Daniel A. Gipe
Regeneron
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Publication
Featured researches published by Daniel A. Gipe.
European Heart Journal | 2015
John J. P. Kastelein; Henry N. Ginsberg; Gisle Langslet; G. Kees Hovingh; Ceska R; Robert Dufour; Dirk Blom; Fernando Civeira; Michel Krempf; Christelle Lorenzato; Jian Zhao; Robert Pordy; Marie T. Baccara-Dinet; Daniel A. Gipe; Mary Jane Geiger; Michel Farnier
Aims To assess long-term (78 weeks) alirocumab treatment in patients with heterozygous familial hypercholesterolaemia (HeFH) and inadequate LDL-C control on maximally tolerated lipid-lowering therapy (LLT). Methods and results In two randomized, double-blind studies (ODYSSEY FH I, n = 486; FH II, n = 249), patients were randomized 2 : 1 to alirocumab 75 mg or placebo every 2 weeks (Q2W). Alirocumab dose was increased at Week 12 to 150 mg Q2W if Week 8 LDL-C was ≥1.8 mmol/L (70 mg/dL). Primary endpoint (both studies) was percentage change in calculated LDL-C from baseline to Week 24. Mean LDL-C levels decreased from 3.7 mmol/L (144.7 mg/dL) at baseline to 1.8 mmol/L (71.3 mg/dL; −57.9% vs. placebo) at Week 24 in patients randomized to alirocumab in FH I and from 3.5 mmol/L (134.6 mg/dL) to 1.8 mmol/L (67.7 mg/dL; −51.4% vs. placebo) in FH II (P < 0.0001). These reductions were maintained through Week 78. LDL-C <1.8 mmol/L (regardless of cardiovascular risk) was achieved at Week 24 by 59.8 and 68.2% of alirocumab-treated patients in FH I and FH II, respectively. Adverse events resulted in discontinuation in 3.4% of alirocumab-treated patients in FH I (vs. 6.1% placebo) and 3.6% (vs. 1.2%) in FH II. Rate of injection site reactions in alirocumab-treated patients was 12.4% in FH I and 11.4% in FH II (vs. 11.0 and 7.4% with placebo). Conclusion In patients with HeFH and inadequate LDL-C control at baseline despite maximally tolerated statin ± other LLT, alirocumab treatment resulted in significant LDL-C lowering and greater achievement of LDL-C target levels and was well tolerated. Clinical trial registration Cinicaltrials.gov (identifiers: NCT01623115; NCT01709500).
Journal of Clinical Lipidology | 2015
Patrick M. Moriarty; Paul D. Thompson; Christopher P. Cannon; John R. Guyton; Jean Bergeron; Franklin Zieve; Eric Bruckert; Terry A. Jacobson; Stephen L. Kopecky; Marie T. Baccara-Dinet; Yunling Du; Robert Pordy; Daniel A. Gipe
BACKGROUND Statin intolerance limits many patients from achieving optimal low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) concentrations. Current options for such patients include using a lower but tolerated dose of a statin and adding or switching to ezetimibe or other non-statin therapies. METHODS ODYSSEY ALTERNATIVE (NCT01709513) compared alirocumab with ezetimibe in patients at moderate to high cardiovascular risk with statin intolerance (unable to tolerate ≥2 statins, including one at the lowest approved starting dose) due to muscle symptoms. A placebo run-in and statin rechallenge arm were included in an attempt to confirm intolerance. Patients (n = 361) received single-blind subcutaneous (SC) and oral placebo for 4 weeks during placebo run-in. Patients reporting muscle-related symptoms during the run-in were to be withdrawn. Continuing patients were randomized (2:2:1) to double-blind alirocumab 75 mg SC every 2 weeks (Q2W; plus oral placebo), ezetimibe 10 mg/d (plus SC placebo Q2W), or atorvastatin 20 mg/d (rechallenge; plus SC placebo Q2W) for 24 weeks. Alirocumab dose was increased to 150 mg Q2W at week 12 depending on week 8 LDL-C values. Primary end point was percent change in LDL-C from baseline to week 24 (intent-to-treat) for alirocumab vs ezetimibe. RESULTS Baseline mean (standard deviation) LDL-C was 191.3 (69.3) mg/dL (5.0 [1.8] mmol/L). Alirocumab reduced mean (standard error) LDL-C by 45.0% (2.2%) vs 14.6% (2.2%) with ezetimibe (mean difference 30.4% [3.1%], P < .0001). Skeletal muscle-related events were less frequent with alirocumab vs atorvastatin (hazard ratio 0.61, 95% confidence interval 0.38-0.99, P = .042). CONCLUSIONS Alirocumab produced greater LDL-C reductions than ezetimibe in statin-intolerant patients, with fewer skeletal-muscle adverse events vs atorvastatin.
