Clinical Trial
Open access until Dec. 7, 2024

Disease: Alpha 1-Antitrypsin Deficiency, AATD, (NCT06677307)

Disease info:

Alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency (AATD) is an inherited genetic disorder that is most commonly caused by a G-to-A point mutation in the SERPINA1 gene. This mutation results in the production of insufficient levels of circulating M-AAT protein, which protects the lungs from proteolytic enzymes, and aggregation of misfolded Z-AAT protein in hepatocytes. This leads to lung and liver disease. Individuals with AATD have Z mutations on both alleles, known as the PiZZ genotype.

Augmentation therapy via delivery of functional AAT protein is currently the only treatment option for AATD lung disease and requires weekly intravenous infusions. There are no treatments for AATD liver disease, other than liver transplantation.

Frequency:
There are approximately 200,000 patients in the United States and Europe who have Z mutations on both alleles.
Official title:
A Phase 1/2a, Single- and Multiple-dose Escalation Study to Evaluate the Safety, Tolerability, Pharmacodynamics, and Pharmacokinetics of KRRO 110 in Healthy Adult Volunteers and in Adult Participants with Alpha-1 Antitrypsin Deficiency (AATD) (REWRITE)
Who:

Study Contact 

Name: Study Director

Phone Number:857-529-5757

Email: clinicaltrials@korrobio.com

Sponsor:

Korro Bio

Partners:
Locations:

Australia

Victoria Locations

Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 3004

Nucleus Network Pty Ltd

Contact:

Nucleus Network, Melbourne
61 1-800-243-733 melbourne@nucleusnetwork.com

Contact:

Sam Francis, MBBS, MTrauma, PhD, DPM, FFPM

Study start:
Jan. 1, 2025
Enrollment:
64
Gene editing method:
RNA Editing (ADAR)
Type of edit:
Single base edit on RNA of target gene
Gene:
PiZ variant of the SERPINA1 gene
Delivery method:
Lipid-nanoparticle (LNP) - In-vivo
IndicatorIndicator
IND Enabling Pre-clinical
Phase I Safety
Phase II Safety and Dosing
Phase III Safety and Efficacy

Status: Active not recruiting

Last updated: Dec. 4, 2024
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