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Clinical Trial Summary

In contrary to what is seen in FRT cells, rectal organoids of patients with a R334W mutation do respond to CFTR modulators ivacaftor and lumacaftor. The present study will investigate the response to modulators in organoids of 30 patients with CF and a R334W mutation, to allow further stratificaton for a future clinical trial assessing the clinical effect of ivacaftor/tezacaftor in patients with CF and a R334W mutation.


Clinical Trial Description

Rationale: CF is caused by mutations in the 'Cystic Fibrosis Transmembrane Conductance Regulator (CFTR)' channel that codes for the CFTR protein, an anion channel. More than 2000 different CFTR mutations have been described. CFTR modulator drugs treat the underlying protein defect by improving folding and trafficking of nascent protein (corrector) or by improving channel opening at the cell membrane (potentiator). In the European Union, treatment with CFTR modulators has only been approved for patients who are homozygous for F508del or carry a mutation of class III or one of a limited number of residual function mutations. The R334W-CFTR mutation is a rare mutation (270 subjects in the European CF Registry ECFSPR), described in CFTR2 as disease causing. Clinically there is evidence for residual CFTR function in these subjects since only 36% of the patients with R334W are pancreatic insufficient and the mean age of all patients in the CFTR2 database is a bit older (22 years) than patients with CF and 2 known disease causing mutations (20 years). On the other hand, patients with R334W have on average a high sweat chloride (mean 95 mmol/L) and severe lung disease; their mean FEV1 reported to the CFTR database [1] is very similar to that of other patients with the F508del CF causing mutation. In the Leuven clinic we have one subject with R334W/F508del who is 60 year old and has very severe lung disease (FEV1 in the low 40s). When studied in FRT (Fisher rat thyroid) cells and compared to wild type, the R334W mutation is reported to give rise to normal levels of protein at the cell membrane, but very much decreased function (short circuit current measurement) of 1.3% of wild type. On the other hand there is very limited rescue of CFTR function after addition of the potentiator ivacaftor: from 1% to 5 % of normal. In contrast with expression in heterologous systems, intestinal organoids allow study of CFTR function in patient specific material. When tested in intestinal organoids from the patient with F508del/R334W in the Leuven clinic, this mutation resulted in some residual function documented by forskolin induced swelling at higher forskolin concentrations, even before addition of CFTR potentiator or corrector. However, addition of ivacaftor and to a lesser degree lumacaftor results in moderate to good rescue of function; the degree of rescue (FIS result) is intermediate between that seen in F508del homozygous subjects and class III mutation subjects. Comparable results are obtained in prof M Amaral's lab in 3 subjects compound heterozygous for F508del/R334W (results in nasal cells, and intestinal organoids). A CFTR functional rescue in organoids from a subject with the R334W/R746X is also reported by the Dutch Utrecht group in organoids; the forskolin induced swelling induced by luma/iva was again between the response seen with iva in organoids from subjects with gating mutations and by luma/iva in organoids derived from F508del homozygous subjects. These findings suggest that R334W might be a suitable candidate for TEZ/IVA treatment. The study described in this protocol will be the first step of a larger project that also includes a clinical trial. With the present study, the response of organoids of patients with mutation R334W to available CFTR-modulators will be tested to identify the in vitro response. An interventional clinical trial, submitted as a separate protocol, will subsequently assess the response to modulators in vivo in the same patients. The clinical trial is thus not part of this protocol. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04254705
Study type Interventional
Source Universitaire Ziekenhuizen KU Leuven
Contact
Status Withdrawn
Phase N/A
Start date March 1, 2020
Completion date March 1, 2021

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