Drugs R D. 2007;8(5):321-34. doi: 10.2165/00126839-200708050-00006.
Oblimersen is an antisense oligonucleotide developed by Genta for systemic use as an injection. It comprises a phosphorothioate backbone linking 18 modified DNA bases. Oblimersen targets the first six codons of Bcl-2 mRNA to form a DNA/RNA complex. The duplex is subsequently recognised as a foreign message and is cleaved enzymatically, thereby destroying the Bcl-2 message. The Bcl-2 protein, which is a potent inhibitor of apoptosis, is overexpressed in many cancers, including follicular lymphomas, breast, colon and prostate cancers, and intermediate-/high-grade lymphomas. By reducing the amount of Bcl-2 protein in cancer cells, oblimersen may enhance the effectiveness of conventional anticancer treatments. Genta has reported results from randomised phase III trials of oblimersen in four different indications: malignant melanoma, chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL), multiple myeloma and acute myleoid leukaemia (AML). A negative opinion has been issued for the company's MAA for the product in the treatment of malignant melanoma in the EU; the EMEA has indicated an additional confirmatory trial is needed in this indication for approval. An NDA for CLL was deemed non-approvable by the US FDA; the company is appealing this decision. The phase III trials in multiple myeloma and AML did not meet their primary endpoints. Phase I and II trials are also underway or have been completed for a range of other cancer types. Genta and sanofi-aventis (formerly Aventis) entered into a collaboration agreement in 2002; however, this agreement was terminated by sanofi-aventis in May 2005. Genta became solely responsible for all costs relating to oblimersen at this time. Genta expanded its Cooperative Research and Development Agreement (CRADA) with the National Cancer Institute in November 2001. The expanded collaboration was to investigate the use of oblimersen in combination with standard anticancer therapy in a broad range of cancers. This expansion occurred following the Gensynergy project, which showed that oblimersen was synergistic with other anticancer therapies. Genta signed a 5-year manufacturing agreement with Avecia Ltd in December 2002 to supply it with oblimersen. Genta's NDA was submitted to the FDA in December 2005 and accepted for review in March 2006. The application was based on data from a phase I/II trial (NCT00021749) of oblimersen alone in approximately 40 patients and a phase III study (NCT00024440) of 241 patients who received fludarabine and cyclo-phosphamide with or without oblimersen. Genta received a Special Protocol Assessment (SPA) from the FDA in October 2006 for a randomised, pivotal, clinical trial of oblimersen in CLL. The trial will be conducted in patients who have not received prior chemotherapy and who would be randomised to receive fludarabine and rituximab with or without oblimersen. This trial has not yet begun.Fast-track status was given to oblimersen for CLL in June 2003 by the FDA. Oblimersen previously obtained orphan drug status in the US and EU for CLL in September 2001. Genta previously submitted the MAA under the centralised licensing procedure and Spain and France were assigned as rapporteur and co-rapporteur countries, respectively. It was supported by an extended 24-month follow-up of patients from a phase III study (NCT00016263) of