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Efficacy and safety of givosiran for acute hepatic porphyria: 24-month interim analysis of the randomized phase 3 ENVISION study. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the long-term effectiveness and safety of givosiran in treating acute hepatic porphyria, a condition characterized by toxic levels of heme precursors.
  • It involved an interim analysis of the ENVISION study, where patients either received givosiran or a placebo for six months, followed by an open-label extension.
  • Results showed that givosiran significantly reduced attack frequency, need for hemin treatment, and daily pain severity, while also improving patients' quality of life with an acceptable safety profile.

Article Abstract

Background & Aims: Upregulation of hepatic delta-aminolevulinic acid synthase 1 with accumulation of potentially toxic heme precursors delta-aminolevulinic acid and porphobilinogen is fundamental to the pathogenesis of acute hepatic porphyria.

Aims: evaluate long-term efficacy and safety of givosiran in acute hepatic porphyria.

Methods: Interim analysis of ongoing ENVISION study (NCT03338816), after all active patients completed their Month 24 visit. Patients with acute hepatic porphyria (≥12 years) with recurrent attacks received givosiran (2.5 mg/kg monthly) (n = 48) or placebo (n = 46) for 6 months (double-blind period); 93 received givosiran (2.5 mg or 1.25 mg/kg monthly) in the open-label extension (continuous givosiran, n = 47/48; placebo crossover, n = 46/46). Endpoints included annualized attack rate, urinary delta-aminolevulinic acid and porphobilinogen levels, hemin use, daily worst pain, quality of life, and adverse events.

Results: Patients receiving continuous givosiran had sustained annualized attack rate reduction (median 1.0 in double-blind period, 0.0 in open-label extension); in placebo crossover patients, median annualized attack rate decreased from 10.7 to 1.4. Median annualized days of hemin use were 0.0 (double-blind period) and 0.0 (open-label extension) for continuous givosiran patients and reduced from 14.98 to 0.71 for placebo crossover patients. Long-term givosiran led to sustained lowering of delta-aminolevulinic acid and porphobilinogen and improvements in daily worst pain and quality of life. Safety findings were consistent with the double-blind period.

Conclusions: Long-term givosiran has an acceptable safety profile and significantly benefits acute hepatic porphyria patients with recurrent attacks by reducing attack frequency, hemin use, and severity of daily worst pain while improving quality of life.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9299194PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/liv.15090DOI Listing

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