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Investigation of ALPL variant states and clinical outcomes: An analysis of adults and adolescents with hypophosphatasia treated with asfotase alfa.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Kishnani, PS; Del Angel, G; Zhou, S; Rush, ET
Published in: Mol Genet Metab
May 2021

BACKGROUND: Hypophosphatasia (HPP), a rare metabolic disease, can be inherited in an autosomal recessive (biallelic) or an autosomal dominant (monoallelic) manner. Most of the severe, early-onset, frequently lethal HPP in infants is acquired through recessive inheritance; less severe, later-onset, typically nonlethal HPP phenotypes are acquired through either dominant or recessive inheritance. HPP's variable clinical presentation arises from >400 identified ALPL pathogenic variants with likely variable penetrance, especially with autosomal dominant inheritance. This post hoc analysis investigated the relationship between ALPL variant state (biallelic and monoallelic) and clinical outcomes with asfotase alfa in HPP. METHODS: Data were pooled from two phase 2, randomized, open-label studies in adolescents and adults with HPP; one study evaluated the efficacy and safety of different doses of asfotase alfa (n = 25), and the other assessed the pharmacodynamics and safety of asfotase alfa (n = 19). Patients were grouped by ALPL variant state (biallelic or monoallelic). Available data from both studies included ALPL pathogenic variant state, Baseline characteristics, HPP-specific medical history, and Baseline TNSALP substrate levels (inorganic pyrophosphate [PPi] and pyridoxal 5'-phosphate [PLP]) concentrations). Clinical outcomes over 5 years of treatment were available from only the efficacy and safety study. RESULTS: In total, 44 patients with known variant status were included in the pooled analysis (biallelic, n = 30; monoallelic, n = 14). The most common pathogenic variant was c.571G > A (p.Glu191Lys) in biallelic patients (allele frequency: 19/60) and c.1133A > T (p.Asp378Val) in monoallelic patients (allele frequency: 7/28). Median (min, max) Baseline PPi concentrations were significantly higher in patients with a biallelic vs monoallelic variant state (5.3 [2.2, 12.1] vs 4.3 [3.5, 7.4] μM; P = 0.0113), as were Baseline PLP concentrations (221.4 [62.4, 1590.0] vs 75.1 [28.8, 577.0] ng/mL; P= 0.0022). HPP-specific medical history was generally similar between biallelic and monoallelic patients in terms of incidence and type of manifestations; notable exceptions included fractures, which were more common among monoallelic patients, and delayed walking and bone deformities such as abnormally shaped chest and head and bowing of arms or legs, which were more common among biallelic patients. Data from the efficacy and safety study (n = 19) showed that median PPi and PLP concentrations were normalized over 5 years of treatment in patients with both variant states. Median % predicted distance walked on the 6-Minute Walk Test remained within the normal range for monoallelic patients over 4 years of treatment, and improved from below normal (<84%) to normal in biallelic patients. CONCLUSIONS: Although patients with biallelic variants had significantly higher Baseline PPi and PLP levels than monoallelic variants, both groups generally showed similar pretreatment Baseline clinical characteristics. Treatment with asfotase alfa for up to 5 years normalized TNSALP substrate concentrations and improved functional outcomes, with no clear differences between biallelic and monoallelic variant states. This study suggests that patients with HPP have significant disease burden, regardless of ALPL variant state.

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Published In

Mol Genet Metab

DOI

EISSN

1096-7206

Publication Date

May 2021

Volume

133

Issue

1

Start / End Page

113 / 121

Location

United States

Related Subject Headings

  • Young Adult
  • Treatment Outcome
  • Recombinant Fusion Proteins
  • Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic
  • Male
  • Immunoglobulin G
  • Hypophosphatasia
  • Humans
  • Genetics & Heredity
  • Genes, Recessive
 

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Kishnani, P. S., Del Angel, G., Zhou, S., & Rush, E. T. (2021). Investigation of ALPL variant states and clinical outcomes: An analysis of adults and adolescents with hypophosphatasia treated with asfotase alfa. Mol Genet Metab, 133(1), 113–121. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ymgme.2021.03.011
Kishnani, Priya S., Guillermo Del Angel, Shanggen Zhou, and Eric T. Rush. “Investigation of ALPL variant states and clinical outcomes: An analysis of adults and adolescents with hypophosphatasia treated with asfotase alfa.Mol Genet Metab 133, no. 1 (May 2021): 113–21. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ymgme.2021.03.011.
Kishnani, Priya S., et al. “Investigation of ALPL variant states and clinical outcomes: An analysis of adults and adolescents with hypophosphatasia treated with asfotase alfa.Mol Genet Metab, vol. 133, no. 1, May 2021, pp. 113–21. Pubmed, doi:10.1016/j.ymgme.2021.03.011.
Journal cover image

Published In

Mol Genet Metab

DOI

EISSN

1096-7206

Publication Date

May 2021

Volume

133

Issue

1

Start / End Page

113 / 121

Location

United States

Related Subject Headings

  • Young Adult
  • Treatment Outcome
  • Recombinant Fusion Proteins
  • Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic
  • Male
  • Immunoglobulin G
  • Hypophosphatasia
  • Humans
  • Genetics & Heredity
  • Genes, Recessive