Journal article

Efficacy and Safety of N-Acetyl-l-Leucine in Children and Adults With GM2 Gangliosidoses


Authors listMartakis, Kyriakos; Claassen, Jens; Gascon-Bayari, Jordi; Goldschagg, Nicolina; Hahn, Andreas; Hassan, Anhar; Hennig, Anita; Jones, Simon; Kay, Richard; Lau, Heather; Perlman, Susan; Sharma, Reena; Schneider, Susanne; Bremova-Ertl, Tatiana

Publication year2023

PagesE1072-E1083

JournalNeurology

Volume number100

Issue number10

ISSN0028-3878

eISSN1526-632X

Open access statusGreen

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1212/WNL.0000000000201660

PublisherLippincott, Williams & Wilkins


Abstract
Background and Objectives GM2 gangliosidoses (Tay-Sachs and Sandhoff diseases) are rare, autosomal recessive, neurodegenerative diseases with no available symptomatic or disease-modifying treatments. This clinical trial investigated N-acetyl-l-leucine (NALL), an orally administered, modified amino acid in pediatric (>= 6 years) and adult patients with GM2 gangliosidoses.Methods In this phase IIb, multinational, open-label, rater-blinded study (IB1001-202), male and female patients aged >= 6 years with a genetically confirmed diagnosis of GM2 gangliosidoses received orally administered NALL for a 6-week treatment period (4 g/d in patients >= 13 years, weight-tiered doses for patients 6-12 years), followed by a 6-week posttreatment washout period. For the primary Clinical Impression of Change in Severity analysis, patient performance on a predetermined primary anchor test (the 8-Meter Walk Test or the 9-Hole Peg Test) at baseline, after 6 weeks on NALL, and again after a 6-week washout period was videoed and evaluated centrally by blinded raters. Secondary outcomes included assessments of ataxia, clinical global impression, and quality of life.Results Thirty patients between the age of 6 and 55 years were enrolled. Twenty-nine had an on-treatment assessment and were included in the primary modified intention-to-treat analysis. The study met its CI-CS primary end point (mean difference 0.71, SD = 2.09, 90% CI 0.00, 1.50, p = 0.039), as well as secondary measures of ataxia and global impression. NALL was safe and well tolerated, with no serious adverse reactions.Discussion Treatment with NALL was associated with statistically significant and clinically relevant changes in functioning and quality of life in patients with GM2 gangliosidosis. NALL was safe and well tolerated, contributing to an overall favorable risk:benefit profile. NALL is a promising, easily administered (oral) therapeutic option for these rare, debilitating diseases with immense unmet medical needs.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleMartakis, K., Claassen, J., Gascon-Bayari, J., Goldschagg, N., Hahn, A., Hassan, A., et al. (2023) Efficacy and Safety of N-Acetyl-l-Leucine in Children and Adults With GM2 Gangliosidoses, Neurology, 100(10), pp. E1072-E1083. https://doi.org/10.1212/WNL.0000000000201660

APA Citation styleMartakis, K., Claassen, J., Gascon-Bayari, J., Goldschagg, N., Hahn, A., Hassan, A., Hennig, A., Jones, S., Kay, R., Lau, H., Perlman, S., Sharma, R., Schneider, S., & Bremova-Ertl, T. (2023). Efficacy and Safety of N-Acetyl-l-Leucine in Children and Adults With GM2 Gangliosidoses. Neurology. 100(10), E1072-E1083. https://doi.org/10.1212/WNL.0000000000201660



Keywords


DL-LEUCINE

Last updated on 2025-10-06 at 11:52