Transthyretin Amyloid Cardiomyopathy Clinical Trial
Short-term Effects of TOLCAPONE on Transthyretin Stability in Subjects With Leptomeningeal TTR Amyloidosis (ATTR)
Summary
The purpose of this study is to determine whether Tolcapone crosses from the blood stream into the fluid around the brain and stabilizes the protein that makes leptomeningeal amyloid. Tolcapone is a commercially available generic drug that treats Parkinson's disease.
The Investigator plans to evaluate Tolcapone as a treatment for ATTR (Transthyretin Amyloidosis), a rare genetic disease often causing death within 5-15 years after diagnosis. ATTR is characterized by deposition of misfolded protein known as amyloid, in one or more organ systems (including the peripheral and autonomic nervous systems, the heart, the brain and the eyes). The age at which symptoms begin to develop varies widely ranging between 20 to 70 years old. ATTR is progressive, and some variants can have a fatal outcome within a few years of presentation. Treatment options include supportive and symptomatic care that may slow or stop progressive decline in functional state but do not alter the pathological process. Liver transplant can be performed in selected patients but is limited by organ supply, requires lifelong immunosuppression, and may be complicated by progressive heart and nerve amyloid deposition. Importantly, liver transplant does not alter the natural course of central nervous system amyloid disease. To date, no treatment for ATTR penetrates the CNS.
At present there is no FDA approved treatment for ATTR amyloidosis in the US. In Europe, Tafamidis has been approved for treatment of stage 1 ATTR-polyneuropathy since 2012. Tafamidis and Tolcapone bind to the thyroxine binding site of TTR (with different drug-transthyretin interactions) and in so doing stabilizes the tetrameric form of TTR, preventing dissociation and amyloid fibril formation The preclinical and clinical data from a variety of experimental systems support the therapeutic activity of TOLCAPONE in TTR mediated disease.
Full Description
This study is designed as a clinical proof-of-concept evaluating whether TOLCAPONE is capable of stabilizing tetrameric TTR (Transthyretin) in the plasma and CSF of symptomatic or asymptomatic patients with leptomeningeal ATTR. Additionally the study will determine the plasma and CSF concentrations of TOLCAPONE needed to induce maximal stabilization of TTR across different TTR variants (TTR mutations).
The study will be carried out in two different populations of subjects, defined by the TTR variant expressed:
Mutant TTR (up to 10 subjects): symptomatic leptomeningeal TTR patient with any documented leptomeningeal mutations in the TTR gene.
Mutant TTR (remaining subjects up to 10): asymptomatic leptomeningeal TTR patient with any documented leptomeningeal mutation in the TTR gene.
TTR tetramers stability in plasma and CSF samples will be determined by urea-induced denaturation methodology.
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
Genotyping of variant TTR
Documented CNS manifestation or expression of variant TTR with leptomeningeal potential
Exclusion Criteria:
Patients who are unable to provide informed consent
Contraindication for Tolcapone
An ALT or AST measurement > 2 times the ULN (Upper Limit of Normal)
Estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) ≤ 25 ml/min/1.72M2
Treatment with a known TTR tetramer protein stabilizer within the last 2 weeks
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There is 1 Location for this study
Boston Massachusetts, 02118, United States
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