Tafamidis polyneuropathy amelioration requires modest increases in transthyretin stability even though increases in plasma native TTR and decreases in non-native TTR do not predict response.
Cecília Monteiro, Jaleh S Mesgarzadeh, João Anselmo, Joana Fernandes, Marta Novais, Carla Rodrigues, David L Powers, Evan T Powers, Teresa Coelho, Jeffery W Kelly
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: TTR aggregation causes hereditary transthyretin (TTR) polyneuropathy (ATTRv-PN) in individuals with destabilised TTR variants. ATTRv-PN can be treated with ligands that bind TTR and prevent aggregation. One such ligand, tafamidis, is widely approved to treat ATTRv-PN. We explore how TTR stabilisation markers relate to clinical efficacy in 210 ATTRv-PN patients taking tafamidis.
Methods: TTR concentration in patient plasma was measured before and after tafamidis treatment using assays for native or combined native + non-native TTR. TTR tetramer dissociation kinetics, which are slowed by tafamidis binding, were also measured.
Results: Native TTR levels increased by 56.8% while combined native + non-native TTR levels increased by 3.1% after 24 months of tafamidis treatment, implying that non-native TTR decreased. Accordingly, the fraction of native TTR increased from 0.54 to 0.71 with tafamidis administration. Changes in native and non-native TTR levels were uncorrelated with clinical response to tafamidis. TTR tetramer dissociation generally slowed to an extent consistent with ∼40% of TTR being tafamidis-bound. Male non-responders had a lower extent of binding.
Conclusions: Native and non-native TTR concentration changes cannot be used as surrogate measures for therapeutic efficacy. Also, successful tafamidis therapy requires only moderate TTR stabilisation. Male patients may benefit from higher tafamidis doses.
期刊介绍:
Amyloid: the Journal of Protein Folding Disorders is dedicated to the study of all aspects of the protein groups and associated disorders that are classified as the amyloidoses as well as other disorders associated with abnormal protein folding. The journals major focus points are:
etiology,
pathogenesis,
histopathology,
chemical structure,
nature of fibrillogenesis;
whilst also publishing papers on the basic and chemical genetic aspects of many of these disorders.
Amyloid is recognised as one of the leading publications on amyloid protein classifications and the associated disorders, as well as clinical studies on all aspects of amyloid related neurodegenerative diseases and major clinical studies on inherited amyloidosis, especially those related to transthyretin. The Journal also publishes book reviews, meeting reports, editorials, thesis abstracts, review articles and symposia in the various areas listed above.