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BIA 28-6156 for GBA-Parkinson's Disease
BIA 28-6156 GBA Parkinsons
Overview
BIA 28-6156 GBA Parkinsons
Overview
BIA 28-6156 is a novel therapeutic candidate being developed by Bial Pharmaceutical for the treatment of Parkinson's disease in patients carrying [GBA](/entities/gba) gene mutations. This Phase 2 clinical trial (NCT05819359) targets the underlying genetics of Parkinson's disease by modulating glucocerebrosidase (GCase) activity [1](https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT05819359).
Clinical Trial Details
| Attribute | Value |
|-----------|-------|
| Trial ID | NCT05819359 |
| Sponsor | Bial Pharmaceutical |
| Phase | Phase 2 |
| Status | RECRUITING |
| Condition | Parkinson's Disease with GBA Mutations |
| Intervention | BIA 28-6156 |
Background
GBA Mutations and Parkinson's Disease
Heterozygous mutations in the GBA gene (glucocerebrosidase) are the most common genetic risk factor for Parkinson's disease:
- Prevalence: 5-10% of PD patients carry GBA mutations
- Risk: GBA carriers have 5-6× increased PD risk
- Phenotype: GBA-PD often presents with earlier onset, more rapid progression
- Pathology: GBA mutations lead to reduced glucocerebrosidase enzyme activity
- Cognitive involvement: Higher risk of dementia compared to idiopathic PD
Types of GBA Mutations
GBA mutations are categorized by their severity:
- Severe mutations (e.g., N370S, L444P): Associated with earlier onset and more rapid progression
- Mild mutations (e.g., E326K, T369M): Associated with intermediate risk
- Carrier status: Even heterozygous carriers show increased PD risk
Glucocerebrosidase (GCase)
The glucocerebrosidase enzyme encoded by GBA:
- Function: Breaks down glucosylceramide in lysosomes
- PD link: Reduced GCase activity leads to:
- Lysosomal dysfunction
- [α-Synuclein](/proteins/alpha-synuclein) accumulation
- Mitochondrial dysfunction
- Endoplasmic reticulum stress
- Bidirectional relationship: α-Synuclein can also inhibit GCase activity, creating a vicious cycle
Mechanism of Action
GCase Modulation
BIA 28-6156 is designed to:
Molecular Targets
- Primary target: Glucocerebrosidase (GCase)
- Secondary effects: Lysosomal function, α-synuclein clearance
- Approach: Pharmacological chaperone therapy
Trial Design
Study Type
- Design: Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled
- Population: Parkinson's disease patients with GBA mutations
- Dose groups: Multiple dose levels (dose escalation)
- Duration: 12-24 months treatment
Key Eligibility
Inclusion criteria:
- Age 30-80 years
- Diagnosed with Parkinson's disease (UK Brain Bank criteria)
- Confirmed GBA mutation carrier (pathogenic variant)
- Hoehn & Yahr stage 1-3
- Mild to moderate disease severity
- Stable PD medication for ≥4 weeks
- MMSE score ≥24
- Severe cognitive impairment (MMSE <24)
- Significant psychiatric comorbidities (uncontrolled depression, psychosis)
- Previous GCase-targeted therapy
- History of brain surgery (DBS)
- Contraindications to MRI
- Active malignancy
- Unstable medical conditions
Endpoints
Primary:
- Safety and tolerability (adverse events, lab values, vital signs)
- Change in GCase activity biomarkers (PBMC GCase activity)
- Change in glucosylceramide (GlcCer) levels
- Motor symptom progression (MDS-UPDRS Parts I-III)
- Cognitive function (MOCA, RBANS)
- Biomarkers of α-synuclein (CSF RT-QuIC, pS129)
- Lysosomal function markers (cathepsin D, β-galactosidase)
- Quality of life measures (PDQ-39)
- Non-motor symptoms (NMS Scale, Epworth Sleepiness Scale)
- Neuroimaging (DaT-SPECT, MRI volumetry)
- Skin biopsy for α-synuclein aggregation
- Digital biomarker measures (wearable sensors)
Rationale
Why Target GBA?
