Spark Therapeutics Announces Updated Data on SPK-8011 from Phase 1/2 Clinical Trial in Hemophilia A at ISTH 2020 Virtual Congress

In This Article:

All five participants in the 5x1011 vg/kg and 1×1012 vg/kg dose cohorts and seven participants in the 2×1012 vg/kg dose show an acceptable safety profile, stable and durable factor VIII expression and substantial improvement in annualized bleed rate (ABR) after between two and 3.3 years follow-up

Represents the longest stable expression of FVIII following investigational gene therapy and reinforces the ability of AAV gene therapy targeting hepatocytes to achieve stable and durable FVIII expression

Optimizing the dose and immunomodulatory regimen; Phase 3 dosing expected in 2021

PHILADELPHIA, July 12, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Spark Therapeutics, a member of the Roche Group (SIX: RO, ROG; OTCQX: RHHBY) and a fully integrated, commercial gene therapy company dedicated to challenging the inevitability of genetic disease, today announced updated data from three dose cohorts of the ongoing Phase 1/2 clinical trial of investigational SPK-8011 in hemophilia A. These data were presented at the International Society of Thrombosis and Hemostasis (ISTH) 2020 Virtual Congress by Principal Investigator Lindsey A. George, M.D., The Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania and Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia.

Fourteen participants in the Phase 1/2 trial received a single administration of investigational SPK-8011, two at a dose of 5x1011 vg/kg, three at a dose of 1×1012 vg/kg and nine at a dose of 2×1012 vg/kg. As of the June 3, 2020 data cutoff, results from the five total participants in the 5x1011 vg/kg and 1×1012 dose cohorts and seven participants in the 2×1012 vg/kg dose cohort show an acceptable safety profile, 91-percent reduction in annualized bleed rate (ABR), 96-percent reduction in FVIII infusions and stable and durable factor FVIII expression after between two and 3.3 years of follow-up.

As previously disclosed, two of nine participants in the 2×1012 dose cohort lost FVIII expression likely due to a capsid-based immune response. The seven other participants in the 2×1012 dose cohort and the five total participants in the 5×1011 vg/kg and 1×1012 vg/kg dose cohorts continue to show stable and durable factor FVIII expression. These data represent the longest stable expression of FVIII following investigational gene therapy and reinforce the ability of AAV gene therapy targeting hepatocytes to achieve stable and durable FVIII expression.

“We are very encouraged by these interim data that continue to show an acceptable safety profile and a substantial reduction in bleeds for more than two years of observation on average, with one participant being observed for more than three years,” said Federico Mingozzi, Ph.D., chief scientific officer, Spark Therapeutics. “Our focus is on optimizing the dose and immunomodulatory regimen before moving to a Phase 3 clinical study that falls in line with our strategy to progress a hemophilia A gene therapy that, at the lowest effective dose and the optimal immunomodulatory regimen, demonstrates safety, predictability, efficacy, and durability.”