen
- Subjects
Chorea ,Deutetrabenazine ,Huntington disease ,Movement disorders ,Safety profile ,Tardive dyskinesia ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
Abstract Introduction Deutetrabenazine is a vesicular monoamine transporter 2 inhibitor used to treat tardive dyskinesia (TD) and chorea associated with Huntington disease (HD). To enhance detection of safety signals across individual trials, integrated safety analyses of deutetrabenazine in TD and HD chorea were conducted. Methods For TD, safety data were integrated from two 12-week pivotal studies (ARM-TD and AIM-TD) and through week 15 of the open-label extension (OLE) study (RIM-TD). Data were analyzed by deutetrabenazine treatment group and placebo. For HD, safety data were integrated from the 12-week pivotal study (First-HD) and through week 15 of the OLE study (ARC-HD) for patients previously receiving placebo. Integrated deutetrabenazine data were compared with placebo from the pivotal study. Results For TD, deutetrabenazine (n = 384) was generally well tolerated compared with placebo (n = 130). Adverse event (AE) incidence was numerically higher in the response-driven deutetrabenazine vs the fixed-dose deutetrabenazine and placebo groups, respectively (any AE, 59.5% vs 44.4–50.0% and 53.8%; treatment-related AE, 38.1% vs 18.1–25.0% and 30.8%). Serious AEs were reported for 2.8–8.3% of patients in the deutetrabenazine groups and 6.9% in the placebo group. Common AEs (≥ 4%) included headache, somnolence, nausea, anxiety, fatigue, dry mouth, and diarrhea. AE incidence was higher during the titration vs maintenance periods. For HD, AE incidence was numerically higher with deutetrabenazine (n = 84) vs placebo (n = 45; any AE, 64.3% vs 60.0%; treatment-related AE, 38.1% vs 26.7%); serious AEs were reported for similar proportions for the deutetrabenazine and placebo groups, 2.4% and 2.2%, respectively. Common AEs (≥ 4%) included irritability, fall, depression, dry mouth, and fatigue. Conclusions Data from an integrated analysis of studies in TD and an integrated analysis of studies of chorea in HD showed that deutetrabenazine has a favorable safety profile and is well tolerated across indications. Trial Registration ClinicalTrials.gov identifiers, NCT02291861, NCT02195700, NCT01795859, NCT02198794, NCT01897896.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Pharmacokinetic and Metabolic Profile of Deutetrabenazine (TEV‐50717) Compared With Tetrabenazine in Healthy Volunteers
- Author
-
Frank Schneider, Margaret Bradbury, Thomas A. Baillie, David Stamler, Edward Hellriegel, Donna S. Cox, Pippa S. Loupe, Juha‐Matti Savola, and Laura Rabinovich‐Guilatt
- Subjects
Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,RM1-950 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Deutetrabenazine (Austedo, Teva Pharmaceuticals) is a deuterated form of tetrabenazine. It is the first deuterated drug to receive US regulatory approval and is approved for treatment of chorea in Huntington’s disease and tardive dyskinesia. Two oral single dose studies comparing deutetrabenazine (25 mg) with tetrabenazine (25 mg) in healthy volunteers evaluated the impact of deuteration on pharmacokinetics of the active metabolites, alpha‐dihydrotetrabenazine (α‐HTBZ) and beta‐dihydrotetrabenazine (β‐HTBZ), metabolite profile, safety, and tolerability. In the two‐way, cross‐over study, the mean elimination half‐life of deuterated total (α + β)‐HTBZ was doubled compared with nondeuterated total (α + β)‐HTBZ, with a twofold increase in overall mean exposure (area under the concentration‐time curve from zero to infinity (AUC0–inf)) and a marginal increase in mean peak plasma concentration (Cmax). In the mass balance and metabolite profiling study, there were no novel plasma or urinary metabolites of [14C]‐deutetrabenazine relative to [14C]‐tetrabenazine. Specific deuteration in deutetrabenazine resulted in a superior pharmacokinetic profile and an increased ratio of active‐to‐inactive metabolites, attributes considered to provide significant benefits to patients.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Long-Term Deutetrabenazine Treatment for Tardive Dyskinesia Is Associated With Sustained Benefits and Safety: A 3-Year, Open-Label Extension Study
- Author
-
Robert A. Hauser, Hadas Barkay, Hubert H. Fernandez, Stewart A. Factor, Joohi Jimenez-Shahed, Nicholas Gross, Leslie Marinelli, Amanda Wilhelm, Jessica Alexander, Mark Forrest Gordon, Juha-Matti Savola, and Karen E. Anderson
- Subjects
deutetrabenazine ,efficacy ,safety ,tardive dyskinesia ,treatment ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
BackgroundDeutetrabenazine is a vesicular monoamine transporter 2 inhibitor approved for the treatment of tardive dyskinesia (TD) in adults. In two 12-week pivotal studies, deutetrabenazine demonstrated statistically significant improvements in Abnormal Involuntary Movement Scale (AIMS) scores, with favorable safety/tolerability in TD patients. This study reports long-term efficacy and safety of deutetrabenazine in a 3-year, single-arm, open-label extension (OLE) study.MethodsPatients who completed the pivotal studies could enroll in this single-arm OLE study, titrating up to 48 mg/day based on dyskinesia control and tolerability. Efficacy was assessed based on change from baseline in total motor AIMS score, Clinical Global Impression of Change (CGIC) and Patient Global Impression of Change (PGIC), and quality of life (QOL) assessments. Safety evaluation included adverse event (AE) incidence, reported using exposure-adjusted incidence rates, and safety scales.Results343 patients enrolled in the study (6 patients were excluded). At Week 145 (mean dose: 39.4 ± 0.83 mg/day), mean ± SE change from baseline in total motor AIMS score was −6.6 ± 0.37 and 67% of patients achieved ≥50% improvement in total motor AIMS score. Based on CGIC and PGIC, 73% and 63% of patients achieved treatment success, respectively. QOL improvements were also observed. Deutetrabenazine was generally well tolerated, with low rates of mild-to-moderate AEs and no new safety signals; most safety scales remained unchanged over time.ConclusionsLong-term deutetrabenazine treatment was associated with sustained improvement in AIMS scores, indicative of clinically meaningful long-term benefit, and was generally well tolerated. Results suggest deutetrabenazine may provide increasing benefit over time without increases in dose.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Characterizing patient compliance over six months in remote digital trials of Parkinson’s and Huntington disease
- Author
-
Shani Cohen, Zeev Waks, Jordan J. Elm, Mark Forrest Gordon, Igor D. Grachev, Leehee Navon-Perry, Shai Fine, Iris Grossman, Spyros Papapetropoulos, and Juha-Matti Savola
- Subjects
Remote clinical trials ,Digital trials ,Compliance ,Wearables ,Sensors ,Smartphones ,Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 - Abstract
Abstract Background A growing number of clinical trials use various sensors and smartphone applications to collect data outside of the clinic or hospital, raising the question to what extent patients comply with the unique requirements of remote study protocols. Compliance is particularly important in conditions where patients are motorically and cognitively impaired. Here, we sought to understand patient compliance in digital trials of two such pathologies, Parkinson’s disease (PD) and Huntington disease (HD). Methods Patient compliance was assessed in two remote, six-month clinical trials of PD (n = 51, Clinician Input Study funded by the Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson’s Research) and HD (n = 17, sponsored by Teva Pharmaceuticals). We monitored four compliance metrics specific to remote studies: smartphone app-based medication reporting, app-based symptoms reporting, the duration of smartwatch data streaming except while charging, and the performance of structured motor tasks at home. Results While compliance over time differed between the PD and HD studies, both studies maintained high compliance levels for their entire six month duration. None (− 1%) to a 30% reduction in compliance rate was registered for HD patients, and a reduction of 34 to 53% was registered for the PD study. Both studies exhibited marked changes in compliance rates during the initial days of enrollment. Interestingly, daily smartwatch data streaming patterns were similar, peaking around noon, dropping sharply in the late evening hours around 8 pm, and having a mean of 8.6 daily streaming hours for the PD study and 10.5 h for the HD study. Individual patients tended to have either high or low compliance across all compliance metrics as measured by pairwise correlation. Encouragingly, predefined schedules and app-based reminders fulfilled their intended effect on the timing of medication intake reporting and performance of structured motor tasks at home. Conclusions Our findings suggest that maintaining compliance over long durations is feasible, promote the use of predefined app-based reminders, and highlight the importance of patient selection as highly compliant patients typically have a higher adherence rate across the different aspects of the protocol. Overall, these data can serve as a reference point for the design of upcoming remote digital studies. Trial registration Trials described in this study include a sub-study of the Open PRIDE-HD Huntington’s disease study (TV7820-CNS-20016), which was registered on July 7th, 2015, sponsored by Teva Pharmaceuticals Ltd., and registered on Clinicaltrials.gov as NCT02494778 and EudraCT as 2015–000904-24.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. The Safety of Deutetrabenazine for Chorea in Huntington Disease: An Open-Label Extension Study
- Author
-
Samuel, Frank, Claudia, Testa, Mary C, Edmondson, Jody, Goldstein, Elise, Kayson, Blair R, Leavitt, David, Oakes, Christine, O'Neill, Christina, Vaughan, Jacquelyn, Whaley, Nicholas, Gross, Mark Forrest, Gordon, Juha-Matti, Savola, and Christopher A, Beck
- Subjects
Psychiatry and Mental health ,Huntington Disease ,Treatment Outcome ,Double-Blind Method ,Chorea ,Tetrabenazine ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Neurology (clinical) - Abstract
Deutetrabenazine is approved in the USA, China, Australia, Israel, Brazil, and South Korea for the treatment of chorea associated with Huntington disease.We aimed to evaluate the long-term safety and tolerability of deutetrabenazine for the treatment of Huntington disease.This open-label, single-arm, multi-center study included patients who completed a double-blind study (Rollover) and patients who converted overnight from a stable tetrabenazine dose (Switch). Exposure-adjusted incidence rates (adverse events per person-year) were calculated. Efficacy was analyzed using a stable post-titration timepoint (8 weeks). Changes in the Unified Huntington's Disease Rating Scale total motor score and total maximal chorea score from baseline to week 8, as well as those from week 8 to week 145 (or the last visit on the study drug if that occurred earlier), were evaluated as both efficacy and safety endpoints during the study.Of 119 patients (Rollover, n = 82; Switch, n = 37), 100 (84%) completed ≥ 1 year of treatment. End-of-study exposure-adjusted incidence rates for adverse events in Rollover and Switch, respectively, were: any, 2.57 and 4.02; serious, 0.11 and 0.14; leading to dose suspension, 0.05 and 0.04. Common adverse events (≥ 4% either cohort) included somnolence (Rollover, 20%; Switch, 30%), depression (32%; 22%), anxiety (27%; 35%), insomnia (23%; 16%), and akathisia (6%; 11%). Adverse events of interest included suicidality (9%; 5%) and parkinsonism (4%; 8%). Mean dose at week 8 was 38.1 mg (Rollover) and 36.5 mg (Switch). Mean dose across cohorts after titration was 37.6 mg; at the final visit, mean dose across cohorts was 45.7 mg. Patients showed minimal change in the Unified Huntington's Disease Rating Scale total maximal chorea scores with stable dosing from weeks 8-145 or at the end of treatment, but total motor score increased versus week 8 (mean change [standard deviation]: 8.2 [11.9]). There were no unexpected adverse events upon drug withdrawal, and mean (standard deviation) total maximal chorea scores increased 4.7 (4.6) units from week 8 to 1-week follow-up.Adverse events observed with long-term deutetrabenazine exposure were consistent with previous studies. Reductions in chorea persisted over time. Upon treatment cessation, there was no unexpected worsening of chorea.ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT01897896.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Minimal clinically important change in Abnormal Involuntary Movement Scale score in tardive dyskinesia as assessed in pivotal trials of deutetrabenazine
- Author
-
Robert A. Hauser, Hadas Barkay, Amanda Wilhelm, Maria Wieman, Juha-Matti Savola, and Mark Forrest Gordon
- Subjects
Neurology ,Tetrabenazine ,Humans ,Tardive Dyskinesia ,Neurology (clinical) ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,Abnormal Involuntary Movement Scale ,Antipsychotic Agents - Abstract
Deutetrabenazine is approved by the US Food and Drug Administration to treat tardive dyskinesia (TD) based on 2 pivotal, 12-week, placebo-controlled studies (ARM-TD and AIM-TD) evaluating safety and efficacy in patients with baseline total motor Abnormal Involuntary Movement Scale (AIMS) score ≥6. This analysis estimated the minimal clinically important change (MCIC) in total motor AIMS score in TD patients treated with deutetrabenazine.The pooled analysis population included all patients in ARM-TD and AIM-TD who received study drug and had ≥1 postbaseline AIMS assessment. MCIC analyses were performed using Patient Global Impression of Change (PGIC) and Clinical Global Impression of Change (CGIC) as anchors. MCIC was defined as the mean change from baseline in total motor AIMS score in patients treated with deutetrabenazine who were rated minimally improved on PGIC or CGIC at Week 12.This analysis included 295 patients (deutetrabenazine, n = 197; placebo, n = 98). At Week 12, the MCIC in deutetrabenazine-treated patients was -2.4 based on the PGIC and -2.1 based on the CGIC. Mean change from baseline in total motor AIMS score for placebo-treated patients rated minimally improved was -1.4 based on the PGIC and -1.5 based on the CGIC. The proportion of deutetrabenazine-treated patients who achieved improvement in total motor AIMS score by ≥2 and ≥3 points was 66% and 55%, respectively.Using anchor-based methodology, the MCIC on the AIMS for deutetrabenazine in patients with TD was approximately -2, suggesting that a reduction in total motor AIMS score of ∼2 is associated with clinically meaningful improvement in TD symptoms.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. A PET-CT study on neuroinflammation in Huntington’s disease patients participating in a randomized trial with laquinimod
- Author
-
Andreas-Antonios Roussakis, Marta Gennaro, Mark Forrest Gordon, Ralf Reilmann, Beth Borowsky, Gail Rynkowski, Nicholas P Lao-Kaim, Zoe Papoutsou, Juha-Matti Savola, Michael R Hayden, David R Owen, Nicola Kalk, Anne Lingford-Hughes, Roger N Gunn, Graham Searle, Sarah J Tabrizi, and Paola Piccini
