PLoS ONE (Jan 2015)

Safety and Proof-of-Concept Study of Oral QLT091001 in Retinitis Pigmentosa Due to Inherited Deficiencies of Retinal Pigment Epithelial 65 Protein (RPE65) or Lecithin:Retinol Acyltransferase (LRAT).

  • Hendrik P N Scholl,
  • Anthony T Moore,
  • Robert K Koenekoop,
  • Yuquan Wen,
  • Gerald A Fishman,
  • L Ingeborgh van den Born,
  • Ava Bittner,
  • Kristen Bowles,
  • Emily C Fletcher,
  • Frederick T Collison,
  • Gislin Dagnelie,
  • Simona Degli Eposti,
  • Michel Michaelides,
  • David A Saperstein,
  • Ronald A Schuchard,
  • Claire Barnes,
  • Wadih Zein,
  • Ditta Zobor,
  • David G Birch,
  • Janine D Mendola,
  • Eberhart Zrenner,
  • RET IRD 01 Study Group

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0143846
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 12
p. e0143846

Abstract

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UNLABELLED:Restoring vision in inherited retinal degenerations remains an unmet medical need. In mice exhibiting a genetically engineered block of the visual cycle, vision was recently successfully restored by oral administration of 9-cis-retinyl acetate (QLT091001). Safety and visual outcomes of a once-daily oral dose of 40 mg/m2/day QLT091001 for 7 consecutive days was investigated in an international, multi-center, open-label, proof-of-concept study in 18 patients with RPE65- or LRAT-related retinitis pigmentosa. Eight of 18 patients (44%) showed a ≥20% increase and 4 of 18 (22%) showed a ≥40% increase in functional retinal area determined from Goldmann visual fields; 12 (67%) and 5 (28%) of 18 patients showed a ≥5 and ≥10 ETDRS letter score increase of visual acuity, respectively, in one or both eyes at two or more visits within 2 months of treatment. In two patients who underwent fMRI, a significant positive response was measured to stimuli of medium contrast, moving, pattern targets in both left and right hemispheres of the occipital cortex. There were no serious adverse events. Treatment-related adverse events were transient and the most common included headache, photophobia, nausea, vomiting, and minor biochemical abnormalities. Measuring the outer segment length of the photoreceptor layer with high-definition optical coherence tomography was highly predictive of treatment responses with responders having a significantly larger baseline outer segment thickness (11.7 ± 4.8 μm, mean ± 95% CI) than non-responders (3.5 ± 1.2 μm). This structure-function relationship suggests that treatment with QLT091001 is more likely to be efficacious if there is sufficient photoreceptor integrity. TRIAL REGISTRATION:ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01014052.