Abstract

In Gaucher disease (GD), genetic deficiency of acid β-glucosidase leads to accumulation of its substrate glucosylceramide (GlcCer) and glucosylsphingosine (GlcSph). Lipid-laden cells, most prominently seen as macrophages engorged with GlcCer and GlcSph-laden lysosomes, trigger chronic metabolic inflammation and multisystemic phenotypes. Among the pleiotropic effects of inflammatory cascades, the induction of glucosylceramide synthase accentuates the primary metabolic defect. First-line therapies for adults with GD type 1 include Enzyme Replacement Therapy (ERT) and eliglustat Substrate Reduction Therapy (SRT). The ENCORE phase 3 clinical trial of eliglustat demonstrated non-inferiority compared to ERT. It is not known whether switching stable patients from long-term ERT to SRT results in the incremental reversal of the disease phenotype and its surrogate indicators. Herein, we report real-world experience from a single tertiary referral center of 38 adult GD type 1 patients, stable on long-term ERT (mean 13.3 years), who switched to eliglustat SRT (mean 3.1 years). After switch to SRT, there was significant reduction in spleen volume (P = 0.003) while liver volume, which was normal at baseline, remained unchanged. Platelet counts increased significantly (P = 0.026). Concomitantly, there was reduction of three validated biomarkers of Gaucher disease activity: plasma GlcSph decreased from 63.7 ng/ml (95% CI, 37.6-89.8) to 26.1 ng/ml (95% CI, 15.7-36.6) (P < 0.0001); chitotriosidase fell from 1136.6 nmol/ml/h (95% CI, 144.7-2128.6) to 466.9 nmol/ml/h (95% CI, 209.9-723.9) (P = 0.002); and glycoprotein non-metastatic melanoma B (gpNMB) decreased from 59.3 ng/ml (95% CI, 39.7-78.9) to 43.6 ng/ml (95% CI, 30.7-56.6) (P = 0.0006). There were no episodes of avascular necrosis or fractures in patients on SRT. Patients reported favorable experiences of switching from alternate week infusions to oral therapy. Collectively, these results demonstrate that the switch to eliglustat SRT from ERT leads to incremental response, even in stable patients after long-term ERT.

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