oblimersen plus dacarbazine. The EMEA validated the MAA for review in January 2006. Genta received a number of scientific questions from the EMEA in June 2006, which the company responded to. Genta intends to file a formal complaint and a request for correction of information with the FDA under the Federal Data Quality Act. The complaint is related to a key statistical analysis of the company's data for oblimersen in the treatment of melanoma used by the FDA at the Oncology Drug Advisory Committee (ODAC) in May 2004. Genta believes that analysis sought to discredit the finding that treatment with oblimersen significantly increased progression-free survival; ODAC previously agreed this endpoint would support full approval in the absence of a survival improvement in patients with advanced melanoma.A rolling NDA submission was submitted to the FDA in the third quarter of 2003; however, Genta and Aventis withdrew the NDA after the application failed to gain marketing approval from the FDA's Oncology Drug Advisory Committee (ODAC). In May 2004, ODAC voted that phase III trial results did not provide substantial evidence of effectiveness to outweigh toxicity of oblimersen treatment in patients with metastatic melanoma. Genta has the option to resubmit this application. The FDA gave oblimersen orphan drug status for malignant melanoma in August 2000. In October 1999, fast-track status was given to oblimersen by the FDA for malignant melanoma when used in combination with dacarbazine. In addition, oblimersen received orphan drug status for malignant melanoma in Australia in October 2006.A phase III study (NCT00016263) of oblimersen in combination with dacarbazine was conducted in patients with malignant melanoma. The combination treatment did not significantly increase overall survival time, but did significantly increase progression-free survival time, compared with dacarbazine treatment alone. The phase III trial enrolled 771 patients at 140 sites in 12 different countries. Patients were randomly assigned to receive dacarbazine alone or in combination with oblimersen. The primary endpoint of this trial was to compare the overall survival between the two treatment arms. Secondary endpoints included comparative analyses of progression-free survival and tumour response. Genta will conduct another phase III study of oblimersen in patients with advanced melanoma. The trial is designed to provide additional safety and efficacy evidence of the drug, in combination with dacarbazine, in patients who have not previously received chemotherapy. Approximately 300 patients are expected to be enrolled in the trial, which is planned to begin during mid-2007, at sites throughout Europe, Australia, and North and South America. Genta is conducting a phase I clinical trial (NCT00409383) to evaluate the combination of oblimersen, ABI 007, and temozolomide in chemotherapy-naive patients with advanced melanoma. This trial was initiated in November 2006 and is the first follow-on study to Genta's phase III trial of oblimersen plus dacarbazine. Oblimersen received orphan drug status in the US and EU for multiple myeloma in September 2001. In addition, fast-track designation was given to oblimersen by the FDA in the same month.A phase I/II clinical study (NCT00062244) of oblimersen was conducted by the NCI in patients with Waldenstrom's macroglobulinaemia, a disease that is similar