current treatment strategies for mitochondrial diseases · 2018-08-01 · elamipretide / bendavia....

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Current Treatment Strategies for Mitochondrial Diseases

Dr Robert Pitceathly

UCL MRC Centre for Neuromuscular Diseases, London

Lily Family Weekend, June 2018

Brain. 2016 Jun; 139(6): 1633–1648.

ClinicalTrials.gov June 2018Interventional Studies | Mitochondrial Disease | Phase 2: 10 active studies

What about now!

What is a treatment?

Anything that improves life quality

Overview

• Pharmacological agents, vitamins and related substances– Underlying disease versus symptoms

– Specific treatable clinical syndromes

• Exercise and dietary modification

• Health surveillance and monitoring

• Emergency plans and acute management

• Actively recruiting UK mitochondrial trials

Pharmacological agents, vitamins and related substances

CoQ10

-lipoic acid

Vitamin C/E

Folate/Folinic acid

L-Arginine/Citrulline

Succinate Idebenone

Creatine

Thiamine

Riboflavin

Carnitine

Vitamins, cofactors and food supplements

Pharmacological agents and vitamins

Treatment for mitochondrial disorders (2012)• 1335 abstracts (1966-2012)

• 12 trials well designed: – Coenzyme Q10

– Creatine

– Creatine/Q10/lipoic acid combo

– Dichloroacetate

– Dimethylglycine

– Cysteine

• No evidence supporting use of any intervention in mitochondrial disorders

Kanabus. Br J Pharmacol. 2014 Apr; 171(8): 1798–1817.

Randomised, double-blinded, placebo-controlled clinical trials in mitochondrial disease

Kanabus. Br J Pharmacol. 2014 Apr; 171(8): 1798–1817.

Randomised, placebo-controlled, double-blind, clinical trials in mitochondrial disease

Kanabus. Br J Pharmacol. 2014 Apr; 171(8): 1798–1817.

Randomised, placebo-controlled, double-blind, clinical trials in mitochondrial disease

Biochim Biophys Acta. 2015 Jun-Jul;1847(6-7):544-57

Reactive oxygen species and their detoxification

Mitochondrial diseases with specific treatment options

Brain. 2017 Feb;140(Pt 2):e11.

Mitochondrial diseases with specific treatment options

Brain. 2017 Feb;140(Pt 2):e11.

Mitochondrial

diseases with

spontaneous

recovery

“Benign” reversible

mitochondrial

myopathy

Acute liver failure

in infancy (TRMU)

Exercise and diet

Exercise• Important for general fitness: exercises muscles and keeps heart and

circulation healthy

• If you become unfit can adversely affect muscles

• In many patients’ muscles there is a mixture of good and badmitochondria; the hope is that exercise can increase the goodmitochondria, boosting the level of ATP so avoiding symptoms

• This remains a theory and there are large trials looking at this idea

• Current advice is to exercise regularly at a level that is comfortable,but without pushing yourself to the point that the muscles becomepainful

Dietary modification

• Ketogenic (high fat / low carbohydrate) diet: promotes formation of ketone bodies (via FAO)

• Ketone bodies:

– Alternative energy source for brain, heart and muscle

– Associated with OXPHOS gene expression (akin to starvation)

– Possibly stimulate mitochondrial biogenesis

• No randomized, double-blinded trial data

• PDH deficiency

• Seizures

• Dietetic supervision!

Health surveillance and monitoring

Clinical variability

Diabetes

FatigueMyopathy

Exercise intolerance

Peripheral neuropathy

Deafness

Stroke / Seizures Developmental DelayMovement Disorders

Respiratory Failure

Cardiomyopathy Conduction Defects

Short statureMarrow Failure

Liver / Renal FailureDysphagiaGut dysmotility

Hypothyroidism

PtosisOptic AtrophyRetinitis PigmentosaCataracts

Surveillance = early treatment

DietDrugsInsulinEnzymes

CoQ10/exercisePT/OT/exercise

Energy conservation

Foot careOrthoticsSurgery

Hearing aidsCochlear implants

AEDsBotox and drugsTendon release DBS

VentilatorsupportDrugs

PPMICDAblationTransplant

Growth hormoneTransfusionTransplant

Dietician SALTPEGLaxativesMicrobiomeDialysisTransplant

PhotocoagulationPtosis surgeryEyelid propsCataract surgeryPrisms

ThyroxineRadioiodineSurgery

Guidelines - http://mitochondrialdisease.nhs.uk

For patients and professionals…

Emergency plans and acute management

Emergency plan

Acute management

• Education and early recognition of warning signs:

– Nausea and vomiting

– Confusion, sleepiness or irritability

– Weakness, numbness or speech problems

– Visual or hearing disturbance

– Seizures

– Severe headaches

– Sudden bowel problems

Acute management

• Seek medical attention early (GP or A&E)

• Ensure any infection treated and well hydrated

• Review medications

• Admit to hospital for:

– Seizure control

– Intravenous fluids (dextrose)

– Intravenous antibiotics

– Correction of acidosis

Actively Recruiting UK Mito Trials

Nicotinamide Riboside

Less mitochondria – less energy

Nucleus containingChromosomes

(blueprint)Mitochondria

(batteries)

Human Cell(the machine)

More mitochondria – more energy

Nucleus containingChromosomes

(blueprint)Mitochondria

(batteries)

Human Cell(the machine)

Nicotinamide Riboside experimental medicine study

UCL and Cambridge

Inclusion criteria:

•PEO plus exercise intolerance/fatigue

•Single mtDNA deletion

•Age 18-70 years

•Signed informed patient consent

Study design:

•Stage I (5 patients): 24 hours study, single dose with overnight stay

•Stage II (10 patients): 4 week study to measure whether NR increases mitochondria in humans; will involve muscle biopsies pre- and post-treatment

Study coordinator:

•Zoe McIntyre

Nicotinamide Riboside experimental medicine study

Nicotinamide Riboside - Lily Funded Research

Elamipretide / Bendavia

An Observational Study of Patients With Primary Mitochondrial Disease (SPIMM-300)

Inclusion Criteria:

•Genetic diagnosis of mitochondrial disease

•Patient can provide informed consent

•Patient 16 and 65 years of age

•Signs or symptoms of mitochondrial myopathy (fatigueability, exercise intolerance, muscle pain)

•Ambulatory and can walk for 6 minutes

An Observational Study of Patients With Primary Mitochondrial Disease (SPIMM-300)

Patient visits and procedures

• 2 questionnaires: fatigue (8Qu) and PMD symptom assessment (9Qu)

• 6MWT

• 3TUG

• 5XSST

• 6 month follow up telephone call

Phase 3 Randomized, Double-Blind, Parallel-Group, Placebo-Controlled Trial to Evaluate

the Efficacy and Safety of Daily Subcutaneous Injections of Elamipretide in Subjects with

Primary Mitochondrial Myopathy Followed by an Open-Label Treatment Extension

UCL and Newcastle

Summary

• Lots of exciting treatments in pipeline – but let’s not forget there’s lots we can do now!

• No clear evidence from trials for current pharmacological agents, vitamins and cofactors – apart from specific scenarios

• Surveillance and treatment of complications and recognition of warning signs crucial

Thank you

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