Pridopidine in Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis: The HEALEY ALS Platform Trial.

Journal: Jama
Published:
Abstract

Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a fatal disease. The sigma-1 (σ1) receptor emerged as a target for intervention. To determine the effects of pridopidine, a σ1-receptor agonist, in ALS. Pridopidine was tested as a regimen of the HEALEY ALS Platform Trial, a phase 2/3, multicenter, randomized, double-blind, platform trial. The study was conducted at 54 sites in the US from January 2021 to July 2022 (final follow-up, July 14, 2022). A total of 163 participants with ALS were randomized to receive pridopidine or placebo. An additional 122 concurrently randomized participants were assigned to receive placebo in other regimens and included in the analyses. Eligible participants were randomized 3:1 to receive oral pridopidine 45 mg twice daily (n = 121) or matching oral placebo (n = 42) for a planned duration of 24 weeks. The primary efficacy outcome was change from baseline through week 24 in ALS disease severity, analyzed using a bayesian shared parameter model, which has components for function (Revised Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis Functional Rating Scale [ALSFRS-R]) and survival that were linked through an integrated estimate of treatment-dependent disease slowing across these 2 components. This was denoted as the disease rate ratio (DRR), with DRR less than 1 indicating a slowing in disease progression on pridopidine relative to placebo. There were 5 key secondary end points: time to 2-point or greater reduction in ALSFRS-R total score among participants with bulbar dysfunction at baseline, rate of decline in slow vital capacity among participants with bulbar dysfunction at baseline, percentage of participants with no worsening in the ALSFRS-R bulbar domain score, time to 1-point or greater change in the ALSFRS-R bulbar domain score, and time to death or permanent assisted ventilation. Among 162 patients (mean age, 57.5 years; 35% female) who were randomized to receive the pridopidine regimen and included in the primary efficacy analysis, 136 (84%) completed the trial. In the primary analysis comparing pridopidine vs the combined placebo groups, there was no significant difference between pridopidine and placebo in the primary end point (DRR, 0.99 [95% credible interval, 0.80-1.21]; probability of DRR <1, 0.55) and no differences were seen in the components of ALSFRS-R or survival. There was no benefit of pridopidine on the secondary end points. In the safety dataset (pridopidine, n = 121; placebo, n = 163), the most common adverse events were falls (28.1% vs 29.3%, respectively) and muscular weakness (24.0% vs 31.7%, respectively). In this 24-week study, pridopidine did not impact the progression of ALS. ClinicalTrials.gov Identifiers: NCT04297683, NCT04615923.

Authors
Björn Oskarsson, Eric Macklin, Lori Chibnik, Melanie Quintana, Benjamin Saville, Michelle Detry, Matteo Vestrucci, Joe Marion, Anna Mcglothlin, Terry Heiman Patterson, Marianne Chase, Lindsay Pothier, Brittney Harkey, Hong Yu, Alexander Sherman, Meghan Hall, Gale Kittle, James Berry, Suma Babu, Jinsy Andrews, Derek D'agostino, Eric Tustison, Erica Scirocco, Elisa Giacomelli, Gustavo Alameda, Eduardo Locatelli, Doreen Ho, Adam Quick, Senda Ajroud Driss, Jonathan Katz, Daragh Heitzman, Stanley Appel, Sheetal Shroff, Kevin Felice, Nicholas Maragakis, Zachary Simmons, Timothy Miller, Nicholas Olney, Michael Weiss, Stephen Goutman, Joseph Fernandes, Omar Jawdat, Margaret Owegi, Laura Foster, Tuan Vu, Hristelina Ilieva, Daniel Newman, Ximena Arcila Londono, Carlayne Jackson, Shafeeq Ladha, James Caress, Andrea Swenson, Amanda Peltier, Richard Lewis, Dominic Fee, Matthew Elliott, Richard Bedlack, Edward Kasarskis, Lauren Elman, Jeffrey Rosenfeld, David Walk, Courtney Mcilduff, Paul Twydell, Eufrosina Young, Kristin Johnson, Kourosh Rezania, Namita Goyal, Jeffrey Cohen, Michael Benatar, Vovanti Jones, Jaimin Shah, Said Beydoun, James Wymer, Lindsay Zilliox, Shakti Nayar, Gary Pattee, Jennifer Martinez Thompson, Melanie Leitner, Kelly Chen, Y Goldberg, Yael Cohen, Michal Geva, Michael Hayden, Sabrina Paganoni, Merit Cudkowicz