Therapeutics
NurOwn™
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Overview
Name: NurOwn™
Synonyms: MSC-NTF Cells, debamestrocel , Neurotrophic factors-secreting Mesenchymal Stromal Cells
Therapy Type: Other
Target Type: Other (timeline)
Condition(s): Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis
U.S. FDA Status: Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (Phase 3)
Company: BrainStorm Cell Therapeutics, Inc.
Background
NurOwn™ comprises mesenchymal stem cells enriched from patients’ own bone marrow, propagated in the lab, and induced to secrete neurotrophic factors. The cells are transplanted back into the patients’ spinal cord and muscle, where the neurotrophic factors are expected to promote neuron survival, and slow down disease progression.
Published preclinical work describes microRNA profiling of MSC-NTF cells (Gothelf et al., 2017), and experiments demonstrating the safety of repeated injections of cryopreserved cells in mice (Gothelf et al., 2014). In mice, MSC-NTF transplant to the brain was reported to improve autism-related behaviors (Perets et al., 2017).
Findings
Two open-label safety studies were conducted between 2011 and 2014, involving 36 ALS patients who received NurOwn™ as one-time intramuscular or intrathecal injections, or both. After a six-month follow-up, the treatment was safe, and provided a possible clinical benefit (Jan 2016 news on Petrou et al., 2016).
A Phase 2, placebo-controlled study from May 2014 to July 2016 treated 48 early stage ALS patients with a one-time intramuscular and intrathecal administration of MSC-NTF cells. All patients underwent bone marrow harvest, followed by active transplants in 36 and placebo injections in 12. The study met its primary outcome of safety six months after transplant, but treatment did not change the clinical outcome of rate of decline on the on ALS-Functional Rating Scale (Berry et al., 2019). In a post hoc analysis, a rapid progressor subgroup of 21 patients showed hints of potential slowing of decline at one and three months after treatment.
In August 2017, a Phase 3 study randomized 196 patients to three intrathecal injections of NurOwn™ or placebo, spaced two months apart. The primary endpoint was the number of patients who met criteria for slowed disease progression on the ALSFRS-R six months after the first injection. Participants who finished the trial could continue treatment under an expanded access program. The trial finished in October 2020, and missed its primary endpoint of efficacy (Cudkowicz et al., 2022). A prespecified subgroup analysis suggested benefits in people with less-severe disease. CSF biomarkers of neuroinflammation, neurotrophic factors, and neurodegeneration improved after treatment. The company claimed an 11 percent reduction in CSF neurofilament light in treated patients (press release; July 2023 Gordon Conference poster).
In September 2022, the company filed a Biologicals License application with the FDA, which refused to review it (press release). This “Refusal to File” applies to applications the agency considers incomplete or to have inadequate scientific information to enable review. The company then used a “File Over Protest” procedure to force a review.
On September 27, 2023, an FDA Advisory Committee voted 17-1 against approving NurOwn™ (press release). In its briefing documents, the FDA said the application did not demonstrate effectiveness on primary or secondary endpoints. According to the agency's analysis, survival was worse in patients who received NurOwn™.
On October 18, the company announced it was withdrawing its licencing application in coordination with the FDA, and would discuss further development steps with the agency (press release).
NurOwn™ has also completed a Phase 2, open-label trial for multiple sclerosis (Cohen et al., 2023).
For details on NurOwn™ trials, see clinicaltrials.gov.
Last Updated: 19 Oct 2023
References
News Citations
Paper Citations
- Petrou P, Gothelf Y, Argov Z, Gotkine M, Levy YS, Kassis I, Vaknin-Dembinsky A, Ben-Hur T, Offen D, Abramsky O, Melamed E, Karussis D. Safety and Clinical Effects of Mesenchymal Stem Cells Secreting Neurotrophic Factor Transplantation in Patients With Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis: Results of Phase 1/2 and 2a Clinical Trials. JAMA Neurol. 2016 Mar 1;73(3):337-44. PubMed.
- Berry JD, Cudkowicz ME, Windebank AJ, Staff NP, Owegi M, Nicholson K, McKenna-Yasek D, Levy YS, Abramov N, Kaspi H, Mehra M, Aricha R, Gothelf Y, Brown RH. NurOwn, phase 2, randomized, clinical trial in patients with ALS: Safety, clinical, and biomarker results. Neurology. 2019 Dec 10;93(24):e2294-e2305. Epub 2019 Nov 18 PubMed.
- Cudkowicz ME, Lindborg SR, Goyal NA, Miller RG, Burford MJ, Berry JD, Nicholson KA, Mozaffar T, Katz JS, Jenkins LJ, Baloh RH, Lewis RA, Staff NP, Owegi MA, Berry DA, Gothelf Y, Levy YS, Aricha R, Kern RZ, Windebank AJ, Brown RH Jr. A randomized placebo-controlled phase 3 study of mesenchymal stem cells induced to secrete high levels of neurotrophic factors in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. Muscle Nerve. 2022 Mar;65(3):291-302. Epub 2022 Jan 5 PubMed.
- Cohen JA, Lublin FD, Lock C, Pelletier D, Chitnis T, Mehra M, Gothelf Y, Aricha R, Lindborg S, Lebovits C, Levy Y, Motamed Khorasani A, Kern R. Evaluation of neurotrophic factor secreting mesenchymal stem cells in progressive multiple sclerosis. Mult Scler. 2023 Jan;29(1):92-106. Epub 2022 Sep 14 PubMed.
- Gothelf Y, Kaspi H, Abramov N, Aricha R. miRNA profiling of NurOwn®: mesenchymal stem cells secreting neurotrophic factors. Stem Cell Res Ther. 2017 Nov 7;8(1):249. PubMed.
- Gothelf Y, Abramov N, Harel A, Offen D. Safety of repeated transplantations of neurotrophic factors-secreting human mesenchymal stromal stem cells. Clin Transl Med. 2014;3:21. Epub 2014 Jul 10 PubMed.
- Perets N, Segal-Gavish H, Gothelf Y, Barzilay R, Barhum Y, Abramov N, Hertz S, Morozov D, London M, Offen D. Long term beneficial effect of neurotrophic factors-secreting mesenchymal stem cells transplantation in the BTBR mouse model of autism. Behav Brain Res. 2017 Jul 28;331:254-260. Epub 2017 Apr 7 PubMed.
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