Islamabad, Jan 10 : The first
drug to treat the underlying disorder instead of the symptoms of Fragile X, the
most common cause of inherited intellectual disability, shows some promise,
according to a new study published in the Science Translational Medicine.
Researchers from Rush University Medical Center helped design the study
and are now participating in the larger follow-up clinical trial.
The
data from the early trial of 30 Fragile X patients, found the drug, called
AFQ056, made by Novartis Pharmaceuticals, helped improve symptoms in some
patients. Patients who had the best response have a kind of "fingerprint" in
their DNA that could act as a marker to determine who should get
treatment.
"This is an exciting development. It is the first time we have
a treatment targeted to the underlying disorder, as opposed to supportive
treatment of the behavioral symptoms, in a developmental brain disorder causing
intellectual disability. This drug could be a model for treatment of other
disorders such as autism," said pediatric neurologist Dr. Elizabeth
Berry-Kravis, a study author and director of the Fragile X Clinic and Research
Program and the Fragile X-Associated Disorders Program at Rush.
The drug
is designed to block the activity of mGluR5, a receptor protein on brain cells
that is involved in most aspects of normal brain function, including regulation
of the strength of brain connections, a key process required for learning and
memory. Fragile X patients have a mutation in a single gene, known as Fragile X
Mental Retardation-1 or FMR1. The mutation prevents FMR1 from making its
protein, called FMRP, such that FMRP is missing in the brain. FMRP normally acts
as a blocker or "brake" for brain cell pathways activated by mGluR5. When FMRP
is missing, mGluR5 pathways are overactive resulting in abnormal connections in
the brain and the behavioral and cognitive impairments associated with Fragile
X.
The research team, led by Sebastien Jacquemont of Vaudois University
in Switzerland in collaboration with Baltazar Gomez-Mancilla of Novartis, found
no significant effects of treatment when the entire group of 30 patients was
analyzed. However, in a subsequent analysis, seven patients who had a fully
methylated gene, a gene that was fully shut down, presumably resulting in no FMR
protein in the blood or brain, showed significant improvement in behavior,
hyperactivity and inappropriate speech with the treatment compared to
placebo.
"The treatment period in this pilot study was very short and
longer treatment might have been needed to see improvement in the whole group of
patients. Importantly, the drug was well-tolerated and there were no safety
problems," said Berry-Kravis.
A larger study of the drug is now underway
that will recruit 160 patients worldwide and test the effects of a longer period
of treatment. Rush University Medical Center is one of the participating
sites.
Fragile X affects 1 in 4000 males and 1 in 6000 females of all
races and ethnic groups. It is the most common known single gene cause of autism
or "autistic-like" behaviors. Symptoms also can include characteristic physical
and behavioral features and delays in speech and language development. The
impairment can range from learning disabilities to more severe cognitive and
intellectual disabilities.
Ends
SA/EN
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