- Subjects
Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Neurology ,Biological Psychiatry - Abstract
Microglia activation, an indicator of central nervous system inflammation, is believed to contribute to the pathology of Huntington’s disease. Laquinimod is capable of regulating microglia. By targeting the translocator protein, 11C-PBR28 PET-CT imaging can be used to assess the state of regional gliosis in vivo and explore the effects of laquinimod treatment. This study relates to the LEGATO-HD, multi-centre, double-blinded, Phase 2 clinical trial with laquinimod (US National Registration: NCT02215616). Fifteen patients of the UK LEGATO-HD cohort (mean age: 45.2 ± 7.4 years; disease duration: 5.6 ± 3.0 years) were treated with laquinimod (0.5 mg, N = 4; 1.0 mg, N = 6) or placebo (N = 5) daily. All participants had one 11C-PBR28 PET-CT and one brain MRI scan before laquinimod (or placebo) and at the end of treatment (12 months apart). PET imaging data were quantified to produce 11C-PBR28 distribution volume ratios. These ratios were calculated for the caudate and putamen using the reference Logan plot with the corpus callosum as the reference region. Partial volume effect corrections (Müller–Gartner algorithm) were applied. Differences were sought in Unified Huntington’s Disease Rating Scale scores and regional distribution volume ratios between baseline and follow-up and between the two treatment groups (laquinimod versus placebo). No significant change in 11C-PBR28 distribution volume ratios was found post treatment in the caudate and putamen for both those treated with laquinimod (N = 10) and those treated with placebo (N = 5). Over time, the patients treated with laquinimod did not show a significant clinical improvement. Data from the 11C-PBR28 PET-CT study indicate that laquinimod may not have affected regional translocator protein expression and clinical performance over the studied period.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Pharmacokinetics of Deutetrabenazine and Tetrabenazine: Dose Proportionality and Food Effect
- Author
-
Edward T. Hellriegel, Mark Forrest Gordon, David Stamler, Margaret Bradbury, Pippa S. Loupe, Donna S. Cox, Laura Rabinovich-Guilatt, Frank Schneider, and Juha-Matti Savola
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,tetrabenazine ,Tetrabenazine ,Cmax ,Biological Availability ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Original Manuscript ,Pharmacology ,Tardive dyskinesia ,030226 pharmacology & pharmacy ,Food-Drug Interactions ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Pharmacokinetics ,medicine ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Active metabolite ,deuteration ,Cross-Over Studies ,Adrenergic Uptake Inhibitors ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,CYP2D6 ,business.industry ,deutetrabenazine ,Articles ,medicine.disease ,Crossover study ,Bioavailability ,Deutetrabenazine ,Area Under Curve ,Vesicular Monoamine Transport Proteins ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Female ,business ,Half-Life ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Deutetrabenazine (Austedo, Teva), an approved treatment of chorea in Huntington's disease and tardive dyskinesia in adult patients, is a rationally designed deuterated form of tetrabenazine. Two studies assessed the pharmacokinetics and safety of deutetrabenazine compared with tetrabenazine, and the effects of food on absorption of the deuterated active metabolites, α‐dihydrotetrabenazine (α‐HTBZ) and β‐dihydrotetrabenazine (β‐HTBZ). One study was an open‐label 2‐part study in healthy volunteers; the first part included a crossover single dose of two 15 mg candidate deutetrabenazine formulations in fed and fasted states compared with tetrabenazine 25 mg in the fasted state, and the second part included single and repeated dosing of the commercial formulation of deutetrabenazine (7.5, 15, and 22.5 mg) compared with tetrabenazine 25 mg. The second study was an open‐label 5‐way crossover study in healthy volunteers (n = 32) to evaluate relative bioavailability of 4 dose levels of the commercial formulation of deutetrabenazine (6, 12, 18, and 24 mg) with a standard meal and 18 mg with a high‐fat meal. Both studies confirmed longer half‐lives for active metabolites and lower peak‐to‐trough fluctuations for the sum of the metabolites (total [α+β]‐HTBZ) following deutetrabenazine compared with tetrabenazine (3‐ to 4‐fold and 11‐fold, respectively) in steady‐state conditions. Deutetrabenazine doses estimated to provide total (α+β)‐HTBZ exposure comparable to tetrabenazine 25 mg were 11.4‐13.2 mg. Food had no effect on exposure to total (α+β)‐HTBZ, as measured by AUC. Although the total (α+β)‐HTBZ Cmax of deutetrabenazine was increased by ≈50% in the presence of food, it remained lower than that of tetrabenazine.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Sigma-1 and dopamine D2/D3 receptor occupancy of pridopidine in healthy volunteers and patients with Huntington disease: a [18F] fluspidine and [18F] fallypride PET study
- Author
-
Michael R. Hayden, Osama Sabri, Mark Forrest Gordon, Laura Rabinovich, Marianne Patt, Henryk Barthel, Michael Rullmann, Andreas Kluge, Gina Pastino, Georg Becker, Doug Marsteller, Swen Hesse, Helena Knebel, Peter Brust, Thilo Gerhards, Juha-Matti Savola, Marcus Bronzel, Philipp Meyer, Ole Voges, Michal Geva, Igor D. Grachev, Franziska Zientek, Maria Strauss, and Bernhard Sattler
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Male ,18F-fallypride ,Sigma-1 receptor occupancy ,Dopamine ,[18F]fluspidine ,Pharmacology ,Dopamine D2/D3 receptor occupancy ,Pridopidine ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Piperidines ,Dopamine receptor D3 ,Dopamine receptor D2 ,Healthy volunteers ,medicine ,pridopidine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,sigma-1 receptor occupancy ,Benzofurans ,dopamine D2/D3 receptor occupancy ,business.industry ,Receptors, Dopamine D2 ,Receptors, Dopamine D3 ,Brain ,General Medicine ,Huntington disease ,Healthy Volunteers ,030104 developmental biology ,PET ,Fallypride ,chemistry ,Positron-Emission Tomography ,Benzamides ,Original Article ,Fluspidine ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Pridopidine is an investigational drug in late stage development for the treatment of Huntington disease and originally postulated to act as dopamine stabilizer by modulating dopamine-dependent motor behavior. However, preclinical studies show pridopidine has highest affinity to sigma-1 receptors. Importantly, mediated by sigma-1 receptors, pridopidine has neuroprotective properties and enhances neuronal plasticity. The aim of our study was to determine the in-vivo the target engagement (receptor occupancy) of pridopidine at clinically relevant doses in healthy volunteers and Huntington disease patients. We used sigma-1 receptor-specific (S)-(-)-[18F]Fluspidine and dopamine D2/D3 receptor-specific [18F]Fallypride PET imaging to quantify the sigma-1 and dopamine D2/D3 receptor occupancy of pridopidine. Eleven male healthy volunteers (pridopidine 0.5 to 90 mg in six dose groups) and three male Huntington disease patients (pridopidine 90 mg) were studied twice before and 2h following single oral doses of pridopidine using S-(-)-[18F]Fluspidine PET (300 MBq, 0-90min p.i.). Distribution volume VT was quantified using kinetic modeling (One-tissue compartment model; metabolite correction). Four male healthy volunteers were studied twice using [18F]Fallpride PET (200 MBq, 0-210min p.i.) before and 2h after a single oral dose of pridopidine (90 mg). Binding potential BPND was assessed by the simplified reference model. Volume-of-interest analyses were performed. For each subject/tracer, the receptor occupancy was calculated by the Lassen plot analysis. In healthy volunteers, there was high sigma-1 receptor occupancy (87 to 91%) across all brain regions at doses ranging from 22.5 to 90 mg. The sigma-1 receptor occupancy was 43% at 1 mg pridopidine. In Huntington disease patients, very similar to healthy volunteers, at 90 mg pridopidine, there was high sigma-1 receptor occupancy (87±7%, n.s.). In contrast, in healthy volunteers, there was only negligible dopamine D2/D3 receptor occupancy (3±2%) at 90 mg pridopidine. We established a sigmoid-shaped dose/sigma-1 receptor occupancy relation (Hill equation) with Hill coefficient larger than 1 in healthy volunteers, suggesting a positive cooperative binding nature of the sigma-1 receptor. Using PET, we report for the first time in the living human brain that after a single dose of 90 mg, pridopidine acts as a selective sigma-1 receptor ligand showing near to complete sigma-1 receptor occupancy (~90%) but only minimal (~3%) dopamine D2/D3 receptor occupancy. Our findings provide significant clarification about pridopidine’s mechanism of action and support further use of the 45 mg bidaily dose to achieve full and selective targeting of the sigma-1 receptor in future clinical trials in Huntington disease and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.
- Published
- 2020
11. Safety and Efficacy of Flexible-Dose Deutetrabenazine in Children and Adolescents With Tourette Syndrome: A Randomized Clinical Trial
- Author
-
Maria Wieman, David Stamler, Barry J Gertz, Barbara J. Coffey, Daniel O. Claassen, Elizabeth A Garofalo, Hadas Barkay, Mark Forrest Gordon, Joohi Jimenez-Shahed, Joseph Jankovic, Juha-Matti Savola, Eran Harary, and Jessica Alexander
- Subjects
Male ,Tic disorder ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Tics ,Adolescent ,Tetrabenazine ,Tardive dyskinesia ,Placebo ,Tourette syndrome ,law.invention ,Randomized controlled trial ,Double-Blind Method ,law ,Medicine ,Humans ,Child ,Original Investigation ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Treatment Outcome ,Deutetrabenazine ,Adolescent Behavior ,Treatment of Tourette syndrome ,Female ,Patient Safety ,business ,Tourette Syndrome - Abstract
Importance Tourette syndrome is a neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by childhood onset of motor and phonic tics; treatments for tics are associated with safety concerns. Deutetrabenazine is a selective vesicular monoamine transporter 2 inhibitor approved for the treatment of chorea associated with Huntington disease and tardive dyskinesia in adults. Objective To examine whether deutetrabenazine is effective and safe for the treatment of Tourette syndrome in children and adolescents. Design, setting, and participants This phase 2/3, randomized, double-masked, placebo-controlled, parallel-group, dose-titration study included children and adolescents (aged 6-16 years) with Tourette syndrome with active tics causing distress or impairment (ie, Yale Global Tic Severity Scale-Total Tic Score [YGTSS-TTS] ≥20). The trial was conducted over 12 weeks, with 1 week of follow-up from February 2018 to November 2019 at 36 centers in the United States, Canada, Denmark, Russia, Serbia, and Spain. Data analysis was conducted from January 31 to April 22, 2020. Intervention Patients were randomized (1:1) to receive deutetrabenazine or placebo, titrated during 7 weeks to an optimal level, followed by a 5-week maintenance period. The maximum total daily deutetrabenazine dose was 48 mg/d. Main outcomes and measures The primary efficacy end point was change from baseline to week 12 in YGTSS-TTS. Key secondary end points included changes in Tourette Syndrome-Clinical Global Impression, Tourette Syndrome-Patient Global Impression of Impact, and Child and Adolescent Gilles de la Tourette Syndrome-Quality of Life Activities of Daily Living subscale score. Safety was assessed based on treatment-emergent adverse events, vital signs, questionnaires, and laboratory parameters. Results A total of 119 participants were randomized to deutetrabenazine (59 participants; mean [SD] age, 11.5 [2.5] years; 53 [90%] boys; 49 [83%] White; 3 [5%] Black) and placebo (60 participants; mean [SD] age, 11.5 [2.6] years; 51 [85%] boys; 53 [88%] White; 3 [5%] Black). At week 12, the difference in YGTSS-TTS score was not significant between deutetrabenazine and placebo (least squares mean difference, -0.7; 95% CI, -4.1 to 2.8; P = .69; Cohen d, -0.07). There were no nominally significant differences between groups for key secondary end points. Treatment-emergent adverse events were reported for 38 patients (66%) and 33 patients (56%) receiving deutetrabenazine and placebo, respectively, and were generally mild or moderate. Conclusions and relevance In this study of deutetrabenazine in children and adolescents with Tourette syndrome, the primary efficacy end point was not met. No new safety signals were identified. These results may be informative for future studies of treatments for tics in Tourette syndrome. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT03452943.
- Published
- 2021
12. Long-Term Deutetrabenazine Treatment for Tardive Dyskinesia Is Associated With Sustained Benefits and Safety: A 3-Year, Open-Label Extension Study
- Author
-
Robert A. Hauser, Hadas Barkay, Hubert H. Fernandez, Stewart A. Factor, Joohi Jimenez-Shahed, Nicholas Gross, Leslie Marinelli, Amanda Wilhelm, Jessica Alexander, Mark Forrest Gordon, Juha-Matti Savola, and Karen E. Anderson
- Subjects
Neurology ,Neurology (clinical) - Abstract
BackgroundDeutetrabenazine is a vesicular monoamine transporter 2 inhibitor approved for the treatment of tardive dyskinesia (TD) in adults. In two 12-week pivotal studies, deutetrabenazine demonstrated statistically significant improvements in Abnormal Involuntary Movement Scale (AIMS) scores, with favorable safety/tolerability in TD patients. This study reports long-term efficacy and safety of deutetrabenazine in a 3-year, single-arm, open-label extension (OLE) study.MethodsPatients who completed the pivotal studies could enroll in this single-arm OLE study, titrating up to 48 mg/day based on dyskinesia control and tolerability. Efficacy was assessed based on change from baseline in total motor AIMS score, Clinical Global Impression of Change (CGIC) and Patient Global Impression of Change (PGIC), and quality of life (QOL) assessments. Safety evaluation included adverse event (AE) incidence, reported using exposure-adjusted incidence rates, and safety scales.Results343 patients enrolled in the study (6 patients were excluded). At Week 145 (mean dose: 39.4 ± 0.83 mg/day), mean ± SE change from baseline in total motor AIMS score was −6.6 ± 0.37 and 67% of patients achieved ≥50% improvement in total motor AIMS score. Based on CGIC and PGIC, 73% and 63% of patients achieved treatment success, respectively. QOL improvements were also observed. Deutetrabenazine was generally well tolerated, with low rates of mild-to-moderate AEs and no new safety signals; most safety scales remained unchanged over time.ConclusionsLong-term deutetrabenazine treatment was associated with sustained improvement in AIMS scores, indicative of clinically meaningful long-term benefit, and was generally well tolerated. Results suggest deutetrabenazine may provide increasing benefit over time without increases in dose.