The New England Journal of Medicine | 2017
Frederick E. Dewey; Viktoria Gusarova; Richard L. Dunbar; Colm O’Dushlaine; Omri Gottesman; Shane McCarthy; Cristopher V. Van Hout; Shannon Bruse; Hayes M. Dansky; Joseph B. Leader; Michael F. Murray; Marylyn D. Ritchie; H. Lester Kirchner; Lukas Habegger; Alex Lopez; John S. Penn; An Zhao; Weiping Shao; Neil Stahl; Andrew J. Murphy; Sara C. Hamon; Aurelie Bouzelmat; Rick Zhang; Brad Shumel; Robert Pordy; Daniel A. Gipe; Gary A. Herman; Wayne H-H Sheu; I-Te Lee; Kae-Woei Liang
BACKGROUND Loss‐of‐function variants in the angiopoietin‐like 3 gene (ANGPTL3) have been associated with decreased plasma levels of triglycerides, low‐density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol, and high‐density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol. It is not known whether such variants or therapeutic antagonism of ANGPTL3 are associated with a reduced risk of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease. METHODS We sequenced the exons of ANGPTL3 in 58,335 participants in the DiscovEHR human genetics study. We performed tests of association for loss‐of‐function variants in ANGPTL3 with lipid levels and with coronary artery disease in 13,102 case patients and 40,430 controls from the DiscovEHR study, with follow‐up studies involving 23,317 case patients and 107,166 controls from four population studies. We also tested the effects of a human monoclonal antibody, evinacumab, against Angptl3 in dyslipidemic mice and against ANGPTL3 in healthy human volunteers with elevated levels of triglycerides or LDL cholesterol. RESULTS In the DiscovEHR study, participants with heterozygous loss‐of‐function variants in ANGPTL3 had significantly lower serum levels of triglycerides, HDL cholesterol, and LDL cholesterol than participants without these variants. Loss‐of‐function variants were found in 0.33% of case patients with coronary artery disease and in 0.45% of controls (adjusted odds ratio, 0.59; 95% confidence interval, 0.41 to 0.85; P=0.004). These results were confirmed in the follow‐up studies. In dyslipidemic mice, inhibition of Angptl3 with evinacumab resulted in a greater decrease in atherosclerotic lesion area and necrotic content than a control antibody. In humans, evinacumab caused a dose‐dependent placebo‐adjusted reduction in fasting triglyceride levels of up to 76% and LDL cholesterol levels of up to 23%. CONCLUSIONS Genetic and therapeutic antagonism of ANGPTL3 in humans and of Angptl3 in mice was associated with decreased levels of all three major lipid fractions and decreased odds of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease. (Funded by Regeneron Pharmaceuticals and others; ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT01749878.)
Journal of Clinical Lipidology | 2014
Patrick M. Moriarty; Terry A. Jacobson; Eric Bruckert; Paul D. Thompson; John R. Guyton; Marie T. Baccara-Dinet; Daniel A. Gipe
BACKGROUND Statin intolerance has been a major limitation in the use of statins, especially at higher doses. New effective treatments are needed for lowering low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) in patients who cannot tolerate daily statin doses. OBJECTIVE ODYSSEY ALTERNATIVE (NCT01709513) evaluates efficacy and safety of alirocumab, a fully human proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 9 monoclonal antibody, in patients with well-documented statin intolerance and moderate to very high cardiovascular risk. METHODS This is a phase 3, multicenter, randomized, double-blind, double-dummy study in statin-intolerant patients. Intolerance was defined as inability to take at least 2 different statins because of muscle-related adverse events (AEs), 1 at the lowest approved starting dose. Patients first received single-blind subcutaneous and oral placebo for 4 weeks, and were withdrawn if they developed muscle-related AEs after the placebo treatment. Continuing patients were randomized (2:2:1 ratio) to alirocumab 75 mg self-administered via single 1 mL prefilled pen every 2 weeks or ezetimibe 10 mg/day or atorvastatin 20 mg/day (statin rechallenge), for 24 weeks. Alirocumab dose was increased to 150 mg every 2 weeks (also 1 mL) at week 12 depending on week 8 LDL-C level. The primary endpoint is percent change in LDL-C from baseline to week 24 by intent-to-treat analysis. Muscle-related AEs were assessed by spontaneous patient reports and clinic queries. RESULTS A total of 314 patients have been randomized. CONCLUSIONS This is the first and only study of a new class of LDL-C-lowering agents in patients selected with a rigorously documented intolerance to statins, using a placebo run-in and statin control arm.
