Hearing restoration was observed within 30
days of a single administration of AK-OTOF in the initial
AK-OTOF-101 study participant, the first to receive gene therapy in
the United States for a genetic
form of hearing loss
AK-OTOF is a gene therapy being developed for
the treatment of sensorineural hearing loss due to mutations in the
otoferlin gene (OTOF)
INDIANAPOLIS, Jan. 23,
2024 /PRNewswire/ -- Akouos, Inc., a wholly owned
subsidiary of Eli Lilly and Company (NYSE: LLY), today announced
positive initial clinical results from the Phase 1/2 AK-OTOF-101
study, which demonstrated pharmacologic hearing restoration within
30 days of AK-OTOF administration in the first participant, an
individual with a decade-plus history of profound hearing loss.
Results, including initial data from a second participant to
receive AK-OTOF, will be presented during the Late Breaking
Presidential Symposium at the 2024 Association for Research in
Otolaryngology (ARO) MidWinter Meeting.
Details of the presentation are listed
below:
Title: Clinical development of AK-OTOF
gene therapy for OTOF-mediated hearing loss
Session: Late Breaking Presidential Symposium
Date/Time: Saturday, February 3, 10:00 a.m. PT
Location: Anaheim Marriott, Anaheim, California
The first participant to receive AK-OTOF in the study, an
11-year-old at the time of AK-OTOF administration with profound
hearing loss from birth, experienced restored hearing within 30
days of AK-OTOF administration. In this individual, hearing was
restored across all tested frequencies, achieving thresholds of 65
to 20 dB HL, and within the normal hearing range at some
frequencies at the Day 30 visit. Both the surgical administration
procedure and the investigational therapy were well tolerated, and
no serious adverse events were reported.
"Gene therapy for hearing loss is something physicians and
scientists around the world have been working toward for over 20
years," said Professor John
Germiller, M.D., Ph.D., attending surgeon and Director of
Clinical Research in the Division of Otolaryngology at Children's
Hospital of Philadelphia, and a
principal investigator of the AK-OTOF-101 Clinical Trial who
administered AK-OTOF to this participant. "These initial results
show that it may restore hearing better than many thought
possible."
In the AK-OTOF-101 trial, eligible participants receive a
single, unilateral intracochlear administration of AK-OTOF,
with hearing restoration assessed by behavioral audiometry and
auditory brainstem response (ABR), a clinically accepted and
objective measure of hearing sensitivity. Participants in cohort 1
receive AK-OTOF at a dose of 4.1E11 total vector genomes.
"Children with OTOF-mediated hearing loss are often born
with profound hearing loss, yet only a small fraction have
undergone genetic testing to receive a definitive diagnosis," said
Dr. Oliver Haag, pediatric
otolaryngologist, Head of Otolaryngology at Sant Joan de Deu
Hospital in Barcelona, and an
investigator in Akouos's AK-OTOF-NHS-002 Natural History Study in
which the first individual to receive AK-OTOF was participating.
"The AK-OTOF-101 Clinical Trial and AK-OTOF-NHS-002 Natural History
Study demonstrate the power of international collaboration in the
development of new medicines for rare genetic conditions. It is
gratifying to see this collaborative effort provide benefit to the
first participant to receive AK-OTOF."
Hearing loss is the most common sensory condition, and with no
approved pharmacologic treatments to restore hearing, represents a
significant area of unmet need in medicine. Millions of individuals
worldwide have disabling hearing loss because one of their genes
generates an incorrect or incomplete version of a protein the ear
requires for hearing. In many of these cases – including for some
of the estimated 200,000 individuals worldwide who live with
OTOF-mediated hearing loss – delivering a healthy version of
the gene to a target cell within the inner ear has the potential to
restore auditory function and enable high-acuity physiologic
hearing. OTOF-mediated hearing loss is the first monogenic
form of hearing loss to be investigated as part of a gene therapy
clinical trial.
