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MeiraGTx Announces The Lancet Publication of Data Demonstrating the Efficacy of rAAV8.hRKp.AIPL1 for the Treatment of Leber Congenital Amaurosis 4 (LCA4) Retinal Dystrophy

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MeiraGTx
MeiraGTx
  • As disclosed in the paper, 4 out of 4 young children with the AIPL1-related retinal dystrophy, LCA4, benefited substantially from unilateral subretinal administration of rAAV8.hRKp.AIPL1 with improved visual acuity, functional vision, and protection against progressive retinal degeneration

  • Following the strong safety and substantial efficacy demonstrated in this first cohort of 4 children treated unilaterally, a further 7 children have now been treated bilaterally and all showed substantial benefit from treatment with rAAV8.hRKp.AIPL1

  • Meaningful responses have been observed in 11 out of 11 LCA4 children treated to date with rAAV8.hRKp.AIPL1

  • All 11 children treated with rAAV8.hRKp.AIPL1 between 1 and 4 years old were legally blind at birth, and all gained visual acuity after 4 or more weeks following a single one time delivery of rAAV8.hRKp.AIPL1

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LONDON and NEW YORK, Feb. 21, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- MeiraGTx Holdings plc (Nasdaq: MGTX), a vertically integrated, clinical stage genetic medicines company, today announced the publication of results from the first-in-human interventional study to treat children with AIPL1-associated severe retinal dystrophy. The data were published in The Lancet in a paper titled, "Gene therapy in children with AIPL1-associated severe retinal dystrophy: an open-label, first-in-human interventional study". This paper presents data from the first 4 children treated unilaterally with rAAV8.hRKp.AIPL1. A further 7 children with LCA4 were treated bilaterally with rAAV8.hRKp.AIPL1 demonstrating similarly remarkable effects on vision, with all 11 of the 11 children treated who were blind at birth now having visual acuity in the treated eyes.

Retinal dystrophy due to genetic deficiency of AIPL1 causes severe impairment of sight from birth. The study published today in The Lancet sought to evaluate whether early intervention by gene supplementation therapy was safe and could improve outcomes in young children with this condition. The findings indicate that children under the age of 4 years old with AIPL1-related retinal dystrophy benefited substantially from subretinal administration of rAAV8.hRKp.AIPL1, with improved visual acuity and functional vision and evidence of protection against progressive retinal degeneration, without serious adverse effects.

The non-randomized, single-arm, clinical study conducted in the UK involved four children aged one year to three years with severe retinal dystrophy associated with biallelic disease-causing sequence variants in AIPL1. The genetic medicine was a recombinant adeno-associated viral vector, comprising the human AIPL1 coding sequence driven by a human rhodopsin kinase promoter region (rAAV8.hRKp.AIPL1). The product was manufactured under a Specials License from the UK Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Authority (MHRA) and made available to affected children with local ethics approval. The product was administered to one eye of each child by subretinal injection. Outcome measures included visual acuity (as assessed with standard-of-care testing as well as a novel touchscreen test), functional vision (assessed by observing and recording the children’s visual behavior and their ability to perform simple vision-guided tasks), visual evoked potentials (assessed by recording cortical electrophysiological responses to full-screen black-and-white flickering stimuli), and retinal structure (assessed with handheld OCT and widefield fundus imaging).