Nedosiran Safety and Efficacy in PH1: Interim Analysis of PHYOX3
Jaap W. Groothoff, Anne‐Laure Sellier‐Leclerc, Lisa J. Deesker, Justine Bacchetta, Gesa Schalk, Burkhard Tönshoff, Graham Lipkin, Sandrine Lemoine, Thomas Bowman, Jing Zhou, Bernd Höppe
Abstract
Introduction: Primary hyperoxaluria (PH) is a rare genetic disorder of hepatic glyoxylate metabolism. Nedosiran is an RNA interference (RNAi) therapeutic that the US Food and Drug Administration has approved for treatment of PH1. PHYOX3 is a trial evaluating monthly nedosiran in patients with PH. Methods: In this PHYOX3 interim analysis, participants with PH1 who continued from a single-dose nedosiran trial (PHYOX1), with no previous kidney or liver transplantation, dialysis, or evidence of systemic oxalosis were eligible. The safety and efficacy of once-monthly nedosiran was assessed over 30 months. Results: ) to month 30. Mean 24-hour urinary oxalate (Uox) excretion showed a sustained reduction from baseline of ≥60% at every visit (months 2-30). From month 2, at least 10 of 13 (76.9%) participants achieved normal (<0.46 mmol/24h; upper limit of assay-normal [ULN]) or near-normal (≥0.46 to <0.60 mmol/24h; ≥ULN to <1.3 × ULN) 24-hour Uox excretion. All participants experienced ≥1 adverse event (AE), mostly mild or moderate in severity (primarily, injection site events). Three serious, not treatment-related AEs were reported; there were no deaths or study discontinuations due to AEs. Conclusion: Nedosiran was well-tolerated in patients with PH1, and treatment resulted in a sustained, substantial reduction in Uox excretion for at least 30 months in this long-term study. No safety signals have been identified to date. The PHYOX3 study is ongoing.