Advertisement Arrowhead begins dosing patients in Phase I trial of ARC-AAT to treat AATD - Pharmaceutical Business review
Pharmaceutical Business review is using cookies

ContinueLearn More
Close

Arrowhead begins dosing patients in Phase I trial of ARC-AAT to treat AATD

US-based Arrowhead Research has started dosing patients in Part B of a Phase I clinical trial of its RNAi-based drug candidate ARC-AAT to treat liver disease associated with the rare genetic disorder alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency (AATD).

Recently, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has granted orphan drug designation for ARC-AAT to treat AATD.

Currently, the company is enrolling patients at a single center in Australia and expects to open additional sites for enrollment in Europe, pending regulatory permission to proceed.

The company intends to complete patient enrollment in this Phase I trial by the end of this year.

Arrowhead chief operating officer Bruce Given said: "Dosing the first alpha-1 patient with ARC-AAT is a milestone for Arrowhead and for patients with AATD.

"The goal of treatment with ARC-AAT is to halt progression and possibly reverse the liver injury and fibrosis associated with AATD, which currently has no approved therapy short of liver transplant. This is becoming a larger clinical problem that we believe ARC-AAT holds great potential to address.

"We would also like to thank the Alpha-1 Foundation and The Alpha-1 Project, who have agreed to help support the development of ARC-AAT through funding and assistance with patient recruitment."

The company said that the ongoing Phase I trial is a multi-center, randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind, single dose-escalation study and is designed to evaluate the safety, tolerability and pharmacokinetics of ARC-AAT and the effect on circulating AAT levels.

The trial has been enrolling in dose groups of six participants each, with participants randomized at a ratio of 2:1 to receive a single intravenous injection of either ARC-AAT or placebo.

The Phase I trial includes two parts; Part A in healthy volunteers, which has been completed, and Part B will be conducted in patients with PiZZ genotype AATD.