학술논문

Real‐life effectiveness 1 year after switching to avalglucosidase alfa in late‐onset Pompe disease patients worsening on alglucosidase alfa therapy: A French cohort study.
Document Type
Article
Source
European Journal of Neurology. Apr2024, p1. 8p. 1 Illustration, 1 Chart.
Subject
Language
ISSN
1351-5101
Abstract
Introduction Methods Results Discussion Conclusion Late‐onset Pompe disease (LOPD) is characterized by a progressive myopathy resulting from a deficiency of acid α‐glucosidase enzyme activity. Enzyme replacement therapy has been shown to be effective, but long‐term treatment results vary. Avalglucosidase alfa demonstrated non‐inferiority to alglucosidase alfa in a phase 3 study, allowing in France compassionate access for advanced LOPD patients unresponsive to alglucosidase alfa.Data from the French Pompe registry were analyzed for patients who benefited from a switch to avalglucosidase alfa with at least 1 year of follow‐up. Respiratory (forced vital capacity [FVC]) and motor functions (Six‐Minute Walk Test [6MWT]) were assessed before and 1 year after switching. Individual changes in FVC and 6MWT were expressed as slopes and statistical analyses were performed to compare values.Twenty‐nine patients were included (mean age 56 years, 11 years of prior treatment). The FVC and 6MWT values remained stable. The individual analyses showed a stabilization of motor worsening: –1 m/year on the 6MWT after the switch versus –63 m/year the year before the switch (i.e., a worsening of 33%/year before vs. an improvement of 3%/year later). Respiratory data were not statistically different.At the group level, gait parameters improved slightly with a stabilization of previous worsening, but respiratory parameters showed limited changes. At the individual level, results were discordant, with some patients with a good motor or respiratory response and some with further worsening.Switching to avalglucosidase alfa demonstrated varied responses in advanced LOPD patients with failing alglucosidase alfa therapy, with a general improvement in motor stabilization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]