to multiple myeloma. The study results indicated that oblimersen may be a useful treatment in this group of patients (all had high levels of Bcl-2 expression). In June 2003, Genta and Aventis announced the presentation of clinical data from a phase II trial of oblimersen in combination with docetaxel injection concentrate for patients with advanced HRPC. Researchers reported that these findings validated progression into phase III trials. Genta has licensed eight US patents relating to oblimersen and its backbone chemistry and these expire between 2008 and 2015. Genta has two pending US patent applications that relate to oblimersen. Corresponding patent applications have been filed in Canada, Europe and Japan. Genta owns three US patents relating to methods of using oblimersen that will expire in 2020, and also has approximately 45 corresponding foreign patent applications.
奥布利默森是由根塔公司研发的一种用于全身注射的反义寡核苷酸。它由连接18个修饰DNA碱基的硫代磷酸酯骨架组成。奥布利默森靶向Bcl-2 mRNA的前六个密码子以形成DNA/RNA复合物。该双链体随后被识别为外来信息并被酶切,从而破坏Bcl-2信息。Bcl-2蛋白是一种有效的细胞凋亡抑制剂,在许多癌症中过度表达,包括滤泡性淋巴瘤、乳腺癌、结肠癌和前列腺癌以及中/高级别淋巴瘤。通过减少癌细胞中Bcl-2蛋白的量,奥布利默森可能会增强传统抗癌治疗的效果。根塔公司报告了奥布利默森在四种不同适应症的随机III期试验结果:恶性黑色素瘤、慢性淋巴细胞白血病(CLL)、多发性骨髓瘤和急性髓性白血病(AML)。欧盟已对该公司用于治疗恶性黑色素瘤的产品的上市许可申请给出否定意见;欧洲药品管理局表示,该适应症还需要进行一项额外的验证性试验才能获批。美国食品药品监督管理局(FDA)认为CLL的新药申请不可获批;该公司正在对这一决定提出上诉。多发性骨髓瘤和AML的III期试验未达到其主要终点。针对一系列其他癌症类型的I期和II期试验也正在进行或已经完成。根塔公司与赛诺菲-安万特(原安万特)于2002年达成合作协议;然而,该协议于2005年5月被赛诺菲-安万特终止。此时,根塔公司独自承担与奥布利默森相关的所有费用。2001年11月,根塔公司扩大了与美国国立癌症研究所的合作研究与开发协议(CRADA)。扩大后的合作旨在研究奥布利默森与标准抗癌疗法联合用于多种癌症的情况。此次扩大是在Gensynergy项目之后进行的,该项目表明奥布利默森与其他抗癌疗法具有协同作用。2002年12月,根塔公司与Avecia有限公司签署了一份为期5年的生产协议,向其供应奥布利默森。根塔公司的新药申请于2005年12月提交给FDA,并于2006年3月被受理进行审查。该申请基于一项约40名患者的奥布利默森单药I/II期试验(NCT00021749)的数据以及一项241名患者的III期研究(NCT00024440)的数据,这些患者接受了氟达拉滨和环磷酰胺治疗,部分患者联合使用了奥布利默森。2006年10月,根塔公司获得了FDA对奥布利默森用于CLL的随机、关键临床试验的特殊方案评估(SPA)。该试验将在未接受过先前化疗的患者中进行,患者将被随机分配接受氟达拉滨和利妥昔单抗治疗,部分患者联合使用奥布利默森。该试验尚未开始。2003年6月,FDA授予奥布利默森用于CLL的快速通道地位。奥布利默森此前于2001年9月在美国和欧盟获得CLL的孤儿药地位。根塔公司此前根据集中许可程序提交了上市许可申请,西班牙和法国分别被指定为报告国和联合报告国。该申请得到了一项奥布利默森加达卡巴嗪III期研究(NCT00016263)患者延长24个月随访的支持。欧洲药品管理局于2006年1月批准该上市许可申请进行审查。2006年6月,根塔公司收到了欧洲药品管理局提出的一些科学问题,该公司已做出回应。根塔公司打算根据《联邦数据质量法》向FDA提出正式投诉并请求更正信息。该投诉与FDA在2004年5月肿瘤药物咨询委员会(ODAC)会议上对该公司奥布利默森治疗黑色素瘤数据的关键统计分析有关。根塔公司认为该分析试图诋毁奥布利默森治疗显著提高无进展生存期这一发现;ODAC此前同意,在晚期黑色素瘤患者无生存改善的情况下,这一终点将支持完全批准。2003年第三季度向FDA提交了滚动新药申请;然而,在该申请未获得FDA肿瘤药物咨询委员会(ODAC)的上市批准后,根塔公司和安万特撤回了新药申请。2004年5月,ODAC投票认为III期试验结果未提供充分证据证明奥布利默森治疗转移性黑色素瘤患者的有效性超过其毒性。根塔公司可以选择重新提交该申请。2000年8月,FDA授予奥布利默森用于恶性黑色素瘤的孤儿药地位。1999年10月,FDA授予奥布利默森用于与达卡巴嗪联合治疗恶性黑色素瘤的快速通道地位。此外,奥布利默森于2006年10月在澳大利亚获得用于恶性黑色素瘤的孤儿药地位。一项奥布利默森联合达卡巴嗪治疗恶性黑色素瘤患者的III期研究(NCT00016263)进行。与单独使用达卡巴嗪治疗相比,联合治疗并未显著增加总生存时间,但显著增加了无进展生存时间。该III期试验在12个不同国家的140个地点招募了771名患者。患者被随机分配接受单独的达卡巴嗪或联合奥布利默森治疗。该试验的主要终点是比较两个治疗组之间的总生存情况。次要终点包括无进展生存和肿瘤反应的比较分析。根塔公司将对晚期黑色素瘤患者进行另一项奥布利默森的III期研究。该试验旨在提供该药物与达卡巴嗪联合使用时在未接受过化疗患者中的额外安全性和有效性证据。预计约300名患者将参加该试验,计划于2007年年中在欧洲、澳大利亚以及北美和南美各地的地点开始。根塔公司正在进行一项I期临床试验(NCT00409383),以评估奥布利默森、ABI 007和替莫唑胺联合用于未接受过化疗的晚期黑色素瘤患者的情况。该试验于2006年11月启动,是根塔公司奥布利默森加达卡巴嗪III期试验的首个后续研究。2001年9月,奥布利默森在美国和欧盟获得用于多发性骨髓瘤的孤儿药地位。此外,同月FDA授予奥布利默森快速通道指定。美国国立癌症研究所对患有华氏巨球蛋白血症(一种与多发性骨髓瘤相似的疾病)的患者进行了一项奥布利默森的I/II期临床研究(NCT00062244)。研究结果表明奥布利默森可能是这组患者(所有患者Bcl-2表达水平均较高)的一种有效治疗方法。2003年6月,根塔公司和安万特宣布公布奥布利默森联合多西他赛注射用浓溶液用于晚期HRPC患者的II期试验临床数据。研究人员报告称这些发现为进入III期试验提供了依据。根塔公司已获得八项与奥布利默森及其骨架化学相关的美国专利,这些专利将于2008年至2015年期间到期。根塔公司有两项与奥布利默森相关的美国专利申请正在审批中。相应的专利申请已在加拿大、欧洲和日本提交。根塔公司拥有三项与使用奥布利默森方法相关的美国专利,这些专利将于2020年到期,并且还有约45项相应 的外国专利申请。