"We are grateful to the participants, their families, the
investigators and other collaborators who are working together with
us on this pioneering trial," said Emmanuel
Simons, Ph.D., M.B.A., CEO of Akouos and SVP, Gene Therapy
at Lilly. "These initial results
highlight the potential impact genetic medicines could have on
individuals with OTOF-mediated hearing loss and reinforce
our mission to make healthy hearing available to all."
AK-OTOF has been granted Orphan Drug Designation and Rare
Pediatric Disease Designation by the FDA and has received a
positive opinion on orphan drug designation by the EMA Committee
for Orphan Medicinal Products.
About AK-OTOF and the AK-OTOF-101 Clinical
Trial
AK-OTOF (AAVAnc80-hOTOF) is a dual adeno-associated
viral (AAV) vector-based gene therapy designed to restore auditory
function by gene transfer and durable expression of normal,
functional otoferlin protein to the inner hair cells of the
cochlea. AK-OTOF utilizes AAVAnc80, a capsid with high transduction
efficiency for inner hair cells, together with a strong ubiquitous
promoter to achieve expression of otoferlin, observed only in the
target inner hair cells, at levels that have the potential to
restore high acuity physiologic hearing. The Akouos delivery
device, being developed in parallel specifically for intracochlear
administration, enables a minimally invasive surgical approach to
deliver AK-OTOF throughout the cochlea. The AK-OTOF-101 Clinical
Trial (NCT05821959) is a Phase 1/2 trial that is assessing the
safety, tolerability, and bioactivity of escalating doses of
AK-OTOF delivered via the Akouos delivery device. More information
about the trial can be found at
https://www.clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT05821959.
About the OTOF-mediated Hearing Loss Natural History
Study
The AK-OTOF-NHS-002 Natural History Study
(NCT05572073) is designed to characterize the natural history of
OTOF-mediated hearing loss, including progression of
physiologic responses and audiologic outcomes over time, potential
genotype-phenotype relationships, and longitudinal assessment of
clinical outcomes. More information about the study can be found at
https://www.clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT05572073.
About Lilly
Lilly unites caring with discovery to create
medicines that make life better for people around the world. We've
been pioneering life-changing discoveries for nearly 150 years, and
today our medicines help more than 51 million people across the
globe. Harnessing the power of biotechnology, chemistry and genetic
medicine, our scientists are urgently advancing new discoveries to
solve some of the world's most significant health challenges,
redefining diabetes care, treating obesity and curtailing its most
devastating long-term effects, advancing the fight against
Alzheimer's disease, providing solutions to some of the most
debilitating immune system disorders, and transforming the most
difficult-to-treat cancers into manageable diseases. With each step
toward a healthier world, we're motivated by one thing: making life
better for millions more people. That includes delivering
innovative clinical trials that reflect the diversity of our world
and working to ensure our medicines are accessible and affordable.
To learn more, visit Lilly.com and Lilly.com/news or follow us on
Facebook, Instagram and LinkedIn. C-LLY
Cautionary Statement Regarding Forward-Looking
Statements
This press release contains forward-looking
statements (as that term is defined in the Private Securities
Litigation Reform Act of 1995) about AK-OTOF as a potential
treatment for sensorineural hearing loss due to mutations in the
otoferlin gene (OTOF) and reflects Lilly's current beliefs and expectations.
However, as with any pharmaceutical product, there are substantial
risks and uncertainties in the process of drug research,
development, and commercialization. Among other things, there is no
guarantee that planned or ongoing studies will be completed as
planned, that future study results will be consistent with study
results to date, or that AK-OTOF will receive regulatory approvals,
or be commercially successful. For further discussion of risks and
uncertainties relevant to Lilly's
business that could cause actual results to differ from
Lilly's expectations, see
Lilly's Form 10-K and Form 10-Q
filings with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission.
Except as required by law, Lilly
undertakes no duty to update forward-looking statements to reflect
events after the date of this release.
Refer to:
|
Stefanie Prodouz;
stefanie.prodouz@lilly.com; +1-317-287-9899
(Media)
|
|
Joe
Fletcher; jfletcher@lilly.com; +1-317-296-2884
(Investors)
|
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SOURCE Eli Lilly and Company