AI Article Synopsis

  • Hemophilia B is an X-linked bleeding disorder caused by mutations in the FIX gene, necessitating continuous FIX replacement therapy, often through complex intravenous methods.
  • This study focused on improving new rIX-FP variants, specifically R338L and R338L/E410K, to enhance their effectiveness and explore their potential for subcutaneous administration.
  • Results showed that the R338L variant had 4-5 times greater specific activity and was effective in reducing bleeding, requiring significantly lower protein amounts compared to standard treatments.

Article Abstract

Background: The X-linked bleeding disorder hemophilia B, caused by mutation(s) in the coagulation factor (F)IX gene, leads to partial or total loss of its function, requiring lifelong FIX replacement therapy. Although new recombinant FIX (rIX) therapeutics like albumin fusion proteins (rIX-FP) enable longer plasma half-life and thus less frequent administration, the complexity of intravenous (i.v.) injection remains.

Objectives: The study aimed to characterize rIX-FP variants with anticipated enhanced specific activity, which would leverage rIX-FP's superior pharmacokinetic profile with beneficial characteristics for subcutaneous (s.c.) administration.

Methods: Two rIX-FP variants, R338L ("Padua variant") and R338L/E410K, were characterized in vitro. Pharmacokinetic profiles of FIX antigen and activity levels were evaluated in FIX-deficient mice after i.v. and s.c. administration of these variants (dosing based on antigen levels). The efficacy of the most promising variant was tested after i.v. and s.c. administration (dosing based on activity) in a tail clip bleeding model. A marketed wild-type (WT) rIX-FP product served as the comparator.

Results: Both rIX-FP variants showed a 4- to 5-fold increase in specific activity in vitro compared with rIX(WT)-FP, while FXIa-mediated activation was the fastest for rIX(WT)-FP and rIX(R338L)-FP. Compared with rIX(WT)-FP and rIX(R338L/E410K)-FP, rIX(R338L)-FP exhibited higher FIX activity exposure after i.v. and s.c. administration and demonstrated comparable efficacy with rIX(WT)-FP in reducing bleeding time and blood loss in FIX-deficient mice requiring ∼4 times lower protein amount.

Conclusion: rIX(R338L)-FP was shown to be a promising candidate for s.c. administration, exhibiting increased specific activity combined with higher activity-based exposure and indicating efficacy at a lower protein dose.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jtha.2024.07.007DOI Listing

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