The New England Journal of Medicine | 2017
Daniel Gaudet; Daniel A. Gipe; Robert Pordy; Zahid Ahmad; Marina Cuchel; Prediman K. Shah; Kuang Yuh Chyu; William J. Sasiela; Kuo Chen Chan; Diane Brisson; Etienne Khoury; Poulabi Banerjee; Viktoria Gusarova; Jesper Gromada; Neil Stahl; George D. Yancopoulos; G. Kees Hovingh
Evinacumab, a monoclonal antibody that blocks ANGPTL3, was administered to nine adults with homozygous familial hypercholesterolemia. At 4 weeks, LDL cholesterol was reduced by a mean of 49%, with a mean absolute change from baseline of −157 mg per deciliter.
Postgraduate Medicine | 2015
Michael J. Koren; Eli M. Roth; James M. McKenney; Daniel A. Gipe; Corinne Hanotin; Anne-Catherine Ferrand; Richard Wu; Robert Dufour
Abstract Background. Alirocumab, a fully human monoclonal antibody to proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 9, is in Phase III development for the treatment of hypercholesterolemia. In Phase II studies, 150 mg every 2 weeks (Q2W) was the highest Q2W dose studied, and it is currently the highest Q2W dose under development. To better assess the safety and efficacy of this dose, data across three Phase II studies were pooled. Methods. We analyzed data from three double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled Phase II studies of 8 or 12 weeks’ duration. In the current analysis, 77 patients were randomized to the control group and 108 were randomized to alirocumab 150 mg Q2W administered via a single 1 mL subcutaneous injection. Results. Adverse events (AEs) occurred in 58.3% of alirocumab patients compared with 54.5% of placebo-controlled patients. The most common AE was mild, transient injection-site reactions. No signal for muscle symptoms such as myalgia and no cases of neurocognitive effects were reported or observed. One alirocumab patient, also receiving atorvastatin 80 mg/day, had an increase in aspartate transaminase 3 to 5 times the upper limit of normal. Alirocumab 150 mg Q2W reduced low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) from baseline by 68.4% compared with 10.5% for the control group. More than 90% of patients achieved an LDL-C target of < 70 mg/dL with alirocumab versus 8% with control. Marked reductions in other atherogenic lipids and modest increases in high-density lipoprotein cholesterol were also observed. Conclusion. At the highest Q2W dose under development (150 mg), alirocumab appears well tolerated and produces robust LDL-C reductions. These data suggest that alirocumab 150 mg Q2W is an appropriate dose for further evaluation in Phase III trials.
Journal of Lipids | 2014
Beth A. Taylor; Gregory A. Panza; Linda S. Pescatello; Stuart R. Chipkin; Daniel A. Gipe; Weiping Shao; C Michael White; Paul D. Thompson
The purpose of the present report was to examine whether proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 9 (PCSK9) levels differ in individuals who do not exhibit expected reductions in low density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) with statin therapy. Eighteen nonresponder subjects treated with 80 mg atorvastatin treatment for 6 months without substantial reductions in LDL-C (ΔLDL-C: 2.6 ± 11.4%) were compared to age- and gender-matched atorvastatin responders (ΔLDL-C: 50.7 ± 8.5%) and placebo-treated subjects (ΔLDL-C: 9.9 ± 21.5%). Free PCSK9 was marginally higher in nonresponders at baseline (P = 0.07) and significantly higher in atorvastatin responders after 6 months of treatment (P = 0.04). The change in free PCSK9 over 6 months with statin treatment was higher (P < 0.01) in atorvastatin responders (134.2 ± 131.5 ng/mL post- versus prestudy) than in either the nonresponders (39.9 ± 87.8 ng/mL) or placebo subjects (27.8 ± 97.6 ng/mL). Drug compliance was not lower in the nonresponders as assessed by pill counts and poststudy plasma atorvastatin levels. Serum PCSK9 levels, both at baseline and in response to statin therapy, may differentiate individuals who do versus those who do not respond to statin treatment.
American Journal of Cardiology | 2014
Daniel Gaudet; James M. McKenney; Eli M. Roth; Corinne Hanotin; Daniel A. Gipe; Yunling Du; Anne-Catherine Ferrand; Henry N. Ginsberg; Evan A. Stein
Cardiovascular Drugs and Therapy | 2014
John J. P. Kastelein; Jennifer G. Robinson; Michel Farnier; Michel Krempf; Gisle Langslet; Christelle Lorenzato; Daniel A. Gipe; Marie T. Baccara-Dinet
Journal of Clinical Lipidology | 2017
John J. P. Kastelein; G. Kees Hovingh; Gisle Langslet; Marie T. Baccara-Dinet; Daniel A. Gipe; Umesh Chaudhari; Jian Zhao; Pascal Minini; Michel Farnier