TY - JOUR
T1 - Therapy Trial Design in Vanishing White Matter An Expert Consortium Opinion
AU - van der Knaap, Marjo S.
AU - Bonkowsky, Joshua L.
AU - Vanderver, Adeline
AU - Schiffmann, Raphael
AU - Krägeloh-Mann, Ingeborg
AU - Bertini, Enrico
AU - Bernard, Genevieve
AU - Fatemi, Seyed Ali
AU - Wolf, Nicole I.
AU - Saunier-Vivar, Elise
AU - Rauner, Robert
AU - Dekker, Hanka
AU - van Bokhoven, Pieter
AU - van de Ven, Peter
AU - Leferink, Prisca S.
N1 - Funding Information:
The Article Processing Charge was funded by the authors.
Funding Information:
The authors thank Prof. Arjen B. Brussaard, director of Amsterdam Neuroscience, The Netherlands, for his continuous support of the VWM consortium. The authors are grateful to Daphne Schoenmakers, MD and PhD student at the Department of Child Neurology, Amsterdam University Medical Center, The Netherlands, for setting up and executing the Delphi procedure. The authors thank Menno Stellingwerff, MD and PhD student at the Department of Child Neurology, Amsterdam University Medical Center, for providing numbers and figures from the VWM registry. MSvdK, EB, IK-M, and NIW are members of the European Reference Network for Rare Neurological Disorders (ERN-RND), project ID 739510. AV, JLB, and AF are members of the Global Leukodystrophy Initiative Clinical Trials Network (GLIA-CTN), U54NS115052.
Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2022 The Author(s).
PY - 2022/4/2
Y1 - 2022/4/2
N2 - Vanishing white matter (VWM) is a leukodystrophy caused by recessive variants in the genes EIF2B1-EIF2B5. It is characterized by chronic neurologic deterioration with superimposed stress-provoked episodes of rapid decline. Disease onset spans from the antenatal period through senescence. Age at onset predicts disease evolution for patients with early onset, whereas disease evolution is unpredictable for later onset; patients with infantile and early childhood onset consistently have severe disease with rapid neurologic decline and often early death, whereas patients with later onset have highly variable disease. VWM is rare, but likely underdiagnosed, particularly in adults. Apart from measures to prevent stressors that could provoke acute deteriorations, only symptomatic care is currently offered. With increased insight into VWM disease mechanisms, opportunities for treatment have emerged. EIF2B1-EIF2B5 encode the 5-subunit eukaryotic initiation factor 2B complex, which is essential for translation of mRNAs into proteins and is a principal regulator of the integrated stress response (ISR). ISR deregulation is central to VWM pathology. Targeting components of the ISR has proven beneficial in mutant VWM mouse models, and several drugs are now in clinical development. However, clinical trials in VWM pose considerable challenges: low numbers of known patients with VWM, unpredictable disease course for patients with onset after early childhood, absence of intermediate biomarkers, and novel first-in-human molecular targets. Given these challenges and considering the critical need to offer therapies, we have formulated recommendations for enhanced diagnosis, drug trial setup, and patient selection, based on our expert evaluation of molecular, laboratory, and clinical data.
AB - Vanishing white matter (VWM) is a leukodystrophy caused by recessive variants in the genes EIF2B1-EIF2B5. It is characterized by chronic neurologic deterioration with superimposed stress-provoked episodes of rapid decline. Disease onset spans from the antenatal period through senescence. Age at onset predicts disease evolution for patients with early onset, whereas disease evolution is unpredictable for later onset; patients with infantile and early childhood onset consistently have severe disease with rapid neurologic decline and often early death, whereas patients with later onset have highly variable disease. VWM is rare, but likely underdiagnosed, particularly in adults. Apart from measures to prevent stressors that could provoke acute deteriorations, only symptomatic care is currently offered. With increased insight into VWM disease mechanisms, opportunities for treatment have emerged. EIF2B1-EIF2B5 encode the 5-subunit eukaryotic initiation factor 2B complex, which is essential for translation of mRNAs into proteins and is a principal regulator of the integrated stress response (ISR). ISR deregulation is central to VWM pathology. Targeting components of the ISR has proven beneficial in mutant VWM mouse models, and several drugs are now in clinical development. However, clinical trials in VWM pose considerable challenges: low numbers of known patients with VWM, unpredictable disease course for patients with onset after early childhood, absence of intermediate biomarkers, and novel first-in-human molecular targets. Given these challenges and considering the critical need to offer therapies, we have formulated recommendations for enhanced diagnosis, drug trial setup, and patient selection, based on our expert evaluation of molecular, laboratory, and clinical data.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85128857561&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1212/NXG.0000000000000657
DO - 10.1212/NXG.0000000000000657
M3 - Review article
C2 - 35128050
SN - 2376-7839
VL - 8
JO - Neurology: Genetics
JF - Neurology: Genetics
IS - 2
M1 - e657
ER -