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Long-Term Survival With Sebelipase Alfa Enzyme Replacement Therapy in Infants With Rapidly Progressive Lysosomal Acid Lipase Deficiency Final Results From 2 Open-Label Studies
Long-Term Survival With Sebelipase Alfa Enzyme Replacement Therapy in Infants With Rapidly Progressive Lysosomal Acid Lipase Deficiency Final Results From 2 Open-Label Studies
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Long-Term Survival With Sebelipase Alfa Enzyme Replacement Therapy in Infants With Rapidly Progressive Lysosomal Acid Lipase Deficiency Final Results From 2 Open-Label Studies
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Long-Term Survival With Sebelipase Alfa Enzyme Replacement Therapy in Infants With Rapidly Progressive Lysosomal Acid Lipase Deficiency Final Results From 2 Open-Label Studies
Long-Term Survival With Sebelipase Alfa Enzyme Replacement Therapy in Infants With Rapidly Progressive Lysosomal Acid Lipase Deficiency Final Results From 2 Open-Label Studies

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Long-Term Survival With Sebelipase Alfa Enzyme Replacement Therapy in Infants With Rapidly Progressive Lysosomal Acid Lipase Deficiency Final Results From 2 Open-Label Studies
Long-Term Survival With Sebelipase Alfa Enzyme Replacement Therapy in Infants With Rapidly Progressive Lysosomal Acid Lipase Deficiency Final Results From 2 Open-Label Studies
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Long-Term Survival With Sebelipase Alfa Enzyme Replacement Therapy in Infants With Rapidly Progressive Lysosomal Acid Lipase Deficiency Final Results From 2 Open-Label Studies

2020
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Overview
Background: If symptomatic in infants, the autosomal recessive disease lysosomal acid lipase deficiency (LAL-D; sometimes called Wolman disease or LAL-D/Wolman phenotype) is characterized by complete loss of LAL enzyme activity. This very rare, rapidly progressive form of LAL-D results in severe manifestations leading to failure to thrive and death, usually by 6 months of age. We report results from 2 open-label studies of enzyme replacement therapy with sebelipase alfa, a recombinant human LAL, in infants with LAL-D: the phase 2/3 Survival of LAL-D Infants Treated With Sebelipase Alfa (VITAL) study (NCT01371825) and a phase 2 dose-escalation study (LAL-CL08 [CL08]; NCT02193867). In both, infants received once-weekly intravenous infusions of sebelipase alfa. Results: The analysis population contained 19 patients (9 in VITAL; 10 in CL08). Kaplan-Meier estimates of survival to 12 months and 5 years of age were 79% and 68%, respectively, in the combined population, and the median age of surviving patients was 5.2 years in VITAL and 3.2 years in CL08. In both studies, median weight-for-age, length-for-age, and mid-upper arm circumference-for-age z scores increased from baseline to end of study. Decreases in median liver and spleen volume over time were noted in both studies. Short-term transfusion-free hemoglobin normalization was achieved by 100% of patients eligible for assessment in VITAL, in an estimated median (95% confidence interval [CI]) time of 4.6 (0.3–16.6) months. In CL08, short-term transfusion-free hemoglobin normalization was achieved by 70% of patients eligible for assessment, in an estimated median (95% CI) time of 5.5 (3.7–19.6) months. No patient discontinued treatment because of treatment-emergent adverse events. Most infusion-associated reactions (94% in VITAL and 88% in CL08) were mild or moderate in severity. Conclusions: The findings of these 2 studies of infants with rapidly progressive LAL-D demonstrated that enzyme replacement therapy with sebelipase alfa prolonged survival with normal psychomotor development, improved growth, hematologic, and liver parameters, and was generally well tolerated, with an acceptable safety profile.
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Research Square
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