Duchenne muscular dystrophy: major trials and events to watch in 2023

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Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy Major Trials

In 2023, two potential FDA approvals and three late-stage clinical trial readouts could shift the treatment landscape for Duchenne muscular dystrophy. The upcoming FDA approval decision for Sarepta’s gene therapy SRP-9001, expected by May, headlines what figures to be an eventful year of drug development.

In addition to the looming approval decision for SRP-9001, Santhera’s and ReveraGen’s synthetic steroid vamorolone could receive FDA approval in October. Meanwhile, FibroGen’s antibody pamrevlumab and Capricor’s stem cell therapy CAP-1002 both expect Phase III data by mid-2023, and Edgewise’s EDG-5506 has Phase II data expected by the end of the year.

The wide variety of mechanisms and development stages means these investigational therapies have a range of approval prospects, according to GlobalData’s Likelihood of Approval algorithm. GlobalData, the parent company of Clinical Trials Arena, evaluates the Likelihood of Approval using a combination of machine learning and a propriety algorithm to calculate an individual drug’s probability of ultimately receiving market authorization.

As drug development activity in Duchenne muscular dystrophy picks up, experts say the field is gravitating toward personalized medicine and multi-therapy approaches. The wide variety of therapy types currently in the pipeline—ranging from gene therapies to small molecules—reflects the growing belief in a multi-pronged approach to treatment, explains Dr. Oscar Mayer, director of the Pulmonary Function Laboratory at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia.

“Eventually, clinicians in Duchenne should take a similar approach to how oncologists approach tumor therapy,” Mayer says. “The field should use multiple drugs to address the disease from all different levels.”

Drug development challenges

Duchenne muscular dystrophy, also known as DMD, is a rare genetic neurodegenerative disorder causing progressive muscle loss, primarily in young boys. The disease is characterized by alterations in the protein dystrophin, which is crucial for building muscle connections.

To date, four drugs have received FDA accelerated approval for Duchenne muscular dystrophy, all of which are exon-skipping therapies. These drugs can increase the expression of micro-dystrophin—a shorter and partially functional form of dystrophin—but they are far from a silver bullet, explains Eric Hoffman, PhD, drug development researcher at Binghamton University, New York, and CEO of ReveraGen BioPharma. Exon-skipping therapies only address a subset of patients, and they can only delay—not stop—disease progression, he adds.