Ashley L. Lennox, Libo Sun, Fei Huang, Melissa Kelly Behrs, Robert Kleiman, Hongqi Xue, Neha Bhise, Ying Wan, Tymara Berry, Faye Feller, Peter N. Morcos
{"title":"Low Proarrhythmic Risk of Imetelstat, a Novel Oligonucleotide Telomerase Inhibitor: A Translational Analysis","authors":"Ashley L. Lennox, Libo Sun, Fei Huang, Melissa Kelly Behrs, Robert Kleiman, Hongqi Xue, Neha Bhise, Ying Wan, Tymara Berry, Faye Feller, Peter N. Morcos","doi":"10.1111/cts.70169","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>Evaluation of the proarrhythmic potential of imetelstat, a novel oligonucleotide telomerase inhibitor, in nonclinical and clinical studies is presented. In vitro, imetelstat sodium ≤ 750 μg/mL and negative (vehicle) and positive (cisapride) controls were evaluated for hERG channel current inhibition. In vivo, cynomolgus monkeys received a single vehicle control or imetelstat sodium (5 mg/kg [2-h infusion], 10 mg/kg [6-h infusion], or 15 mg/kg [6- or 24-h infusion]); cardiovascular parameters were collected before and after drug administration. A ventricular repolarization substudy of the IMerge phase III study evaluated patients with lower-risk myelodysplastic syndromes administered imetelstat 7.1 mg/kg active dose every 4 weeks; intensive electrocardiograms and pharmacokinetic samples were collected for concentration-QTc and by-time point analyses after a single dose. In vitro, imetelstat did not inhibit the hERG channel (IC<sub>50</sub> > 750 μg/mL). In monkeys, imetelstat demonstrated no treatment-related changes in cardiac parameters, including QTc using Fridericia correction (QTcF). In the IMerge QTc substudy, 45 patients received imetelstat (<i>n</i> = 29) or placebo (<i>n</i> = 16). The concentration-QTc relationship was described by a linear mixed-effects model; at the geometric mean maximum plasma concentration (C<sub>max</sub>) for imetelstat 7.1 mg/kg of 89.5 μg/mL, the predicted effect on placebo-corrected change from baseline QTcF was 2.36 ms (90% confidence interval, −3.04 to 7.76), supporting no evidence of QTcF prolongation. By-time point analysis demonstrated no clinically significant effect of imetelstat on QTc. Nonclinical studies demonstrated no proarrhythmic risk at > 140× (in vitro) and > 2.6× (in vivo) imetelstat 7.1 mg/kg C<sub>max</sub>. Clinical evaluations showed no significant effects on QTcF or other electrocardiogram parameters at 7.1 mg/kg. Collectively, this integrated risk assessment supports the low proarrhythmic potential of imetelstat.</p>","PeriodicalId":50610,"journal":{"name":"Cts-Clinical and Translational Science","volume":"18 2","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":3.1000,"publicationDate":"2025-02-20","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/cts.70169","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Cts-Clinical and Translational Science","FirstCategoryId":"3","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/cts.70169","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"医学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"MEDICINE, RESEARCH & EXPERIMENTAL","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Evaluation of the proarrhythmic potential of imetelstat, a novel oligonucleotide telomerase inhibitor, in nonclinical and clinical studies is presented. In vitro, imetelstat sodium ≤ 750 μg/mL and negative (vehicle) and positive (cisapride) controls were evaluated for hERG channel current inhibition. In vivo, cynomolgus monkeys received a single vehicle control or imetelstat sodium (5 mg/kg [2-h infusion], 10 mg/kg [6-h infusion], or 15 mg/kg [6- or 24-h infusion]); cardiovascular parameters were collected before and after drug administration. A ventricular repolarization substudy of the IMerge phase III study evaluated patients with lower-risk myelodysplastic syndromes administered imetelstat 7.1 mg/kg active dose every 4 weeks; intensive electrocardiograms and pharmacokinetic samples were collected for concentration-QTc and by-time point analyses after a single dose. In vitro, imetelstat did not inhibit the hERG channel (IC50 > 750 μg/mL). In monkeys, imetelstat demonstrated no treatment-related changes in cardiac parameters, including QTc using Fridericia correction (QTcF). In the IMerge QTc substudy, 45 patients received imetelstat (n = 29) or placebo (n = 16). The concentration-QTc relationship was described by a linear mixed-effects model; at the geometric mean maximum plasma concentration (Cmax) for imetelstat 7.1 mg/kg of 89.5 μg/mL, the predicted effect on placebo-corrected change from baseline QTcF was 2.36 ms (90% confidence interval, −3.04 to 7.76), supporting no evidence of QTcF prolongation. By-time point analysis demonstrated no clinically significant effect of imetelstat on QTc. Nonclinical studies demonstrated no proarrhythmic risk at > 140× (in vitro) and > 2.6× (in vivo) imetelstat 7.1 mg/kg Cmax. Clinical evaluations showed no significant effects on QTcF or other electrocardiogram parameters at 7.1 mg/kg. Collectively, this integrated risk assessment supports the low proarrhythmic potential of imetelstat.
期刊介绍:
Clinical and Translational Science (CTS), an official journal of the American Society for Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics, highlights original translational medicine research that helps bridge laboratory discoveries with the diagnosis and treatment of human disease. Translational medicine is a multi-faceted discipline with a focus on translational therapeutics. In a broad sense, translational medicine bridges across the discovery, development, regulation, and utilization spectrum. Research may appear as Full Articles, Brief Reports, Commentaries, Phase Forwards (clinical trials), Reviews, or Tutorials. CTS also includes invited didactic content that covers the connections between clinical pharmacology and translational medicine. Best-in-class methodologies and best practices are also welcomed as Tutorials. These additional features provide context for research articles and facilitate understanding for a wide array of individuals interested in clinical and translational science. CTS welcomes high quality, scientifically sound, original manuscripts focused on clinical pharmacology and translational science, including animal, in vitro, in silico, and clinical studies supporting the breadth of drug discovery, development, regulation and clinical use of both traditional drugs and innovative modalities.