- Published
- 2021
13. Effects of Long-Term Deutetrabenazine Treatment in Patients with Tardive Dyskinesia and Underlying Psychiatric or Mood Disorders
- Author
-
Robert A. Hauser, Hadas Barkay, Hubert H. Fernandez, Stewart A. Factor, Joohi Jimenez-Shahed, Nicholas Gross, Leslie Marinelli, Amanda Wilhelm, Mark Forrest Gordon, Juha-Matti Savola, and Karen E. Anderson
- Subjects
Psychiatry and Mental health ,Neurology (clinical) - Abstract
IntroductionDeutetrabenazine is FDA-approved for the treatment of tardive dyskinesia (TD) in adults. In two 12-week pivotal trials (ARM-TD/AIM-TD), deutetrabenazine significantly improved Abnormal Involuntary Movement Scale (AIMS) scores and was well-tolerated. This post hoc analysis examined the efficacy and safety of long-term deutetrabenazine treatment in TD patients with comorbid psychiatric illness, including schizophrenia/schizoaffective disorder and mood disorders (bipolar/depression/other).MethodsPatients who completed ARM-TD or AIM-TD enrolled in the 3-year, open-label extension (OLE) study. Deutetrabenazine was titrated based on dyskinesia control and tolerability. Change from baseline in total motor AIMS score, Patient Global Impression of Change (PGIC), Clinical Global Impression of Change (CGIC), and adverse events (AEs) were analyzed in subgroups by comorbid psychiatric illness.ResultsA total of 337 patients in the OLE study were included in the analysis: 205 patients with schizophrenia/schizoaffective disorder (mean age, 55 years; 50% male; 6.4 years since diagnosis; 92% taking DRA) and 131 patients with mood disorders (mean age, 60 years; 35% male; 4.6 years since diagnosis; 50% taking DRA). At week 145, mean ± SE dose was 40.4 ± 1.1 mg/day for schizophrenia/schizoaffective disorder (n = 88) and 38.5 ± 1.2 mg/day for mood disorders (n = 72). Mean ± SE change from baseline in AIMS score at week 145 was −6.3 ± 0.49 and −7.1 ± 0.58, 56% and 72% achieved PGIC treatment success, and 66% and 82% achieved CGIC treatment success in schizophrenia/schizoaffective disorder and mood disorder patients, respectively. Overall AE incidence (exposure-adjusted incidence rates [incidence/patient-years]) was low: any, 1.02 and 1.71; serious, 0.10 and 0.12; leading to discontinuation, 0.07 and 0.05).ConclusionLong-term deutetrabenazine treatment provided clinically meaningful improvements in TD-related movements, with a favorable safety profile, regardless of underlying comorbid psychiatric illness.FundingTeva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd., Petach Tikva, Israel
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Quantification of Motor Function in Huntington Disease Patients Using Wearable Sensor Devices
- Author
-
Igor D. Grachev, Pippa S. Loupe, Spyros Papapetropoulos, Leehee Navon-Perry, Juha-Matti Savola, Shai Fine, Michael R. Hayden, Itzik Mazeh, Ralf Reilmann, Nicholas Gross, Mark Forrest Gordon, and Yonatan Dolan
- Subjects
congenital, hereditary, and neonatal diseases and abnormalities ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Movement disorders ,Essential tremor ,business.industry ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Wearable computer ,Health Informatics ,Chorea ,medicine.disease ,Digital health ,nervous system diseases ,Computer Science Applications ,Research Reports - Research Article ,Smartwatch ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,Sample size determination ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Generalizability theory ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
Previous studies have demonstrated the feasibility and promise of wearable sensors as objective measures of motor impairment in Parkinson disease and essential tremor. However, there are few published studies that have examined such an application in Huntington disease (HD). This report provides an evaluation of the potential to objectively quantify chorea in HD patients using wearable sensor data. Data were derived from a substudy of the phase 2 Open-PRIDE-HD study, where 17 patients were screened and 15 patients enrolled in the substudy and ultimately 10 patients provided sufficient wearable sensor data. The substudy was designed to provide high-resolution data to inform design of predictive algorithms for chorea quantification. During the entire course of the 6-month study, in addition to chorea ratings from 18 in-clinic assessments, 890 home assessments, and 1,388 responses to daily reminders, 33,000 h of high-resolution accelerometer data were captured continuously from wearable smartwatches and smartphones. Despite its limited sample size, our study demonstrates that arm chorea can be characterized using accelerometer data during static assessments. Nonetheless, the small sample size limits the generalizability of the model. The sensor-based model can quantify the chorea level with high correlation to the chorea severity reported by both clinicians and patients. In addition, our analysis shows that the chorea digital signature varies between patients. This work suggests that digital wearable sensors have the potential to support clinical development of medications in patients with movement disorders, such as chorea. However, additional data would be needed from a larger number of HD patients with a full range of chorea severity (none to severe) with and without intervention to validate this potentially predictive technology.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Additional Safety and Exploratory Efficacy Data at 48 and 60 Months from Open-HART, an Open-Label Extension Study of Pridopidine in Huntington Disease
- Author
-
Michael R. Hayden, Juha-Matti Savola, Igor D. Grachev, Victor Abler, Peggy Auinger, Spyridon Papapetropoulos, Karl Kieburtz, Munish Mehra, Michal Geva, Mark Forrest Gordon, Andrew McGarry, and Sanjay Gandhi
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Vital signs ,Placebo ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Huntington's disease ,Double-Blind Method ,Piperidines ,Internal medicine ,Outcome Assessment, Health Care ,Medicine ,Humans ,Receptors, sigma ,Adverse effect ,Aged ,business.industry ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Pridopidine ,Clinical trial ,030104 developmental biology ,Huntington Disease ,Neuroprotective Agents ,chemistry ,Concomitant ,Cohort ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Background Open-HART was an open-label extension of HART, a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study of pridopidine in Huntington disease (HD). Previously, we reported safety and exploratory efficacy data after 36 months of treatment with pridopidine 45 mg twice daily. In the interim, emerging data suggests pridopidine may have neuroprotective effects mediated by sigma-1 receptor agonism. Objective To report additional safety and exploratory efficacy data for continued open-label use of 45 mg BID pridopidine at 48 and 60 months. Methods Patients in Open-HART were followed up to or greater than 60 months. Adverse events, concomitant medications, vital signs, laboratory values, and ECG data were monitored. Rates of decline in total functional capacity (TFC) and total motor score (TMS) over 60 months were evaluated in an exploratory analysis and compared between Open-HART and placebo recipients from the 2CARE trial. To account for missing data, sensitivity analyses were performed. Results Of the original Open-HART baseline cohort (N = 118), 40 remained in the study at 48 months and 33 at 60 months. Pridopidine remained safe and well tolerated over the 60-month interval. TFC and TMS at 48 and 60 months remained stable, showing less decline at these timepoints compared to historical placebo controls from the 2CARE trial. TFC differences at 48 and 60 months observed remained nominally significant after sensitivity analysis. Conclusion The 45 mg BID pridopidine dosage remained safe and tolerable over 60 months. Exploratory analyses show TFC and TMS stability at 48 and 60 months, in contrast to placebo historical controls from the 2CARE trial. Results are consistent with data reported from the recent Phase 2 PRIDE-HD trial showing less functional decline in the pridopidine 45 mg BID treated group at 52 weeks.
- Published
- 2020
16. High sigma-1 receptor (S1R) and very low dopamine 2/dopamine 3 receptor (D2/D3R) occupancy at clinically relevant doses of pridopidine in healthy volunteers (HV) and Huntington disease patients (HD): a F-18-Fluspidine and F-18-Fallypride PET study
- Author
-
L Rabinovich, Georg-Alexander Becker, O Voges, Swen Hesse, Michael R. Hayden, Juha-Matti Savola, M Patt, Franziska Zientek, Doug Marsteller, Mark Forrest Gordon, E Strauss, PM Meyer, Henryk Barthel, Igor D. Grachev, Marcus Bronzel, Bernhard Sattler, Michael Rullmann, Michal Geva, Osama Sabri, and Andreas Kluge
- Subjects
Sigma-1 receptor ,business.industry ,Disease ,Pharmacology ,Pridopidine ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Fallypride ,Dopamine ,Healthy volunteers ,medicine ,Receptor ,Fluspidine ,business ,medicine.drug - Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Long-Term Efficacy and Safety of Deutetrabenazine in Patients with Tardive Dyskinesia by Concomitant Dopamine-Receptor Antagonist Use
- Author
-
Robert A. Hauser, Hadas Barkay, Hubert H. Fernandez, Stewart A. Factor, Joohi Jimenez-Shahed, Nicholas Gross, Leslie Marinelli, Amanda Wilhelm, Mark Forrest Gordon, Juha-Matti Savola, and Karen E. Anderson
- Subjects
Psychiatry and Mental health ,Neurology (clinical) - Abstract
IntroductionTardive dyskinesia (TD) is an involuntary movement disorder that can result from exposure to dopamine-receptor antagonists (DRAs). Deutetrabenazine demonstrated significant improvements in Abnormal Involuntary Movement Scale (AIMS) scores in the 12-week pivotal trials (ARM-TD/AIM-TD). This post hoc analysis assessed the long-term efficacy and safety of deutetrabenazine by baseline DRA use.MethodsPatients who completed ARM-TD or AIM-TD enrolled in the 3-year, open-label extension (OLE) study, with deutetrabenazine dose titrated based on dyskinesia control and tolerability. Change from baseline in total motor AIMS score, Patient Global Impression of Change (PGIC), Clinical Global Impression of Change (CGIC), and adverse event (AE) rates were analyzed in subgroups by baseline DRA use.ResultsOf 337 patients in the OLE study, 254 were taking DRAs at baseline (mean age, 56 years; 48% male; 6.0 years since diagnosis) and 83 were not (mean age, 60 years; 31% male; 4.9 years since diagnosis). Mean ± SE dose at week 145 was 39.9 ± 1.0 mg/day in patients taking DRAs (n = 108) and 38.5 ± 1.5 mg/day in patients not taking DRAs (n = 53). At week 145, mean ± SE change from baseline in AIMS score was −6.1 ± 0.43 and −7.5 ± 0.71; 64% and 62% achieved PGIC treatment success; and 69% and 81% achieved CGIC treatment success, respectively. Overall AE incidence was low (exposure-adjusted incidence rates [incidence/patient-years]: any, 1.08 and 1.97; serious, 0.10 and 0.12; leading to discontinuation, 0.06 and 0.05).ConclusionThis analysis suggests that deutetrabenazine for long-term treatment of TD is beneficial, with a favorable safety profile, regardless of concomitant DRA use.FundingTeva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd., Petach Tikva, Israel
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Pridopidine, a clinic‐ready compound, reduces 3,4‐dihydroxyphenylalanine‐induced dyskinesia in Parkinsonian macaques
- Author
-
Ralph Laufer, Spyros Papapetropoulos, Michael Hill, Paula Ravenscroft, Lilach Steiner, Jonathan M. Brotchie, Susan H. Fox, Juha-Matti Savola, Aric Orbach, Ian J. Reynolds, Tom H. Johnston, Michal Geva, and Michael R. Hayden
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Dyskinesia, Drug-Induced ,Parkinson's disease ,Movement ,Pharmacology ,Antiparkinson Agents ,Levodopa ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Parkinsonian Disorders ,Piperidines ,Receptors, Adrenergic, alpha-2 ,Dopamine receptor D2 ,medicine ,Animals ,Receptors, Histamine H3 ,Receptors, sigma ,Receptor, Serotonin, 5-HT2A ,Receptor, Muscarinic M2 ,Sigma-1 receptor ,Receptors, Dopamine D2 ,business.industry ,Parkinsonism ,MPTP ,Receptors, Dopamine D3 ,Brain ,MPTP Poisoning ,medicine.disease ,Dihydroxyphenylalanine ,nervous system diseases ,Pridopidine ,Macaca fascicularis ,030104 developmental biology ,Neurology ,Dyskinesia ,chemistry ,1-Methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine ,Positron-Emission Tomography ,Receptor, Serotonin, 5-HT1A ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
BACKGROUND Pridopidine, in development for Huntington's disease, may modulate aberrant l-dopa-induced effects including l-dopa-induced dyskinesia (LID). OBJECTIVE This study investigated whether pridopidine could reduce LID in the MPTP macaque model of Parkinson's disease and characterized the observed behavioral effects in terms of receptor occupancy. METHODS The pharmacokinetic profile and effects of pridopidine (15-30 mg/kg) on parkinsonism, dyskinesia, and quality of on-time, in combination with l-dopa, were assessed in MPTP macaques with LID. Pridopidine receptor occupancy was estimated using known in vitro binding affinities to σ1 and dopamine D2 receptors, in vivo PET imaging, and pharmacokinetic profiling across different species. RESULTS Pridopidine produced a dose-dependent reduction in dyskinesia (up to 71%, 30 mg/kg) and decreased the duration of on-time with disabling dyskinesia evoked by l-dopa by 37% (20 mg/kg) and 60% (30 mg/kg). Pridopidine did not compromise the anti-parkinsonian benefit of l-dopa. Plasma exposures following the ineffective dose (15 mg/kg) were associated with full σ1 occupancy (>80%), suggesting that σ1 engagement alone is unlikely to account for the antidyskinetic benefits of pridopidine. Exposures following effective doses (20-30 mg/kg), while providing full σ1 occupancy, provide only modest dopamine D2 occupancy (
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Pharmacokinetics, metabolism and safety of deuterated L-DOPA (SD-1077)/carbidopa compared to L-DOPA/carbidopa following single oral dose administration in healthy subjects
- Author
-
Hooman Beygi, Igor D. Grachev, Juha-Matti Savola, Micha Levi, Serge Guzy, Margaret Bradbury, Pippa S. Loupe, Lavi Erisson, Ofer Spiegelstein, Maria Velinova, Spyros Papapetropoulos, William Tracewell, Mirna McDonald, Orit Cohen-Barak, and Frank Schneider
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Pharmacology ,business.industry ,Monoamine oxidase ,Cmax ,Urine ,Crossover study ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,0302 clinical medicine ,Tolerability ,Pharmacokinetics ,Dopamine ,Carbidopa ,Medicine ,Pharmacology (medical) ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,medicine.drug - Abstract
AIMS SD-1077, a selectively deuterated precursor of dopamine (DA) structurally related to L-3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine (L-DOPA), is under development for treatment of motor symptoms of Parkinson's disease. Preclinical models have shown slower metabolism of central deuterated DA. The present study investigated the peripheral pharmacokinetics (PK), metabolism and safety of SD-1077. METHODS Plasma and urine PK of drug and metabolites and safety after a single oral 150 mg SD-1077 dose were compared to 150 mg L-DOPA, each in combination with 37.5 mg carbidopa (CD) in a double-blind, two-period, crossover study in healthy volunteers (n = 16). RESULTS Geometric least squares mean ratios (GMRs) and 90% confidence intervals (90% CI) of SD-1077 vs. L-DOPA for Cmax , AUC0-t , and AUC0-inf were 88.4 (75.9-103.1), 89.5 (84.1-95.3), and 89.6 (84.2-95.4), respectively. Systemic exposure to DA was significantly higher after SD-1077/CD compared to that after L-DOPA/CD, with GMRs (90% CI) of 1.8 (1.45-2.24; P = 0.0005) and 2.06 (1.68-2.52; P
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Evaluation of the Safety of Deutetrabenazine at Higher Doses to Treat Chorea in Huntington’s Disease
- Author
-
Mark Forrest Gordon, David Oakes, Elise Kayson, Juha-Matti Savola, Nicholas Gross, Mat D. Davis, Jacquelyn Whaley, Maria Wieman, Samuel Frank, Claudia M. Testa, Shirley Eberly, Christina Vaughan, Jody Goldstein, and David Stamler
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Population ,Chorea ,medicine.disease ,Gastroenterology ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Huntington's disease ,Tolerability ,Deutetrabenazine ,Internal medicine ,Maximum dose ,medicine ,In patient ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,Adverse effect ,business ,education - Abstract
