Children (Aug 2024)

A Pilot Phase 2 Randomized Trial to Evaluate the Safety and Potential Efficacy of Etravirine in Friedreich Ataxia Patients

  • Gabriella Paparella,
  • Cristina Stragà,
  • Nicola Pesenti,
  • Valentina Dal Molin,
  • Gian Antonio Martorel,
  • Vasco Merotto,
  • Cristina Genova,
  • Arianna Piazza,
  • Giuseppe Piccoli,
  • Elena Panzeri,
  • Alessandra Rufini,
  • Roberto Testi,
  • Andrea Martinuzzi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/children11080958
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 8
p. 958

Abstract

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Background: A drug repositioning effort supported the possible use of the anti-HIV drug etravirine as a disease-modifying drug for Friedreich ataxia (FRDA). Etravirine increases frataxin protein and corrects the biochemical defects in cells derived from FRDA patients. Because of these findings, and since etravirine displays a favorable safety profile, we conducted a pilot open-label phase 2 clinical trial assessing the safety and potential efficacy of etravirine in FRDA patients. Methods: Thirty-five patients were stratified into three severity groups and randomized to etravirine 200 mg/day or 400 mg/day. They were treated for 4 months. Safety endpoints were the number and type of adverse events and number of dropouts. Efficacy endpoints were represented by changes in peak oxygen uptake and workload as measured by incremental exercise test, SARA score, cardiac measures, measures of QoL and disability. Data were collected 4 months before the start of the treatment (T − 4), at the start (T0), at the end (T4) and 4 months after the termination of the treatment (T + 4). Results: Etravirine was reasonably tolerated, and adverse events were generally mild. Four months of etravirine treatment did not significantly increase the peak oxygen uptake but was associated with a change in the progression of the SARA score (p value p value = 0.021). No changes in the cardiac measures were observed. Health and QoL measures showed a worsening at the suspension of the drug. Conclusions: In this open trial etravirine treatment was safe, reasonably well tolerated and appreciably improved neurological function and exercise performance. Even though a placebo effect cannot be ruled out, these results suggest that etravirine may represent a potential therapeutic agent in FRDA deserving testing in a randomized placebo-controlled clinical trial.

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