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Migalastat improves diarrhea in patients with Fabry disease: clinical-biomarker correlations from the phase 3 FACETS trial

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2018

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BioMed Central
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Schiffmann, R., D. G. Bichet, A. Jovanovic, D. A. Hughes, R. Giugliani, U. Feldt-Rasmussen, S. P. Shankar, et al. 2018. “Migalastat improves diarrhea in patients with Fabry disease: clinical-biomarker correlations from the phase 3 FACETS trial.” Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases 13 (1): 68. doi:10.1186/s13023-018-0813-7. http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13023-018-0813-7.

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Abstract

Background: Fabry disease is frequently characterized by gastrointestinal symptoms, including diarrhea. Migalastat is an orally-administered small molecule approved to treat the symptoms of Fabry disease in patients with amenable mutations. Methods: We evaluated minimal clinically important differences (MCID) in diarrhea based on the corresponding domain of the patient-reported Gastrointestinal Symptom Rating Scale (GSRS) in patients with Fabry disease and amenable mutations (N = 50) treated with migalastat 150 mg every other day or placebo during the phase 3 FACETS trial (NCT00925301). Results: After 6 months, significantly more patients receiving migalastat versus placebo experienced improvement in diarrhea based on a MCID of 0.33 (43% vs 11%; p = .02), including the subset with baseline diarrhea (71% vs 20%; p = .02). A decline in kidney peritubular capillary globotriaosylceramide inclusions correlated with diarrhea improvement; patients with a reduction > 0.1 were 5.6 times more likely to have an improvement in diarrhea than those without (p = .031). Conclusions: Migalastat was associated with a clinically meaningful improvement in diarrhea in patients with Fabry disease and amenable mutations. Reductions in kidney globotriaosylceramide may be a useful surrogate endpoint to predict clinical benefit with migalastat in patients with Fabry disease. Trial registration NCT00925301; June 19, 2009.

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Amenable mutation, Diarrhea, Fabry disease, Gastrointestinal, Globotriaosylceramide, GSRS, Lyso-Gb, Migalastat, Pharmacological chaperone

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