BackgroundIn the First-HD pivotal trial, the maximum deutetrabenazine dose evaluated to treat chorea associated with Huntington’s disease (HD chorea) was 48 mg/d, which is the approved maximum dose for this population. In ARC-HD, an open-label extension study evaluating the long-term efficacy and safety of deutetrabenazine to treat HD chorea, dosage ranged from 6 mg/d to 72 mg/d, with doses ≥12 mg/d administered twice daily. Doses in ARC-HD were increased by 6 mg/d per week in a response-driven manner based on efficacy and tolerability until 48 mg/d (Week 8). At the investigator’s discretion, further increases were permitted by 12 mg/d per week to a maximum of 72 mg/d. This post-hoc analysis evaluates the safety and tolerability of deutetrabenazine >48 mg/d compared to ≤48 mg/d to treat HD chorea in ARC-HD.MethodsPatient counts and safety assessments were attributed to patients when they received a dose of either ≤48 mg/d or >48 mg/d. For 9 selected adverse events (AEs), we compared AE rates adjusted for duration of drug exposure (as number of AEs/year) at ≤48 mg/d or >48 mg/d. The AE rates were determined after titration when participants were on stable doses of deutetrabenazine.ResultsAll 113 patients were exposed to doses ≤48 mg/d (177.1 patient-years) and 49 patients were ever exposed to doses >48 mg/d (74.1 patient-years). In patients taking deutetrabenazine >48 mg/d compared to ≤48 mg/d after the titration period, there were no apparent differences in exposure-adjusted AE rates.ConclusionsBased on clinical experience, some patients with HD may benefit from doses higher than 48 mg/d to adequately control chorea. These doses were tolerated without apparent increase in the exposure-adjusted rates of selected AEs after titration. This analysis does not address the occurrence of other AEs or whether adequate efficacy was achieved at lower doses, factors that may have influenced dose increases.FundingTeva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd., Petach Tikva, Israel
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Effect of Deutetrabenazine on Metabolic Parameters in the Treatment of Tardive Dyskinesia
- Author
-
Hadas Barkay, Joohi Jimenez-Shahed, Juha-Matti Savola, Karen E. Anderson, Stewart A. Factor, Maria Wieman, Mark Forrest Gordon, Hubert H. Fernandez, and Robert A. Hauser
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Triglyceride ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Placebo ,Tardive dyskinesia ,Gastroenterology ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Deutetrabenazine ,Internal medicine ,Hyperlipidemia ,medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,Dosing ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Body mass index ,Weight gain - Abstract
BackgroundDeutetrabenazine, a novel vesicular monoamine transporter 2 (VMAT2) inhibitor, is approved by the FDA for treatment of tardive dyskinesia (TD) in adults. Dopamine-receptor antagonists (DRAs) are associated with worsening of metabolic parameters, including weight gain, hyperlipidemia, and elevated blood glucose. This post hoc analysis assessed the short- and long-term effects of deutetrabenazine treatment on weight and metabolic parameters in individuals treated for TD.MethodsTwo 12-week, randomized placebo-controlled trials (RCTs) of deutetrabenazine for patients with TD evaluated either fixed dosing (AIM-TD; 12, 24, or 36 mg) or dose titration (ARM-TD; max dose, 48 mg/day). Patients completing ARM-TD or AIM-TD were included in an open-label extension (OLE) study, in which all patients underwent response-driven titration of deutetrabenazine from 12 mg/day up to a maximum total dose of 48 mg/day. Weight, body mass index (BMI), serum glucose, serum total cholesterol, and serum triglycerides were evaluated at baseline and during treatment in the RCTs and in the OLE.ResultsIn the RCTs, 282 and 133 patients received deutetrabenazine or placebo. At baseline, 77% of patients used DRAs. At Week 12, no meaningful changes in weight were observed, with mean (standard error) weight changes of 0.9–1.2 (0.3–0.5) and 0.2 (0.3) kg in the deutetrabenazine and placebo groups, respectively, and mean BMI changes of 0.3–0.5 (0.1–0.2) and 0.1 (0.1) kg/m2. 337 patients were included in the analysis of the OLE study. No meaningful changes were observed in weight (mean change: 0.4 [0.4] kg at Week 54, –0.5 [0.6] kg at Week 106, and –1.1 [0.6] kg at Week 145) or BMI (mean change: 0.1 [0.2] kg/m2 at Week 54, –0.2 [0.2] kg/m2 at Week 106, and –0.3 [0.2] kg/m2 at Week 145). Across the studies, no meaningful changes were observed in triglyceride, cholesterol, or glucose levels.ConclusionDeutetrabenazine does not affect common metabolic parameters in patients with TD, even during long-term exposure.FundingTeva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd., Petach Tikva, Israel
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Long-Term Efficacy and Safety of Deutetrabenazine for Chorea in Huntington’s Disease: Results From the ARC-HD Open-label Study
- Author
-
David Oakes, Samuel Frank, Jody Goldstein, Mat D. Davis, David Stamler, Christina Vaughan, Jacquelyn Whaley, Claudia M. Testa, Mark Forrest Gordon, Elise Kayson, and Juha-Matti Savola
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Tetrabenazine ,Chorea ,medicine.disease ,Placebo ,Akathisia ,Gastroenterology ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Drug withdrawal ,Huntington's disease ,Deutetrabenazine ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,medicine.drug - Abstract
BackgroundChorea is a prominent motor dysfunction in Huntington’s disease (HD). Deutetrabenazine, a vesicular monoamine transporter 2 (VMAT2) inhibitor, is FDA-approved for the treatment of chorea in HD. In the pivotal, 12-week First-HD trial, deutetrabenazine treatment reduced the Unified Huntington’s Disease Rating Scale (UHDRS) total maximal chorea (TMC) score versus placebo. ARC-HD, an open-label extension study, evaluated long-term safety and efficacy of deutetrabenazine dosed in a response-driven manner for treatment of HD chorea.MethodsPatients who completed First-HD (Rollover) and patients who converted overnight from a stable dose of tetrabenazine (Switch) were included. Safety was assessed over the entire treatment period; exposure-adjusted incidence rates (EAIRs; adverse events [AEs] per person-year) were calculated. A stable, post-titration time point of 8 weeks was chosen for efficacy analyses.ResultsOf 119 patients enrolled (Rollover, n=82; Switch, n=37), 100 (84%) completed ≥1 year of treatment (mean [SD] follow-up, 119 [48] weeks). End of study EAIRs for patients in the Rollover and Switch cohorts, respectively, were: any AE, 2.6 and 4.3; serious AEs, 0.13 and 0.14; AEs leading to dose suspension, 0.05 and 0.04. Overall, 68% and 73% of patients in Rollover and Switch, respectively, experienced a study drug–related AE. Most common AEs possibly related to study drug were somnolence (17% Rollover; 27% Switch), depression (23%; 19%), anxiety (9%; 11%), insomnia (10%; 8%), and akathisia (9%; 14%). Rates of AEs of interest include suicidality (9%; 3%) and parkinsonism (6%; 11%). In both cohorts, mean UHDRS TMC score and total motor score (TMS) decreased from baseline to Week 8; mean (SD) change in TMC score (units) was –4.4 (3.1) and –2.1 (3.3) and change in TMS was –7.1 (7.3) and –2.4 (8.7) in Rollover and Switch, respectively. While receiving stable dosing from Week 8 to 132 (or end of treatment), patients showed minimal change in TMC score (0.9 [5.0]), but TMS increased compared to Week 8 (9.0 [11.3]). Upon drug withdrawal, there were no remarkable AEs and TMC scores increased 4.4 (3.7) units compared to end of treatment.ConclusionsThe type and severity of AEs observed in long-term deutetrabenazine exposure are consistent with the previous study. Efficacy in reducing chorea persisted over time. There was no unexpected worsening of HD or chorea associated with HD upon deutetrabenazine withdrawal.FundingTeva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd., Petach Tikva, Israel
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Efficacy and Safety of Fixed-Dose Deutetrabenazine in Children and Adolescents for Tics Associated With Tourette Syndrome
- Author
-
Joohi Jimenez-Shahed, Juha-Matti Savola, Joseph Jankovic, Elizabeth A Garofalo, Barbara J. Coffey, Mark Forrest Gordon, Barry J Gertz, Hadas Barkay, David Stamler, Eran Harary, Daniel O. Claassen, Jessica Alexander, and Maria Wieman
- Subjects
Male ,Tic disorder ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Tics ,Tetrabenazine ,Placebo ,Tourette syndrome ,law.invention ,Double-Blind Method ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,medicine ,Humans ,Child ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Treatment Outcome ,Deutetrabenazine ,Treatment of Tourette syndrome ,Clinical Global Impression ,Female ,business ,Tourette Syndrome - Abstract
Importance Tourette syndrome is a neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by childhood onset of motor and phonic tics, often accompanied by behavioral and psychiatric comorbidities. Deutetrabenazine is a vesicular monoamine transporter 2 inhibitor approved in the US for the treatment of chorea associated with Huntington disease and tardive dyskinesia. Objective To report results of the ARTISTS 2 (Alternatives for Reducing Tics in Tourette Syndrome 2) study examining deutetrabenazine for treatment of Tourette syndrome. Design, Setting, and Participants This phase 3, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel-group, fixed-dose study was conducted over 8 weeks with a 1-week follow-up (June 21, 2018, to December 9, 2019). Children and adolescents aged 6 to 16 years with a diagnosis of Tourette syndrome and active tics causing distress or impairment were enrolled in the study. Children were recruited from 52 sites in 10 countries. Data were analyzed from February 4 to April 22, 2020. Interventions Participants were randomized (1:1:1) to low-dose deutetrabenazine (up to 36 mg/d), high-dose deutetrabenazine (up to 48 mg/d), or a matching placebo, which were titrated over 4 weeks to the target dose followed by a 4-week maintenance period. Main Outcomes and Measures The primary efficacy end point was change from baseline to week 8 in the Yale Global Tic Severity Scale–Total Tic Score (YGTSS-TTS) for high-dose deutetrabenazine. Key secondary end points included changes in YGTSS-TTS for low-dose deutetrabenazine, Tourette Syndrome Clinical Global Impression score, Tourette Syndrome Patient Global Impression of Impact score, and Child and Adolescent Gilles de la Tourette Syndrome–Quality of Life Activities of Daily Living subscale score. Safety assessments included incidence of treatment-emergent adverse events, laboratory parameters, vital signs, and questionnaires. Results The study included 158 children and adolescents (mean [SD] age, 11.7 [2.6] years). A total of 119 participants (75%) were boys; 7 (4%), Asian; 1 (1%), Black; 32 (20%), Hispanic; 4 (3%), Native American; 135 (85%), White; 2 (1%), multiracial; 9 (6%), other race; and 1 (0.6%), of unknown ethnic origin. Fifty-two participants were randomized to the high-dose deutetrabenazine group, 54 to the low-dose deutetrabenazine group, and 52 to the placebo group. Baseline characteristics for participants were similar between groups. Of the total 158 participants, 64 (41%) were aged 6 to 11 years, and 94 (59%) were aged 12 to 16 years at baseline. Mean time since Tourette syndrome diagnosis was 3.3 (2.8) years, and mean baseline YGTSS-TTS was 33.8 (6.6) points. At week 8, the difference in YGTSS-TTS was not significant between the high-dose deutetrabenazine and placebo groups (least-squares mean difference, –0.8 points; 95% CI, –3.9 to 2.3 points;P = .60; Cohen d, –0.11). There were no nominally significant differences between groups for key secondary end points. Treatment-emergent adverse events were reported for 34 participants (65%) treated with high-dose deutetrabenazine, 24 (44%) treated with low-dose deutetrabenazine, and 25 (49%) treated with placebo and were generally mild or moderate. Conclusions and Relevance In this fixed-dose randomized clinical trial of deutetrabenazine in children and adolescents with Tourette syndrome, the primary efficacy end point was not met. No new safety signals were identified. Trial Registration ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier:NCT03571256
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Enzyme replacement therapy treatment patterns and patient outcomes in late-onset Pompe disease
- Author
-
Fatameh Tavakkoli, Aiden Baek, Ian Kurashige, Nathalie Horowicz-Mehler, Kristin Gabriel, Marla Curran, Angel Pichardo, Shane Myrick, and Juha-Matti Savola
- Subjects
Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Endocrinology ,business.industry ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Genetics ,medicine ,Late onset ,Enzyme replacement therapy ,Disease ,business ,Molecular Biology ,Biochemistry - Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Sembragiline in Moderate Alzheimer’s Disease: Results of a Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled Phase II Trial (MAyflOwer RoAD)
- Author
-
Paul Delmar, Juha-Matti Savola, Stephane Nave, Inma Gilaberte, Paulo Fontoura, Tania Nikolcheva, Marie Mannino, Meike Pauly-Evers, Juergen Dukart, Timo Grimmer, Benedicte Ricci, Nicoletta Milani Muelhardt, Tracie Carey, Irene Gerlach, Edilio Borroni, Rachelle S. Doody, Mercè Boada, Luca Santarelli, Christian Czech, Susanne Ostrowitzki, and Emma Moran
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Subgroup analysis ,Placebo ,Hippocampus ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Double-Blind Method ,Alzheimer Disease ,Internal medicine ,Acetamides ,medicine ,Clinical endpoint ,Dementia ,Humans ,Adverse effect ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,business.industry ,General Neuroscience ,Memantine ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Mental Status and Dementia Tests ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Phase II clinical trial ,Pyrrolidinones ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,030104 developmental biology ,Tolerability ,monoamine oxidase B ,Population study ,Female ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,business ,Alzheimer’s disease ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,medicine.drug ,Research Article ,dementia ,Antipsychotic Agents ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Background: Sembragiline is a potent, selective, long-acting, and reversible MAO-B inhibitor developed as a potential treatment for Alzheimer’s disease (AD). Objective: To evaluate the safety, tolerability, and efficacy of sembragiline in patients with moderate AD. Methods: In this Phase II study ({"type":"clinical-trial","attrs":{"text":"NCT01677754","term_id":"NCT01677754"}}NCT01677754), 542 patients with moderate dementia (MMSE 13–20) on background acetylcholinesterase inhibitors with/without memantine were randomized (1:1:1) to sembragiline 1 mg, 5 mg, or placebo once daily orally for 52 weeks. Results: No differences between treated groups and placebo in adverse events or in study completion. The primary endpoint, change from baseline in ADAS-Cog11, was not met. At Week 52, the difference between sembragiline and placebo in ADAS-Cog11 change from baseline was – 0.15 (p = 0.865) and 0.90 (p = 0.312) for 1 and 5 mg groups, respectively. Relative to placebo at Week 52 (but not at prior assessment times), the 1 mg and 5 mg sembragiline groups showed differences in ADCS-ADL of 2.64 (p = 0.051) and 1.89 (p = 0.160), respectively. A treatment effect in neuropsychiatric symptoms (as assessed by the difference between sembragiline and placebo on BEHAVE-AD-FW) was also seen at Week 52 only: – 2.80 (p = 0.014; 1 mg) and – 2.64 (p = 0.019; 5 mg), respectively. A post hoc subgroup analysis revealed greater treatment effects on behavior and functioning in patients with more severe baseline behavioral symptoms (above the median). Conclusions: This study showed that sembragiline was well-tolerated in patients with moderate AD. The study missed its primary and secondary endpoints. Post hoc analyses suggested potential effect on neuropsychiatric symptoms and functioning in more behaviorally impaired study population at baseline.
