Iptacopan for the treatment of paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria.

Expert Opin Pharmacother

Department of Hematology and Oncology, Institute for Translational Oncology Research at Prisma Health, Greenville, SC, USA.

Published: December 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Standard first-line treatments for PNH involve anti-C5 therapies like eculizumab and ravulizumab, but these can lead to persistent anemia and quality of life issues due to frequent infusions.
  • Iptacopan, a new oral medication targeting complement factor B, showed promising results in phase 3 trials (APPLY-PNH and APPOINT-PNH), improving hemoglobin levels and offering a safe alternative with no major side effects.
  • This oral therapy helps patients avoid infusions, potentially reducing medical costs and enhancing quality of life, while ongoing studies will further evaluate its long-term safety, including risks like infections and thrombosis.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Standard-of-care first-line treatments for paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH) include the anti-C5 therapies eculizumab and ravulizumab. However, persistent anemia, likely due to extravascular hemolysis, and reduced quality of life (QoL) due to frequent infusions remain concerns. Iptacopan is a first-in-class oral proximal complement inhibitor that targets factor B in the alternative pathway (upstream of C5), limiting intravascular and extravascular hemolysis.

Areas Covered: In patients previously treated with anti-C5 therapies or naive to complement inhibitors, iptacopan 200 mg twice daily resulted in clinically meaningful results in the pivotal phase 3 APPLY-PNH (NCT04558918) and APPOINT-PNH (NCT04820530) trials. Treatment with iptacopan was safe, and no treatment-related adverse events led to discontinuation.

Expert Opinion: APPLY-PNH and APPOINT-PNH reported clinically meaningful improvements in hemoglobin, bilirubin, and lactate dehydrogenase levels; transfusion avoidance; reticulocyte count; and fatigue. Iptacopan's safety profile was comparable to other complement inhibitors. Oral iptacopan therapy allows patients to avoid infusions, limit clinical visits, decrease medical costs, improve anemia that persists with other complement inhibitors, and improve QoL. Long-term follow-up will further assess infections, thrombosis, and breakthrough hemolysis. Before treatment, physicians need to discuss current therapeutic options with patients for shared decision-making. Guidelines are being created to assist healthcare professionals in this advancing field.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14656566.2024.2404110DOI Listing

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