Exhibit 99.1
uniQure Announces Dosing of First Patient in Phase I/IIa Clinical Trial
of AMT-191 for the Treatment of Fabry Disease
Lexington, MA and Amsterdam, the Netherlands, August, 15, 2024 — uniQure N.V. (NASDAQ: QURE), a leading gene therapy company advancing transformative therapies for patients with severe medical needs, today announced that the first patient has been dosed in a Phase I/IIa clinical trial of AMT-191 for the treatment of Fabry disease, a rare, inherited genetic disease. The Phase I/IIa study is a multi-center, open-label trial being conducted in the United States with two dose-escalating cohorts assessing the safety, tolerability and early signs of efficacy of AMT-191 in individuals with Fabry disease.
“We are very pleased to begin patient dosing for AMT-191 in Fabry disease, marking a significant milestone in this year’s goal to advance three new gene therapy candidates into clinical studies,” stated Walid Abi-Saab, M.D., chief medical officer of uniQure. “AMT-191 utilizes the same AAV delivery technology incorporated in HEMGENIX®, which has an extensive, long-term safety profile and demonstrated effectiveness in patients with preexisting neutralizing antibodies to the AAV capsid. Our trial is designed to capture well-established endpoints in Fabry disease and to rapidly generate clinical proof-of-concept data for AMT-191 with a differentiated product profile relative to other Fabry programs in clinical development.”
AMT-191 is an investigational AAV5-based gene therapy that uses a proprietary, highly potent promoter to deliver a galactosidase alpha (GLA) transgene designed to target the liver to produce GLA protein. In patients with Fabry disease, a pathogenic variant in the GLA gene leads to α-galactosidase A (aGAL-A) enzyme deficiency, which in turn results in a progressive accumulation of lipids in multiple cell types, including kidney and heart cells, eventually resulting in a multi-system disorder. AMT-191 may offer a novel potential one-time intravenously administered approach to treating Fabry disease.
The Phase I/IIa clinical trial of AMT-191 will be conducted in the United States. The multicenter, open-label trial consists of two cohorts with up to six adult male patients each: a low-dose cohort of 6e10^13 gc/kg and a high-dose cohort of 3e10^14 gc/kg delivered through a one-time intravenous infusion. Patients will continue to receive their regular enzyme replacement therapy until the criteria for withdrawal is met and will be followed for a period of 24 months. The trial will explore the safety, tolerability, and early signs of efficacy by measuring the expression of lysosomal enzyme aGLA-A. Additional details are available on www.clinicaltrials.gov (NCT06270316).
“This achievement marks an exciting period for the company as we advance additional programs into clinical trials this year,” stated Matt Kapusta, chief executive officer of uniQure. “Building on our momentum, we are focused on multiple, exciting catalysts across our pipeline, including engaging with the FDA to pursue an expedited clinical pathway for AMT-130 in Huntington’s disease and the initiation of new clinical studies in temporal lobe epilepsy and SOD1-ALS. With a strong balance sheet and runway extended through the end of 2027 from multiple cost reduction initiatives, we believe we are in an excellent position to execute on key value-creating milestones.”
About Fabry Disease
Fabry disease is an Xlinked- genetic disorder resulting from a deficiency of GLA. Based on a 2020 study published in the Journal of Therapeutics and Clinical Risk Management, the prevalence is estimated to be between one in 40,000 and one in 117,000 individuals. The current standard of care for Fabry disease is bi-weekly infusions of enzyme replacement therapy, a treatment with limited effectiveness in many patients due