- Published
- 2017
26. 134 Long-Term Deutetrabenazine Treatment Is Associated with Sustained Treatment Response in Tardive Dyskinesia: Results from an Open-Label Extension Study
- Author
-
Joohi Jimenez-Shahed, Stewart A. Factor, Hadas Barkay, Nicholas Gross, Robert A. Hauser, Karen E. Anderson, Mark Forrest Gordon, Hubert H. Fernandez, Leslie Marinelli, and Juha-Matti Savola
- Subjects
business.industry ,Sedation ,Akathisia ,Tardive dyskinesia ,medicine.disease ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Tolerability ,Dyskinesia ,Deutetrabenazine ,Anesthesia ,medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Adverse effect ,Depression (differential diagnoses) - Abstract
Background:In the 12-week ARM-TD and AIM-TD studies evaluating deutetrabenazine for the treatment of tardive dyskinesia (TD), the percentage of patients achieving ≥50% response was higher in the deutetrabenazine-treated group than in the placebo group. These studies also showed low rates of overall adverse events (AEs) and discontinuations associated with deutetrabenazine. The current open-label study evaluated the long-term efficacy and safety of deutetrabenazine in patients with TD.Methods:Patients with TD who completed ARM-TD or AIM-TD could enroll in this open-label, single-arm extension study, titrating up over 6 weeks to a maximum total daily dose of deutetrabenazine 48 mg/day on the basis of dyskinesia control and tolerability. The proportion of Abnormal Involuntary Movement Scale (AIMS; items 1-7) responders was assessed based on response rates for achieving ≥50% improvement from baseline in the open-label extension study. AlMS score was assessed by local site raters for this analysis.Results:343 patients enrolled in the extension study. At Week 54 (n=249; total daily dose [mean ± standard error]: 38.6±0.66 mg), the mean percentage change from baseline in AIMS score was –40%; 48% of patients achieved a ≥50% response and 59% of those had already achieved a ≥50% response at Week 15. Further, 34% of those who had not achieved a ≥50% response at Week 15 achieved a ≥50% response at Week 54. At Week 106 (n=169; total daily dose: 39.6±0.77 mg), the mean percentage change from baseline in AIMS score was –45%; 55% of patients achieved a ≥50% response, 59% of those patients had already achieved a ≥50% response at Week 15, and 41% of those who had not achieved a ≥50% response at Week 15 but who reached Week 106 achieved a ≥50% response. At Week 132 (n=109; total daily dose: 39.7±0.97 mg), the mean percentage change from baseline in AIMS score was –61%; 55% of patients achieved a ≥50% response, 61% of those patients had already achieved a ≥50% response at Week 15, and 43% of those who had not achieved a ≥50% response at Week 15 but who reached Week 132 achieved a ≥50% response. Completer analysis suggests that long-term efficacy was not due to dose increases over time. Treatment with deutetrabenazine was generally well tolerated. There were 623 patient-years of exposure through Week 158, and exposure-adjusted incidence rates (incidence/patient-years) of adverse events of special interest were 0.01 for akathisia and restlessness, 0.07 for somnolence and sedation, 0.04 for parkinsonism, and 0.05 for depression.Conclusions:Patients who received long-term treatment with deutetrabenazine achieved response rates that were indicative of clinically meaningful long-term benefit. Results from this open-label trial suggest the possibility of increasing benefit over time with individual dose titration of deutetrabenazine.Funding Acknowledgements:This study was funded by Teva Pharmaceuticals, Petach Tikva, Israel.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. 151 Confirmed Safety of Deutet.rabenazine for Tardive Dyskinesia in a 3-Year Open-Label Extension Study
- Author
-
Hubert H. Fernandez, Hadas Barkay, Robert A. Hauser, Stewart A. Factor, Joohi Jimenez-Shahed, Nicholas Gross, Leslie Marinelli, Mark Forrest Gordon, Juha-Matti Savola, and Karen E. Anderson
- Subjects
Psychiatry and Mental health ,Neurology (clinical) - Abstract
Background:Deutetrabenazine (Austedo) is approved by the FDA for treatment of tardive dyskinesia (TD) in adults. In the 12-week ARM-TD and AIM-TD studies, deutetrabenazine showed clinically significant improvements in Abnormal Involuntary Movement Scale (AIMS) scores compared with placebo, and there were low rates of overall adverse events (AEs) and discontinuations associated with deutetrabenazine. The objective of this study was to evaluate the long-term safety and tolerability of deutetrabenazine in patients with TD at 3 years.METHODS:Patients who completed ARM-TD or AIM-TD were included in this open-label, single-arm extension study, in which all patients restarted/started deutetrabenazine 12 mg/day, titrating up to a maximum total daily dose of 48 mg/day based on dyskinesia control and tolerability. The study comprised a 6-week titration period and a long-term maintenance phase. Safety measures included incidence of AEs, serious AEs (SAEs), and AEs leading to withdrawal, dose reduction, or dose suspension. Exposure-adjusted incidence rates (EAIRs; incidence/patient-years) were used for calculating AE frequencies. This analysis reports results up to Week 158.RESULTS:A total of 343 patients were enrolled (111 received placebo and 232 received deutetrabenazine in the parent studies). At the time of this analysis, 183 patients were still receiving treatment; 259 completed 1 year, 172 completed 2 years, and 41 completed 3 years. There were 623 patient-years of exposure. More than 40% of patients reached the maximum dose. EAIRs of AEs were comparable to or lower than those observed in the ARM-TD and AIM-TD short-term randomized trials of deutetrabenazine vs. placebo. The frequency of SAEs (EAIR 0.10) was similar to that observed with short-term placebo (0.33) and short-term deutetrabenazine (range 0.06–0.33) treatment. AEs leading to withdrawal (0.06), dose reduction (0.10), and dose suspension (0.05) were uncommon.CONCLUSION:These results support the safety outcomes observed in the ARM-TD and AIM-TD parent studies and the safety of deutetrabenazine for long-term use in patients with TD.Funding Acknowledgements: This study was funded by Teva Pharmaceuticals, Petach Tikva, Israel
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Pharmacokinetic and Metabolic Profile of Deutetrabenazine (TEV-50717) Compared With Tetrabenazine in Healthy Volunteers
- Author
-
David Stamler, Laura Rabinovich-Guilatt, Margaret Bradbury, Juha‐Matti Savola, Donna S. Cox, Edward T. Hellriegel, Frank Schneider, Pippa S. Loupe, and Thomas A. Baillie
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,030213 general clinical medicine ,Adolescent ,Metabolite ,Tetrabenazine ,Cmax ,Administration, Oral ,Pharmacology ,030226 pharmacology & pharmacy ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Pharmacokinetics ,medicine ,Humans ,Tardive Dyskinesia ,General Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics ,Active metabolite ,Cross-Over Studies ,Adrenergic Uptake Inhibitors ,lcsh:Public aspects of medicine ,General Neuroscience ,Research ,lcsh:RM1-950 ,lcsh:RA1-1270 ,General Medicine ,Articles ,Healthy Volunteers ,lcsh:Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,Huntington Disease ,chemistry ,Tolerability ,Deutetrabenazine ,Area Under Curve ,Female ,Deuterated drug ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Deutetrabenazine (Austedo, Teva Pharmaceuticals) is a deuterated form of tetrabenazine. It is the first deuterated drug to receive US regulatory approval and is approved for treatment of chorea in Huntington's disease and tardive dyskinesia. Two oral single dose studies comparing deutetrabenazine (25 mg) with tetrabenazine (25 mg) in healthy volunteers evaluated the impact of deuteration on pharmacokinetics of the active metabolites, alpha-dihydrotetrabenazine (α-HTBZ) and beta-dihydrotetrabenazine (β-HTBZ), metabolite profile, safety, and tolerability. In the two-way, cross-over study, the mean elimination half-life of deuterated total (α + β)-HTBZ was doubled compared with nondeuterated total (α + β)-HTBZ, with a twofold increase in overall mean exposure (area under the concentration-time curve from zero to infinity (AUC0-inf )) and a marginal increase in mean peak plasma concentration (Cmax ). In the mass balance and metabolite profiling study, there were no novel plasma or urinary metabolites of [14 C]-deutetrabenazine relative to [14 C]-tetrabenazine. Specific deuteration in deutetrabenazine resulted in a superior pharmacokinetic profile and an increased ratio of active-to-inactive metabolites, attributes considered to provide significant benefits to patients.
