Abstract
BackgroundEliglustat is a first-line oral treatment for adults with Gaucher disease type 1 who have an extensive, intermediate or poor CYP2D6 metabolizer phenotype (> 90% of patients). Whereas enzyme replacement therapy for Gaucher disease has been widely used for more than two decades, eliglustat has only been in commercial use since 2014. Clinicians and patients want to better understand which adverse events are most commonly associated with eliglustat, as well as their severity, frequency, and duration.MethodsThis pooled analysis of treatment-emergent adverse events combines data from four completed eliglustat clinical trials involving 393 Gaucher disease type 1 patients. It represents 1400 patient-years of eliglustat exposure and a mean treatment duration of 3.6 years (maximum: 9.3 years).ResultsEighty-one percent of patients remained in their respective trial until commercial availability of eliglustat (US patients only) or until trial completion. Nine patients (2.3%) withdrew from their respective trial due to one or more adverse events reported as eliglustat treatment-related; all but one of these events were mild or moderate. Overall, 97% of adverse events were mild or moderate and 86% were reported by the investigator as unrelated to eliglustat treatment. The overall rate of adverse events decreased over time and did not increase with increasing eliglustat dose. We evaluated frequency, duration, and severity of 14 adverse event terms reported at least once as treatment-related in 2% or more of all patients: dyspepsia (5.9%), headache (5.3%), abdominal pain upper (5.1%), dizziness (5.1%), diarrhea (4.6%), nausea (4.6%), arthralgia (3.6%), constipation (3.3%), abdominal pain (2.8%), gastroesophageal reflux disease (2.8%), fatigue (2.8%), palpitations (2.8%), abdominal distension (2.5%), and gastritis (2.3%). For abdominal pain upper, diarrhea, nausea, abdominal pain, and headache events, median duration was less than 14 days. All 14 adverse event terms, except for arthralgia and headache, were reported only once per patient in more than 70% of patients experiencing the event.ConclusionsThis final pooled analysis of treatment-emergent adverse events reinforces the favorable safety profile of eliglustat. The majority of the most frequently reported treatment-related adverse events were mild or moderate, transient, and occurred only once per patient.
Highlights
Gaucher disease type 1 is a rare lysosomal glycolipid storage disorder arising from inherited mutations in the acid β-glucosidase gene (GBA, OMIM 606463) that result in deficient activity of acid β-glucosidase and accumulation of enzyme substrates in the lysosomes of macrophages [1, 2]
Four clinical trials have been completed in adults with Gaucher disease type 1: two in treatment-naïve patients and two in switch or mostly switch patients previously treated with enzyme replacement therapy (ERT)
These four clinical trials have demonstrated the efficacy of eliglustat for preventing or ameliorating hematologic, visceral, and bone manifestations of Gaucher disease in previously untreated patients and for maintaining clinical stability in patients switching from ERT to eliglustat [8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16]
Summary
Gaucher disease type 1 is a rare lysosomal glycolipid storage disorder arising from inherited mutations in the acid β-glucosidase gene (GBA, OMIM 606463) that result in deficient activity of acid β-glucosidase and accumulation of enzyme substrates (primarily glucosylceramide) in the lysosomes of macrophages [1, 2]. Eliglustat (Cerdelga®, Sanofi Genzyme, Cambridge, MA, USA) is an oral substrate reduction therapy (SRT) approved in more than 55 countries worldwide, including the United States [4] and the European Union [5], as a first-line treatment for adults with Gaucher disease type 1 who have a CYP2D6 extensive, intermediate, or poor metabolizer phenotype, which encompasses more than 90% of patients [6, 7]. Four clinical trials have been completed in adults with Gaucher disease type 1: two in treatment-naïve patients and two in switch or mostly switch patients previously treated with enzyme replacement therapy (ERT). Eliglustat is a first-line oral treatment for adults with Gaucher disease type 1 who have an extensive, intermediate or poor CYP2D6 metabolizer phenotype (> 90% of patients). Clinicians and patients want to better understand which adverse events are most commonly associated with eliglustat, as well as their severity, frequency, and duration
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