학술논문

Safety, pharmacokinetics, and target engagement of a brain penetrant RIPK1 inhibitor, SAR443820 (DNL788), in healthy adult participants.
Document Type
Article
Source
CTS: Clinical & Translational Science. Jan2024, Vol. 17 Issue 1, p1-13. 13p.
Subject
*AMYOTROPHIC lateral sclerosis
*PHARMACOKINETICS
*CEREBROSPINAL fluid examination
*TERMINATION of treatment
*PROTEIN kinases
*MULTIPLE sclerosis
Language
ISSN
1752-8054
Abstract
SAR443820 (DNL788) is a selective, orally bioavailable, brain penetrant inhibitor of receptor‐interacting serine/threonine protein kinase 1 (RIPK1). This phase I first‐in‐human healthy participant study (NCT05795907) was comprised of three parts: randomized, double‐blind, placebo‐controlled single ascending dose (SAD; part 1a); 14‐day multiple ascending dose (MAD; part 2) parts that evaluated safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics (PK), and pharmacodynamics of SAR443820; and a separate open‐label, single‐dose part 1b (PK‐cerebrospinal fluid [CSF]) to assess SAR443820 levels in CSF. SAR443820 was well‐tolerated in healthy participants, and no treatment discontinuation related to an adverse event (AE) occurred. Most common AEs were dizziness and headache. No clinically meaningful changes were noted in laboratory values, vital signs, or electrocardiogram parameters. SAR443820 had a favorable PK profile, with plasma half‐lives (geometric mean) ranged between 5.7–8.0 h and 7.2–8.9 h after single and repeated doses, respectively. There were no major deviations from dose proportionality for maximum concentration and area under the curve across SAR443820 doses. Mean CSF‐to‐unbound plasma concentration ratio ranged from 0.8 to 1.3 over time (assessed up to 10 h postdose), indicating high brain penetrance. High levels of inhibition of activated RIPK1, as measured by decrease in pS166‐RIPK1, were achieved in both SAD and MAD parts, with a maximum median inhibition from baseline close to 90% at predose (Ctrough) after multiple dosing in MAD, reflecting a marked RIPK1 target engagement at the peripheral level. These results support further development of SAR443820 in phase II trials in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (NCT05237284) and multiple sclerosis (NCT05630547). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]