- Published
- 2019
29. Long-Term Deutetrabenazine Treatment Is Associated With Continued Improvement in Tardive Dyskinesia in the Completed 3-Year Open-Label Extension Study
- Author
-
Nicholas Gross, Mark Forrest Gordon, Hubert H. Fernandez, Robert A. Hauser, Stewart A. Factor, Hadas Barkay, Juha-Matti Savola, Leslie Marinelli, Amanda Wilhelm, Joohi Jimenez-Shahed, and Karen E. Anderson
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Sedation ,Tardive dyskinesia ,medicine.disease ,Akathisia ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Tolerability ,Dyskinesia ,Deutetrabenazine ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Clinical Global Impression ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Somnolence - Abstract
BackgroundThe 12-week ARM-TD and AIM-TD studies in tardive dyskinesia (TD) patients showed statistically significant improvements in TD symptoms with deutetrabenazine. The completed open-label extension (OLE) study (SD-809-C−20) evaluated long-term efficacy and safety of deutetrabenazine in TD.MethodsPatients who completed ARM-TD or AIM-TD enrolled in the OLE study, with deutetrabenazine dose titrated based on dyskinesia control and tolerability. Change from baseline in Abnormal Involuntary Movement Scale (AIMS) score was assessed by local site raters. Treatment success was evaluated locally as patients being “much improved” or “very much improved” on Clinical Global Impression of Change (CGIC).Results343 patients enrolled in the OLE study; 6 patients were excluded from analyses. At Week 54 (n=249; dose [mean±SE]: 38.7±0.66mg/day), mean change from baseline in AIMS score was –4.8±0.28; 66% of patients experienced treatment success. At Week 106 (n=194; dose: 39.3±0.75mg/day), mean change from baseline in AIMS score was –5.4±0.33; 65% of patients experienced treatment success. At Week 145 (n=160; dose: 39.4±0.83mg/day), mean change from baseline in AIMS score was –6.6±0.37; 73% of patients experienced treatment success. Treatment was generally well tolerated across 723 patient-years of exposure through Week 158, and exposure-adjusted incidence rates (incidence/patient-years) for akathisia/restlessness were 0.01, somnolence/sedation were 0.07, and symptoms which may represent parkinsonism or depression were 0.08 each.ConclusionsPatients who received long-term treatment with deutetrabenazine achieved sustained improvement in AIMS scores. Findings from this open-label trial with response-driven dosing suggest the possibility of increasing benefit over time.FundingTeva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd., Petach Tikva, Israel
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Minimal Clinically Important Difference in AIMS Score Based on CGIC and PGIC in Patients With Tardive Dyskinesia Treated With Deutetrabenazine
- Author
-
Mark Forrest Gordon, Hadas Barkay, Juha-Matti Savola, Maria Wieman, Amanda Wilhelm, and Robert A. Hauser
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Minimal clinically important difference ,Placebo ,Tardive dyskinesia ,medicine.disease ,humanities ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Treatment success ,Deutetrabenazine ,Internal medicine ,Clinical Global Impression ,medicine ,In patient ,Neurology (clinical) ,business - Abstract
BackgroundDeutetrabenazine is FDA approved for tardive dyskinesia (TD) based on two 12-week, placebo-controlled studies evaluating safety and efficacy in patients with baseline Abnormal Involuntary Movement Scale (AIMS) score ≥6. Deutetrabenazine reduced overall AIMS scores compared with placebo in ARM-TD (–3.0 vs –1.6, P=0.019) and AIM-TD (24 mg/day, –3.2 vs –1.4, P=0.003; 36 mg/day, –3.3 vs –1.4, P=0.001). This analysis assessed Minimal Clinically Important Difference (MCID) in AIMS score in patients with TD treated with deutetrabenazine.MethodsMCID is the smallest change from baseline in AIMS score that is meaningful for patients. MCID analyses were performed based on Patient Global Impression of Change (PGIC) and Clinical Global Impression of Change (CGIC) as anchors described by Hauser et al., where MCID is the difference between patients treated with deutetrabenazine who were minimally improved and patients treated with placebo who were unchanged. Additional MCID definitions were explored: difference between patients who demonstrated treatment improvement versus those who did not (Method 2); difference between patients who demonstrated treatment success versus those who did not (Method 3).Results295 patients were analyzed. Based on PGIC, the suggested MCID was –2.8. Results were similar for Method 2 (75% of patients had treatment improvement; MCID = –2.8) and Method 3 (38% of patients had treatment success; MCID = –2.6). Based on CGIC, the suggested MCID was –2.6. Results were similar for Method 2 (76% of patients had treatment improvement; MCID = –2.8) and Method 3 (41% of patients had treatment success; MCID = –3.0). Therefore, the suggested MCID for deutetrabenazine is –3.ConclusionsThe MCID for change in AIMS score based on PGIC and CGIC for deutetrabenazine was –3 regardless of the analytical method. Findings suggest an AIMS score reduction of ~3 is associated with clinically meaningful improvement in TD symptoms.FundingTeva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd., Petach Tikva, Israel
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Comparison of Safety and Tolerability of Deutetrabenazine During Titration and Maintenance in Patients with Tardive Dyskinesia
- Author
-
Hadas Barkay, Karen E. Anderson, Nayla Chaijale, Amanda Wilhelm, Juha-Matti Savola, Mark Forrest Gordon, Hubert H. Fernandez, and Alexander F. Send
- Subjects
business.industry ,Tardive dyskinesia ,medicine.disease ,Akathisia ,Placebo ,Discontinuation ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Tolerability ,Dyskinesia ,Deutetrabenazine ,Anesthesia ,Medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Adverse effect - Abstract
BackgroundDeutetrabenazine is approved to treat tardive dyskinesia (TD) in adults and is titrated weekly by 6 mg/day, from 12 to 48 mg/day, based on dyskinesia control and tolerability. This analysis compared the safety of deutetrabenazine during titration versus maintenance.MethodsSafety was assessed during titration versus maintenance using integrated data from two 12-week placebo-controlled studies (ARM-TD and AIM-TD) and the open-label extension study. Rates were compared for overall and serious adverse events (AEs), AEs leading to discontinuation, treatment-related AEs, common AEs (≥4%), and specific AEs (parkinsonism, suicidal ideation, akathisia, restlessness).ResultsIn titration versus maintenance, AE rates with placebo (n=130) were: overall, 43.1% vs 25.4%; serious, 4.6% vs 2.3%; leading to discontinuation, 3.1% vs 0; treatment-related, 26.9% vs 10.0%. For placebo, common AEs during titration were somnolence, headache, nausea, fatigue, and dry mouth; none occurred during maintenance. In titration versus maintenance, AE rates in fixed-dose deutetrabenazine 12–36 mg (n=216) were: overall, 33.3–38.9% vs 22.2–29.2%; serious, 2.8–6.9% vs 0–1.4%; leading to discontinuation, 2.8–5.6% vs 0; treatment-related, 8.3–16.7% vs 8.3–13.9%. For fixed-dose deutetrabenazine, common AEs during titration were headache, diarrhea, nasopharyngitis, depression, hypertension, and dry mouth; headache was the only common AE during maintenance. In titration versus maintenance, AE rates with flexible-dose deutetrabenazine (n=168) were: overall, 49.4% vs 32.7%; serious, 3.6% vs 2.4%; leading to discontinuation, 2.4% vs 0.6%. For flexible-dose deutetrabenazine, the only common AE during titration was somnolence; none occurred during maintenance. Rates of parkinsonism, suicidal ideation, akathisia, and restlessness were low and comparable in titration and maintenance.ConclusionsDeutetrabenazine was well-tolerated, with AE rates similar to placebo during both phases; AE rates were higher during titration and decreased during maintenance.FundingTeva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd., Petach Tikva, Israel
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. 152 Development of Deutetrabenazine as a Potential New Non-Antipsychotic Treatment for Tourette Syndrome in Children and Adolescents
- Author
-
Barbara J. Coffey, Mark Forrest Gordon, Barry J Gertz, Juha-Matti Savola, David Stamler, Joseph Jankovic, Daniel O. Claassen, Maria Wieman, and Elisabeth A. Garofalo
- Subjects
Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Tics ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Tardive dyskinesia ,Tourette syndrome ,030227 psychiatry ,03 medical and health sciences ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,0302 clinical medicine ,Pimozide ,Tolerability ,Deutetrabenazine ,Tolerability Study ,medicine ,Aripiprazole ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background:Tourette syndrome (TS) is a neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by the hyperkinetic movements of motor and phonic tics manifested in young age. Currently approved treatments in the United States are antipsychotics: haloperidol, pimozide, and aripiprazole, which are associated with serious side effects, including tardive dyskinesia (TD). Deutetrabenazine, a vesicular monoamine transporter type 2 (VMAT2) inhibitor, was approved in 2017 by the US FDA for the treatment of chorea associated with Huntington’s disease and TD. Three ongoing studies (Alternatives for Reducing Tics in TS [ARTISTS]) are evaluating the efficacy, safety, and tolerability of deutetrabenazine in reducing tics in TS in children and adolescents (age 6-16 years).Methods:ARTISTS 1, a phase 2/3, response-driven, dose-titration, placebo-controlled study, randomizes patients (N=116) 1:1 to deutetrabenazine or placebo for 12 weeks. ARTISTS 2, a phase 3, fixed-dose study, randomizes patients (N=150) 1:1:1 to deutetrabenazine high or low dose, or placebo for 8 weeks. The primary efficacy outcome in these pivotal studies is change from baseline to end of treatment in the Total Tic Score (TTS) of the Yale Global Tic Severity Scale (YGTSS). Additional efficacy endpoints and safety/tolerability are also evaluated. ARTISTS is a 56-week, open-label, single-arm, long-term safety/tolerability study in patients who have successfully completed either ARTISTS 1 or ARTISTS 2.Results:Not available yet.Conclusion:TS can have potentially long-term life impact, and there remains unmet medical need for effective and well-tolerated treatments. Three ARTISTS studies will evaluate the efficacy, safety, and tolerability of deutetrabenazine in patients with tics in TS.Funding Acknowledgements:The studies are sponsored by Teva Pharmaceuticals and operationalized by Teva’s development partner, Nuvelution TS Pharma INC.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Characterizing patient compliance over six months in remote digital trials of Parkinson's and Huntington disease
- Author
-
Juha-Matti Savola, Shani Cohen, Leehee Navon-Perry, Shai Fine, Igor D. Grachev, Iris Grossman, Jordan J. Elm, Spyros Papapetropoulos, Zeev Waks, and Mark Forrest Gordon
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Pairwise correlation ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Parkinson's disease ,Evening ,Time Factors ,Health Informatics ,Disease ,lcsh:Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,Health informatics ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Medicine ,Humans ,Patient compliance ,Aged ,Protocol (science) ,Remote clinical trials ,business.industry ,Wearables ,Sensors ,Health Policy ,Clinical Studies as Topic ,Parkinson Disease ,Middle Aged ,Digital trials ,Huntington disease ,medicine.disease ,Mobile Applications ,Computer Science Applications ,Clinical trial ,Smartphones ,030104 developmental biology ,Research Design ,Physical therapy ,Parkinson’s disease ,lcsh:R858-859.7 ,Patient Compliance ,Female ,Smartphone ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Research Article ,Compliance - Abstract
Background A growing number of clinical trials use various sensors and smartphone applications to collect data outside of the clinic or hospital, raising the question to what extent patients comply with the unique requirements of remote study protocols. Compliance is particularly important in conditions where patients are motorically and cognitively impaired. Here, we sought to understand patient compliance in digital trials of two such pathologies, Parkinson’s disease (PD) and Huntington disease (HD). Methods Patient compliance was assessed in two remote, six-month clinical trials of PD (n = 51, Clinician Input Study funded by the Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson’s Research) and HD (n = 17, sponsored by Teva Pharmaceuticals). We monitored four compliance metrics specific to remote studies: smartphone app-based medication reporting, app-based symptoms reporting, the duration of smartwatch data streaming except while charging, and the performance of structured motor tasks at home. Results While compliance over time differed between the PD and HD studies, both studies maintained high compliance levels for their entire six month duration. None (− 1%) to a 30% reduction in compliance rate was registered for HD patients, and a reduction of 34 to 53% was registered for the PD study. Both studies exhibited marked changes in compliance rates during the initial days of enrollment. Interestingly, daily smartwatch data streaming patterns were similar, peaking around noon, dropping sharply in the late evening hours around 8 pm, and having a mean of 8.6 daily streaming hours for the PD study and 10.5 h for the HD study. Individual patients tended to have either high or low compliance across all compliance metrics as measured by pairwise correlation. Encouragingly, predefined schedules and app-based reminders fulfilled their intended effect on the timing of medication intake reporting and performance of structured motor tasks at home. Conclusions Our findings suggest that maintaining compliance over long durations is feasible, promote the use of predefined app-based reminders, and highlight the importance of patient selection as highly compliant patients typically have a higher adherence rate across the different aspects of the protocol. Overall, these data can serve as a reference point for the design of upcoming remote digital studies. Trial registration Trials described in this study include a sub-study of the Open PRIDE-HD Huntington’s disease study (TV7820-CNS-20016), which was registered on July 7th, 2015, sponsored by Teva Pharmaceuticals Ltd., and registered on Clinicaltrials.gov as NCT02494778 and EudraCT as 2015–000904-24. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (10.1186/s12911-018-0714-7) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
- Published
- 2018
34. Pharmacokinetics, metabolism and safety of deuterated L-DOPA (SD-1077)/carbidopa compared to L-DOPA/carbidopa following single oral dose administration in healthy subjects
- Author
-
Frank, Schneider, Lavi, Erisson, Hooman, Beygi, Margaret, Bradbury, Orit, Cohen-Barak, Igor D, Grachev, Serge, Guzy, Pippa S, Loupe, Micha, Levi, Mirna, McDonald, Juha-Matti, Savola, Spyros, Papapetropoulos, William G, Tracewell, Maria, Velinova, and Ofer, Spiegelstein
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Cross-Over Studies ,Administration, Oral ,Carbidopa ,Parkinson Disease ,Deuterium ,Drug Administration Schedule ,Healthy Volunteers ,Antiparkinson Agents ,Levodopa ,Double-Blind Method ,Area Under Curve ,Humans ,Drug Therapy, Combination ,Female ,Prodrugs - Abstract
SD-1077, a selectively deuterated precursor of dopamine (DA) structurally related to L-3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine (L-DOPA), is under development for treatment of motor symptoms of Parkinson's disease. Preclinical models have shown slower metabolism of central deuterated DA. The present study investigated the peripheral pharmacokinetics (PK), metabolism and safety of SD-1077.Plasma and urine PK of drug and metabolites and safety after a single oral 150 mg SD-1077 dose were compared to 150 mg L-DOPA, each in combination with 37.5 mg carbidopa (CD) in a double-blind, two-period, crossover study in healthy volunteers (n = 16).Geometric least squares mean ratios (GMRs) and 90% confidence intervals (90% CI) of SD-1077 vs. L-DOPA for CSD-1077/CD demonstrated the potential to prolong exposure to central DA at comparable peripheral PK and safety to the reference L-DOPA/CD combination. A single dose of SD-1077 is safe for further clinical development in Parkinson's disease patients.
