Title

Efficacy Study of Epoetin Alfa in Friedreich Ataxia
A Double-blind, Randomized, Placebo-controlled, Clinical Trial to Test the Efficacy of Epoetin Alfa on Physical Performance of Friedreich Ataxia Patients.
  • Phase

    Phase 2
  • Study Type

    Interventional
  • Status

    Completed No Results Posted
  • Intervention/Treatment

    epoetin ...
  • Study Participants

    56
Friedreich's ataxia (FRDA) is a rare genetic disorder characterised by severe neurological disability and cardiomyopathy. Friedreich's ataxia is the consequence of frataxin deficiency. Although several drugs have been proposed, there is no available treatment. Four trials recently demonstrated that erythropoietin can increase the intracellular levels of frataxin. The present project is aimed at testing a long term therapeutic approach using erythropoietin, which is an already available and commercialised drug. The study will test the effect of erythropoietin on exercise capacity, which is reduced in patients with FRDA. Additional objectives of the study will be the drug's safety and tolerability, and its effect on frataxin, blood vessel reactivity, heart functional indexes, and disease progression.
Friedreich's ataxia (FA) is an autosomal recessive ataxia caused by a trinucleotide GAA expansion in the first intron of the FXN gene. The gene encodes for a 210aa mitochondrial protein called frataxin, whose mRNA and protein levels are severely reduced in FA. It has been suggested that frataxin is involved in iron-sulphur cluster and heme biogenesis, iron binding/storage, and chaperone activity. Clinically, the age of onset is generally around puberty and, as the disease progresses, there is increasing ataxia of the limbs, and eventually most patients are wheelchair bound by the twenties. Cardiomyopathy with myocardial hypertrophy occurs very often and is the predominant cause of death. Type II diabetes, scoliosis, foot deformities, optic atrophy, and deafness are other relatively frequent symptoms.

Erythropoietin (EPO) is a glycoprotein that acts as a main regulator for erythropoiesis. Evidence suggests that both EPO and its receptor are expressed in the nervous tissue, and neuroprotective effects have been shown in animal models of cerebral ischemic damage. EPO increases frataxin levels in cultured human lymphocytes from FRDA patients. However, frataxin protein increase is not preceded by mRNA increase, suggesting that a post-transcriptional mechanism is involved. To date, four phase II clinical trials have been published regarding the use of EPO in FRDA patients.
Study Started
Jan 31
2013
Primary Completion
Oct 31
2014
Study Completion
Jun 30
2015
Last Update
Aug 11
2015
Estimate

Drug Epoetin alfa

Epoetin alfa will be administered s.c. at 1200 IU/Kg every 12 weeks

  • Other names: EPREX 40000 IU, EPREX 10000 IU

Drug Placebo

Placebo

Epoetin alfa Experimental

Patients will be treated with Epoetin alfa 1200 IU/Kg s.c. every 12 weeks

Placebo Placebo Comparator

Placebo 1200 IU/Kg s.c. every 12 weeks

Criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

Molecular diagnosis of Friedreich Ataxia
Age ≥12 years
Body weight ≥30, ≤90 Kg
SARA score ≤30
Patient able to read and sign the informed consent
Patients able to perform a cardiopulmonary test

Exclusion Criteria:

Treatment with Erythropoietin in the previous 12 months
Treatment with Idebenone
Contraindications to CPET: cardiac valve disease, ischemic cardiomyopathy, atrial fibrillation, asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, other arrhythmias judged as not compatible with exercise.
Any Cardiac and/or Hepatic and/or Renal disease judged as clinically relevant by the investigator
Any clinically relevant ECG abnormalities that may interfere with the study
Any abnormal and clinically relevant laboratory exams at screening visit that may interfere with the trial
Anemia with Hemoglobin <10 g/dL
Positive history for venous and/or arterial thrombosis
Drug-resistant arterial hypertension
Positive history for drug-resistant epilepsy
Patients in treatment with not allowed study drugs (starting from 3 months prior to screening)
Any acute/chronic disease that might interfere with the clinical trial, as judged by the investigator
Hypersensitivity to Epoetin alfa or any other component of the study drug
Patients not able to comply to the study
For female patients (Sexually not active, hysterectomized, sterilized, menopause patients are excluded from the following criteria): pregnancy and/or breastfeeding and/or inadequate contraception.
No Results Posted