- Published
- 2018
35. Additional file 4: of Characterizing patient compliance over six months in remote digital trials of Parkinsonâ s and Huntington disease
- Author
-
Cohen, Shani, Waks, Zeev, Elm, Jordan, Gordon, Mark, Grachev, Igor, Leehee Navon-Perry, Fine, Shai, Grossman, Iris, Papapetropoulos, Spyros, and Juha-Matti Savola
- Abstract
Figure S4. Compliance patterns by baseline disease status for the PD and HD studies (DOCX 103 kb)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Additional file 1: of Characterizing patient compliance over six months in remote digital trials of Parkinsonâ s and Huntington disease
- Author
-
Cohen, Shani, Waks, Zeev, Elm, Jordan, Gordon, Mark, Grachev, Igor, Leehee Navon-Perry, Fine, Shai, Grossman, Iris, Papapetropoulos, Spyros, and Juha-Matti Savola
- Subjects
education ,behavioral disciplines and activities - Abstract
Figure S1. Comparison of compliance rates throughout studies between early dropouts and patients that completed the study (DOCX 150 kb)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Additional file 2: of Characterizing patient compliance over six months in remote digital trials of Parkinsonâ s and Huntington disease
- Author
-
Cohen, Shani, Waks, Zeev, Elm, Jordan, Gordon, Mark, Grachev, Igor, Leehee Navon-Perry, Fine, Shai, Grossman, Iris, Papapetropoulos, Spyros, and Juha-Matti Savola
- Abstract
Figure S2. Compliance patterns by gender for the PD and HD studies (DOCX 87 kb)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Additional file 3: of Characterizing patient compliance over six months in remote digital trials of Parkinsonâ s and Huntington disease
- Author
-
Cohen, Shani, Waks, Zeev, Elm, Jordan, Gordon, Mark, Grachev, Igor, Leehee Navon-Perry, Fine, Shai, Grossman, Iris, Papapetropoulos, Spyros, and Juha-Matti Savola
- Abstract
Figure S3. Compliance patterns by age for the PD and HD studies (DOCX 109 kb)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. The α2 adrenergic antagonist fipamezole improves quality of levodopa action in Parkinsonian primates
- Author
-
Susan H. Fox, Matthew J. Piggott, Juha-Matti Savola, Tom H. Johnston, and Jonathan M. Brotchie
- Subjects
Levodopa ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Parkinson's disease ,Antagonist ,Neurological disorder ,Pharmacology ,medicine.disease ,nervous system diseases ,Surgery ,Central nervous system disease ,Pharmacotherapy ,Neurology ,Dyskinesia ,medicine ,Adrenergic antagonist ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Reduction in the antiparkinsonian benefit of levodopa is a major complication of long-term levodopa treatment in advanced Parkinson's disease (PD). Such loss of benefit arises because of reduced duration of action and appearance of disabling dyskinesia. We assess the potential of the α(2) adrenergic antagonist fipamezole to reduce motor complications in parkinsonian macaques. MPTP-lesioned macaques were treated acutely with fipamezole (10 mg/kg) alone and in combination with two doses of levodopa. Fipamezole extended both duration and quality of antiparkinsonian action of levodopa. Duration of antiparkinsonian action, on time, was increased by up to 75% while "good-quality" on time, i.e., that not associated with disabling dyskinesia, was increased by up to 98%. Combination of fipamezole with the lower dose of levodopa provided antiparkinsonian benefit at least equivalent to that provided by the higher dose levodopa alone. However, with the combination, antiparkinsonian benefit was of much better quality. The proportion of on time without disabling dyskinesia (79%) was significantly greater than that with high dose levodopa alone (45%). Increased duration and quality of levodopa action may represent therapeutically valuable actions of α(2) adrenergic antagonists.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Pharmacological characterization and CNS effects of a novel highly selective α 2C -adrenoceptor antagonist JP-1302
- Author
-
Höglund I, Juha-Matti Savola, Siegfried Wurster, Jyrki Lehtimäki, M. Engstrom, Jukka Sallinen, Jouni Sirviö, Antti Haapalinna, and Raimo Virtanen
- Subjects
Pharmacology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Chemistry ,Antagonist ,Atipamezole ,Startle reaction ,Endocrinology ,Internal medicine ,Moro reflex ,medicine ,Antidepressant ,Antagonism ,Prepulse inhibition ,Behavioural despair test ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background and purpose: Pharmacological validation of novel functions for the α2A-, α2B-, and α2C-adrenoceptor (AR) subtypes has been hampered by the limited specificity and subtype-selectivity of available ligands. The current study describes a novel highly selective α2C-adrenoceptor antagonist, JP-1302 (acridin-9-yl-[4-(4-methylpiperazin-1-yl)-phenyl]amine). Experimental approach: Standard in vitro binding and antagonism assays were employed to demonstrate the α2C-AR specificity of JP-1302. In addition, JP-1302 was tested in the forced swimming test (FST) and the prepulse-inhibition of startle reflex (PPI) model because mice with genetically altered α2C-adrenoceptors have previously been shown to exhibit different reactivity in these tests when compared to wild-type controls. Key results: JP-1302 displayed antagonism potencies (KB values) of 1,500, 2,200 and 16 nM at the human α2A-, α2B-, and α2C-adrenoceptor subtypes, respectively. JP-1302 produced antidepressant and antipsychotic-like effects, i.e. it effectively reduced immobility in the FST and reversed the phencyclidine-induced PPI deficit. Unlike the α2-subtype non-selective antagonist atipamezole, JP-1302 was not able to antagonize α2-agonist–induced sedation (measured as inhibition of spontaneous locomotor activity), hypothermia, α2-agonist-induced mydriasis or inhibition of vas deferens contractions, effects that have been generally attributed to the α2A-adrenoceptor subtype. In contrast to JP-1302, atipamezole did not antagonize the PCP-induced prepulse-inhibition deficit. Conclusions and implications: The results provide further support for the hypothesis that specific antagonism of the α2C-adrenoceptor may have therapeutic potential as a novel mechanism for the treatment of neuropsychiatric disorders. British Journal of Pharmacology (2007) 150, 391–402. doi:10.1038/sj.bjp.0707005
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Structure−Activity Relationship of Quinoline Derivatives as Potent and Selective α2C-Adrenoceptor Antagonists
- Author
-
Hanna-Kaisa Kyyrönen, Siegfried Wurster, Iisa Höglund, Kurt Kokko, Anna-Marja Hoffren, Jukka Sallinen, Juha-Matti Savola, Pauli Saarenketo, Katariina Pohjanoksa, Oili Kallatsa, Satu Silver, Andrei Tauber, Mia Engström, and Harri Salo
- Subjects
Stereochemistry ,Substituent ,Alpha (ethology) ,Stereoisomerism ,Ligands ,Binding, Competitive ,Mice ,Radioligand Assay ,Structure-Activity Relationship ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Cricetulus ,GTP-Binding Proteins ,Receptors, Adrenergic, alpha-2 ,Cell Line, Tumor ,Cricetinae ,Drug Discovery ,Animals ,Humans ,Structure–activity relationship ,Adrenergic alpha-Antagonists ,Quinoline ,Antagonist ,Adrenergic alpha-2 Receptor Antagonists ,Piperazine ,chemistry ,Guanosine 5'-O-(3-Thiotriphosphate) ,Acridine ,Aminoquinolines ,Molecular Medicine ,Protein Binding - Abstract
Starting from two acridine compounds identified in a high-throughput screening campaign (1 and 2, Table 1), a series of 4-aminoquinolines was synthesized and tested for their properties on the human alpha(2)-adrenoceptor subtypes (alpha(2A), alpha(2B), and alpha(2C)). A number of compounds with good antagonist potencies against the alpha(2C)-adrenoceptor and excellent subtype selectivities over the other two subtypes were discovered. For example, (R)-{4-[4-(3,4-dimethylpiperazin-1-yl)phenylamino]quinolin-3-yl}methanol 6j had an antagonist potency of 8.5 nM against, and a subtype selectivity of more than 200-fold for, the alpha(2C)-adrenoceptor. Investigation of the structure-activity relationship identified a number of structural features, the most critical of which was an absolute need for a substituent in the 3-position of the quinoline ring. The 3-position on the piperazine ring was also found to play an appreciable role, as substitutions in that position exerted a significant and stereospecific beneficial effect on the alpha(2C)-adrenoceptor affinity and potency. Replacing the piperazine ring proved difficult, with 1,4-diazepanes representing the only viable alternative.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Differential Efficacies of Somatostatin Receptor Agonists for G-Protein Activation and Desensitization of Somatostatin Receptor Subtype 4-Mediated Responses
- Author
-
Siegfried Wurster, Mia Engström, and Juha-Matti Savola
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,G protein ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Stimulation ,CHO Cells ,Naphthalenes ,Biology ,Somatostatin Receptor Agonist ,GTP-Binding Proteins ,Cricetinae ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Receptors, Somatostatin ,Sulfones ,Somatostatin-28 ,Receptor ,Desensitization (medicine) ,Pharmacology ,Somatostatin receptor ,Chinese hamster ovary cell ,Membrane Proteins ,Endocrinology ,Guanosine 5'-O-(3-Thiotriphosphate) ,Butanes ,Molecular Medicine ,Somatostatin - Abstract
Although desensitization represents an important physiological feedback mechanism that protects against overstimulation, it can significantly limit the therapeutic usefulness of drugs. In the current investigation, we have employed Cytosensor microphysiometry for the purpose of determining the propensity of somatostatin receptor agonists to induce desensitization of the human somatostatin receptor subtype 4 (h sst4)-mediated extracellular acidification rate (EAR) response in intact Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells. We have compared this propensity with the efficacies of the agonists as measured in a [35S]guanosine-5'-O-(3-thio)triphosphate binding assay with membranes of the same CHO-h sst4 cell line. We observed that (1'S,2S)-4-amino-N-(1'-carbamoyl-2'-phenylethyl)-2-(4''-methyl-1''-naphthalenesulfonylamino)butanamide (J-2156), a superagonist at the h sst4 with higher efficacy than somatostatin-14 itself (Engström et al., 2005), was considerably less prone to cause desensitization of the EAR response than somatostatin-14, somatostatin-28, and cortistatin-17. In contrast, compound A (methyl (2S)-5-{[amino(imino)methyl]amino}-2-{[4-[5-7-difluoro-2-phenyl-1H-indol-3-yl)butanoyl]amino}-pentanoate), which we also found to be an h sst(4) superagonist, albeit to a lesser degree than J-2156, demonstrated a high propensity to cause desensitization. Our results indicate that there is no relationship between the efficacy of the agonists to cause G-protein activation and their ability to induce desensitization of the h sst4-mediated EAR responses. The finding that on the h sst4, J-2156 is not only a superagonist but also shows a low propensity to cause desensitization, might offer therapeutic advantages. At a minimum, the compound will be a powerful tool to study the mechanisms connected to efficacy and desensitization of h sst4-mediated responses.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Molecular mechanisms of ligand-receptor interactions in transmembrane domain V of theα2A-adrenoceptor
- Author
-
Marjo Pihlavisto, Henri Xhaard, Anna-Marja Hoffren, Siegfried Wurster, Juha M. Peltonen, Anne Marjamäki, Liisa T. Kanerva, Juha-Matti Savola, Mark S. Johnson, Mika Scheinin, and Tommi Nyrönen
- Subjects
Pharmacology ,Transmembrane domain ,Mechanism of action ,Chemistry ,Stereochemistry ,Catecholamine binding ,Docking (molecular) ,Chinese hamster ovary cell ,medicine ,Binding site ,medicine.symptom ,Receptor ,Ligand (biochemistry) - Abstract
The structural determinants of catechol hydroxyl interactions with adrenergic receptors were examined using 12 α2-adrenergic agonists and a panel of mutated human α2A-adrenoceptors. The α2ASer201 mutant had a Cys Ser201 (position 5.43) amino-acid substitution, and α2ASer201Cys200 and α2ASer201Cys204 had Ser Cys200 (5.42) and Ser Cys204 (5.46) substitutions, respectively, in addition to the Cys Ser201 substitution. Automated docking methods were used to predict the receptor interactions of the ligands. Radioligand-binding assays and functional [35S]GTPγS-binding assays were performed using transfected Chinese hamster ovary cells to experimentally corroborate the predicted binding modes. The hydroxyl groups of phenethylamines were found to have different effects on ligand affinity towards the activated and resting forms of the wild-type α2A-adrenoceptor. Substitution of Ser200 or Ser204 with cysteine caused a deterioration in the capability of catecholamines to activate the α2A-adrenoceptor. The findings indicate that (i) Cys201 plays a significant role in the binding of catecholamine ligands and UK14,304 (for the latter, by a hydrophobic interaction), but Cys201 is not essential for receptor activation; (ii) Ser200 interacts with the meta-hydroxyl group of phenethylamine ligands, affecting both catecholamine binding and receptor activation; while (iii) substituting Ser204 with a cysteine interferes both with the binding of catecholamine ligands and with receptor activation, due to an interaction between Ser204 and the para-hydroxyl group of the catecholic ring. British Journal of Pharmacology (2003) 140, 347–358. doi:10.1038/sj.bjp.0705439
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Interaction Of Folk Medicinal Plant Extracts With Human ɑ2-Adrenoceptor Subtypes
- Author
-
Ammar Saleem, Mia Engström, Juha-Matti Savola, Kalevi Pihlaja, and Siegfried Wurster
- Subjects
Binding Sites ,Plants, Medicinal ,Ethanol ,Traditional medicine ,Plant Extracts ,Yohimbine ,Acacia ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Ligand (biochemistry) ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Plant Leaves ,Dissociation constant ,Kinetics ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Harmaline ,Harmine ,chemistry ,Stalk ,Peganum harmala ,Receptors, Adrenergic, alpha-2 ,Botany ,Humans ,Pakistan ,Medicine, Traditional - Abstract
Forty-two extracts of folk medicinal plant organs from Pakistan were tested in competition binding assays for their interaction with the specific ligand recognition sites on the human α2-adrenoceptor subtypes α2A, α2B and α2C. Strong binding of the extracts (40 mg/ml) from Acacia nilotica (L.) Delile leaves (88-98% displacement of radiolabel) and Peganum harmala seeds (89-96% displacement) on three subtypes prompted us to extract these plant materials with 40% and 80% methanol, ethanol, and acetone. The extraction results indicated an absence of α2-adrenoceptor binding activity in the stalk of A. nilotica and A. tortils, whereas the leaves of both plants contained activity. The extracts of A. nilotica leaves showed a slight, but consistent, preference for the α2C-adrenoceptor, whereas the leaves of A. tortils were slightly more active on the α2B subtype. The extract of P. harmala stalks was less active than that of its seeds. The binding activities of A. nilotica leaves and P. harmala seeds were mainly concentrated in the water and 30% methanol fractions and further sub-fractions. In a functional activity assay, the active fractions inhibited epinephrine-stimulated 35S-GTPγS binding, thus indicating a predominantly antagonistic nature of the compounds with α2-adrenoceptor affinity in these fractions. Among the known major alkaloids of P. harmala (demissidine, harmaline, harmine, 6-methoxyharmalan, and norharmane), only 6-methoxyharmalan showed moderate affinity (dissociation constant (Ki) of 530 ± 40 nᴍ for α2A subtype). This study is a first systematic attempt towards the discovery of potential drug candidates from these plant materials for treating α2-adrenoceptor related diseases
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Three-dimensional Models of α2A-Adrenergic Receptor Complexes Provide a Structural Explanation for Ligand Binding
- Author
-
Minna Varis, Tommi Nyrönen, Juha-Matti Savola, Mika Scheinin, Heini Frang, Mark S. Johnson, Anne Marjamäki, Anna-Marja Hoffren, Tuomas Lönnberg, Tiina A. Salminen, and Marjo Pihlavisto
- Subjects
Models, Molecular ,Protein Conformation ,Stereochemistry ,Oxymetazoline ,CHO Cells ,Ligands ,Biochemistry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Receptors, Adrenergic, alpha-2 ,Chloroethylclonidine ,Cricetinae ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Receptor ,Molecular Biology ,biology ,Hydrobromide ,Ligand binding assay ,Cell Biology ,Ligand (biochemistry) ,chemistry ,Docking (molecular) ,Rhodopsin ,Bacteriorhodopsins ,Mutagenesis, Site-Directed ,biology.protein ,Protein Binding ,medicine.drug - Abstract
We have compared bacteriorhodopsin-based (alpha(2A)-AR(BR)) and rhodopsin-based (alpha(2A)-AR(R)) models of the human alpha(2A)-adrenengic receptor (alpha(2A)-AR) using both docking simulations and experimental receptor alkylation studies with chloroethylclonidine and 2-aminoethyl methanethiosulfonate hydrobromide. The results indicate that the alpha(2A)-AR(R) model provides a better explanation for ligand binding than does our alpha(2A)-AR(BR) model. Thus, we have made an extensive analysis of ligand binding to alpha(2A)-AR(R) and engineered mutant receptors using clonidine, para-aminoclonidine, oxymetazoline, 5-bromo-N-(4, 5-dihydro-1H-imidazol-2-yl)-6-quinoxalinamine (UK14,304), and norepinephrine as ligands. The representative docked ligand conformation was chosen using extensive docking simulations coupled with the identification of favorable interaction sites for chemical groups in the receptor. These ligand-protein complex studies provide a rational explanation at the atomic level for the experimentally observed binding affinities of each of these ligands to the alpha(2A)-adrenergic receptor.
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Chloroethylclonidine Binds Irreversibly to Exposed Cysteines in the Fifth Membrane-Spanning Domain of the Human α2A-Adrenergic Receptor
- Author
-
Anne Marjamäki, Petri Heinonen, Mika Scheinin, Marjo Pihlavisto, Juha-Matti Savola, and Victor Cockcroft
- Subjects
Molecular Sequence Data ,Transfection ,Clonidine ,Protein Structure, Secondary ,Mice ,Structure-Activity Relationship ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Receptors, Adrenergic, alpha-2 ,Chloroethylclonidine ,Animals ,Humans ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Cysteine ,Binding site ,Lipid bilayer ,Receptor ,Adrenergic alpha-Antagonists ,Pharmacology ,Binding Sites ,Rats ,Transmembrane domain ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Second messenger system ,Mutagenesis, Site-Directed ,Molecular Medicine ,Binding domain - Abstract
The alpha2-adrenergic receptors (alpha2-ARs) mediate signals to intracellular second messengers via guanine nucleotide binding proteins. Three human genes encoding alpha2-AR subtypes (alpha2A, alpha2B, alpha2C) have been cloned. Several chemical compounds display subtype differences in their binding and/or functional activity. Site-directed mutagenesis and molecular modeling are new tools with which to investigate the subtype selectivity of ligands. In this study, we introduce a new approach to mapping of the binding site crevice of the human alpha2A-AR. Based on a three-dimensional receptor model, we systematically mutated residues 197-201 and 204 in the fifth transmembrane domain of the human alpha2A-AR to cysteine. Chloroethylclonidine, an alkylating derivative of the alpha2-adrenergic agonist clonidine, binds irreversibly to alpha2A-ARs by forming a covalent bond with the sulfhydryl side chain of a cysteine residue exposed in the binding cavity, leading to inactivation of the receptor. Irreversible binding of chloroethylclonidine was used as a criterion for identifying introduced cysteine residues as being exposed in the binding cavity. The results supported a receptor model in which the fifth transmembrane domain is alpha-helical, with residues Val197, Ser200, Cys201, and Ser204 exposed in the binding pocket. Residues Ile198, Ser199, Ile202, and Gly203 face the lipid bilayer of the plasma membrane. This approach emerges as a powerful tool for structural characterization of the alpha2-ARs.
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Evaluation of the effects of a specific α2-adrenoceptor antagonist, atipamezole, on α1- and α2-adrenoceptor subtype binding, brain neurochemistry and behaviour in comparison with yohimbine
- Author
-
Juha-Matti Savola, Ewen MacDonald, Timo Viitamaa, Leena Tuomisto, Raimo Virtanen, Esa Heinonen, and Antti Haapalinna
- Subjects
Male ,Biogenic Amines ,Serotonin ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Alpha (ethology) ,Motor Activity ,Pharmacology ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,Mice ,Dopamine ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Adrenergic alpha-Antagonists ,Behavior, Animal ,Chemistry ,Dopaminergic ,Imidazoles ,Antagonist ,Brain ,Yohimbine ,Atipamezole ,Prazosin ,General Medicine ,Medetomidine ,Receptors, Adrenergic, alpha ,Rats ,Endocrinology ,Female ,Alpha-2 adrenergic receptor ,Rabbits ,Adrenergic alpha-Agonists ,medicine.drug - Abstract
In the present study we evaluated the alpha 1- and alpha 2-adrenoceptor subtype binding, central alpha 2-adrenoceptor antagonist potency, as well as effects on brain neurochemistry and behavioural pharmacology of two alpha 2-adrenoceptor antagonists, atipamezole and yohimbine. Atipamezole had higher selectivity for alpha 2- vs. alpha 1-adrenoceptors than yohimbine regardless of the subtypes studied. Both compounds had comparable affinity for the alpha 2A-, alpha 2C- and alpha 2B-adrenoceptors, but yohimbine had significantly lower affinity for the alpha 2D-subtype. This may account for the fact that significantly higher doses of yohimbine than atipamezole were needed for reversal of alpha 2-agonist (medetomidine)-induced effects in rats (mydriasis) and mice (sedation and hypothermia). The effect on central monoaminergic activity was estimated by measuring the concentrations of transmitters and their main metabolites in whole brain homogenate. At equally effective alpha 2-antagonising doses in the rat mydriasis model, both drugs stimulated central noradrenaline turnover (as reflected by increase in metabolite levels) to the same extent. Atipamezole increased dopaminergic activity only slightly, whereas yohimbine elevated central dopamine but decreased central 5-hydroxytryptamine turnover rates. In behavioural tests, atipamezole (0.1-10 mg/kg) did not affect motor activity but stimulated food rewarded operant (FR-10) responding (0.03-3 mg/kg) whereas yohimbine both stimulated (1 mg/kg) and decreased (or = 3 mg/kg) behaviour in a narrow dose range in these tests. In the staircase test, both antagonists increased neophobia, but in the two compartment test only yohimbine (or = 3 mg/kg) decreased exploratory behaviour. The dissimilar effects of the antagonists on neurochemistry and behaviour are thought to be caused by non alpha 2-adrenoceptor properties of yohimbine. In conclusion, the alpha 2-antagonist atipamezole blocked all alpha 2-adrenoceptor subtypes at low doses, stimulated central noradrenergic activity and had only slight effects on behaviour under familiar conditions, but increased neophobia. The low affinity for the alpha 2D-adrenoceptor combined with its unspecific effects complicates the use of yohimbine as pharmacological tool to study alpha 2-adrenoceptor physiology and pharmacology.
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Anti-obesity effect of MPV-1743 AIII, a novel imidazoline derivative, in genetic obesity
- Author
-
Markku Koulu, Atso Raasmaja, Eriika Savontaus, Juha-Matti Savola, Risto Huupponen, Raimo Virtanen, Ullamari Pesonen, and Juha Rouru
- Subjects
Male ,Agonist ,Mydriatics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.drug_class ,Imidazoline receptor ,Adipose tissue ,In Vitro Techniques ,Biology ,Weight Gain ,Guanosine Diphosphate ,Cell Line ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,Eating ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Adipose Tissue, Brown ,Receptors, Adrenergic, alpha-2 ,Receptors, Adrenergic, alpha-1 ,Internal medicine ,Brown adipose tissue ,medicine ,Animals ,Uncoupling protein ,Obesity ,RNA, Messenger ,Receptor ,IC50 ,Adrenergic alpha-Antagonists ,030304 developmental biology ,Cerebral Cortex ,Pharmacology ,0303 health sciences ,Binding Sites ,Imidazoles ,Adrenergic alpha-2 Receptor Antagonists ,Rats ,Rats, Zucker ,3. Good health ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Indenes ,Female ,Anti-Obesity Agents ,Thermogenesis ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Protein Binding - Abstract
MPV-1743 A III ((+/-)-4-(5-fluoro-2,3-dihydro-1H-inden-2-yl)-1H-imidazole) is a novel imidazoline derivative. In this study, it was shown to bind with high affinity to alpha2-adrenoceptor subtypes alpha2A (IC50) = 0.66 +/- 0.06 nM), alpha2B (IC50) = 3.8 +/- 0.53 nM), alpha2C (IC50) = 3.1 +/- 0.61 nM) in the recombinant S115 cells and to alpha2D (IC50 = 0.94 +/- 0.10 nM) in the rat submandibular gland. MPV-1743 A III also showed remarkably high affinity to alpha1-adrenoceptors (IC50 = 150 +/- 12 nM) in the rat cerebral cortex and to imidazoline I2b-binding sites (IC50) = 150 +/- 5.0 nM) in the rat liver. The functional alpha2-adrenoceptor antagonistic effect of MPV-1743 A III was demonstrated by studying the ability of orally administered MPV-1743 A III to reverse and prevent the alpha2-adrenoceptor agonist detomidine-induced mydriasis in rat. The anti-obesity effect of MPV-1743 A III was investigated in genetically obese (fa/fa) Zucker rats in two different phases of obesity. Chronic treatment with MPV-1743 A III (0.3 3 mg/kg per day p.o. for 3 weeks) dose dependently decreased weight gain in early-phase obesity. In fully established obesity, GDP binding to mitochondria and expression of uncoupling protein mRNA were increased in brown adipose tissue by MPV-1743 A III indicating an activation of non-shivering thermogenesis. The present study shows that MPV- 1743 A III has a modest anti-obesity effect in the genetic rodent model of obesity. The relative importance of alpha2- and alpha1-adrenoceptors and imidazoline I2b-binding sites in mediating the effects of MPV-1743 A III needs further evaluation.
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Different apparent modes of inhibition of α2A-adrenoceptor by α2-adrenoceptor antagonists
- Author
-
Christian C Jansson, Vic Cockcroft, Juha-Matti Savola, Siegfried Wurster, Karl E.O. Åkerman, Jyrki P. Kukkonen, and Ge Huifang
- Subjects
Agonist ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.drug_class ,Tritium ,Dissociation (chemistry) ,Idazoxan ,Receptors, Adrenergic, alpha-2 ,Internal medicine ,Tumor Cells, Cultured ,medicine ,Humans ,Adrenergic alpha-Antagonists ,Pharmacology ,Chemistry ,Adrenergic alpha-2 Receptor Antagonists ,Antagonist ,Yohimbine ,Dissociation constant ,Endocrinology ,Mechanism of action ,Biophysics ,medicine.symptom ,Quinolizines ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The inhibition of alpha2A-adrenoceptor-mediated Ca2+ elevation by alpha2-adrenoceptor antagonists was measured in HEL human erythroleukemia cells. The antagonists could be divided in two classes: those that displayed surmountable inhibition (right-shift of the agonist dose-response curve), and those that displayed different degrees of insurmountable inhibition (depression of the maximum signal and a possible right-shift of the agonist dose-response curve). The degree of surmountability of the inhibition correlated well with the measured antagonist dissociation rates, suggesting that the hypothesis of the antagonist dissociation rate governing the mode of inhibition of fast responses, holds true. HEL cells thus provide a useful model system for the investigation of physiological consequences of different dissociation rates. Also, the dissociation rates of antagonists not available in radiolabelled form can be predicted from the functional data. The data stresses the importance of measurement of kinetic parameters of the drug-receptor interaction in addition to the equilibrium binding constants.
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. [3H]Dexmedetomidine, an α2-adrenoceptor agonist, detects a novel imidazole binding site in adult rat spinal cord
- Author
-
Juha-Matti Savola and Maarit K.T. Savola
- Subjects
Male ,Agonist ,Benzylamines ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.drug_class ,Receptors, Drug ,Central nervous system ,Imidazoline receptor ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,Adrenergic Agents ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Radioligand ,Animals ,Neurotoxin ,Dexmedetomidine ,Binding site ,Receptor ,Cerebral Cortex ,Pharmacology ,Chemistry ,Imidazoles ,Medetomidine ,Rats ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Spinal Cord ,Female ,Adrenergic alpha-Agonists ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Binding properties of [3H]dexmedetomidine [(+)-(S)-4-[1-(2,3-dimethylphenyl)ethyl]-1H-imidazole] as an agonist-type radioligand for alpha 2-adrenoceptors were characterised for the first time in tissues relevant to its analgesic (spinal cord from neonatal or adult rats) and behavioural (rat cerebral cortex) actions. In membranes of rat cerebral cortex (KdHigh 0.2 +/- 0.03 nM, KdLow 8.8 +/- 1.4 nM with Bmax High 130 +/- 11 fmol/mg protein, RHigh 16%) and neonatal spinal cord (KdHigh 0.3 +/- 0.04 nM, KdLow 14 +/- 3.7 nM with Bmax High 290 +/- 40 fmol/mg protein, RHigh 25%) Gpp(NH)p modifies the biphasic binding to monophasic and binding is competed with specifically by alpha 2-adrenoceptor compounds. Binding to rat cerebral cortex is not modified by pretreatment with the noradrenergic neurotoxin, DSP-4 (N-(2-chloroethyl)-N-ethyl-2-bromobenzylamine). In contrast, [3H]dexmedetomidine binding to adult rat spinal cord membranes is more complex and both saturation analysis and competition experiments indicate the presence of a non-adrenergic component of binding (about 40% of total binding) which is sensitive to imidazole-type compounds. This non-adrenergic component of [3H]dexmedetomidine binding can be defined as a novel type of imidazole binding site such that, of the imidazoline I1 or I2 receptor ligands, only cimetidine has relatively high affinity. In conclusion, [3H]dexmedetomidine shows very complex binding characteristics that limit its use as an agonist-type radioligand for alpha 2-adrenoceptors but it may be a useful tool for imidazoline receptor characterisation.
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.