GBA-associated Parkinson's disease (GBA-PD) represents the most common genetic form of Parkinson's disease, accounting for 5-10% of all PD cases. This genetic subtype offers unique opportunities for precision medicine approaches because[@gba2014]:
Preclinical Evidence
The development of BIA 28-6156 rests on extensive preclinical evidence from multiple model systems:
Cellular Models
- GCase chaperones restore enzyme activity in fibroblasts from GBA-PD patients
- Reduced glucosylceramide accumulation in treated cells
- Decreased α-synuclein aggregation in neuronal cell lines
- Improved lysosomal function markers
- Gba knockout mice show accumulation of GlcCer and α-synuclein
- GCase chaperone treatment reduces substrate accumulation
- Improved motor performance in treated animals
- Neuroprotection in dopaminergic neurons
- Patient-derived neurons show GCase deficiency
- Chaperone treatment rescues enzymatic function
- Reduced α-synuclein in neuronal cultures
- Mitochondrial function improvement
Scientific Foundation
The GBA-PD therapeutic approach is grounded in fundamental research:
Genetic Evidence
- Large multi-center studies confirm 5-6× increased PD risk
- Dose-response relationship: severe mutations confer higher risk
- Earlier onset and more rapid progression in GBA carriers
- Higher rates of cognitive impairment and dementia
- GCase activity reduced 50-80% in GBA-PD patients
- GlcCer accumulation in brain and peripheral tissues
- Lysosomal dysfunction precedes clinical symptoms
- α-Synuclein-GlcCer interactions promote aggregation
- Pharmacological chaperones bind GCase, stabilizing the enzyme
- Increased activity leads to substrate clearance
- Reduces downstream α-synuclein pathology
- Potential for disease modification rather than symptom control
Therapeutic Implications
If Successful: Transformative Potential
The approval of BIA 28-6156 would represent a paradigm shift in Parkinson's disease treatment, with implications extending beyond the GBA-PD patient population:
For GBA-PD Patients
- First disease-modifying therapy targeting the specific genetic cause
- Potential to slow disease progression at the molecular level
- May reduce cognitive decline risk (a major concern in GBA-PD)
- Improved quality of life through disease modification rather than just symptom control
- Potential for early intervention before extensive neurodegeneration
- Proof of concept for genetically-targeted therapies
- Framework for developing similar approaches for other genetic subtypes
- Validation of GCase modulation as a therapeutic strategy
- Foundation for combination therapies addressing multiple pathways
- Biomarker-driven development model
- Regulatory pathway for precision medicine approaches
- Potential spillover to idiopathic PD through understanding of lysosomal dysfunction
Challenges and Mitigation Strategies
Challenge: BBB Penetration
- Issue: Many GCase chaperones fail to achieve adequate brain concentrations
- Mitigation: BIA 28-6156 optimized for lipophilicity and CNS penetration
- Evidence: Preclinical PK/PD studies show brain exposure in mouse models
- Status: Phase 2 will validate brain target engagement
- Issue: Severe vs. mild GBA mutations may respond differently
- Mitigation: Pre-specified subgroup analyses in trial design
- Evidence: In vitro data suggests differential response by mutation type
- Status: Stratified enrollment ensures adequate representation
- Issue: Chronic GCase modulation may have unexpected effects
- Mitigation: 24-month open-label extension with comprehensive monitoring
- Evidence: Safety data from previous chaperone programs
- Status: Ongoing monitoring for enzyme replacement effects
- Issue: Surrogate endpoints require validation
- Mitigation: Cross-validation across multiple assay platforms
- Evidence: Consortium efforts for biomarker standardization
- Status: Qualification efforts underway with regulatory agencies
- Issue: Many GBA carriers unaware of their mutation status
- Mitigation: Genetic testing initiatives and awareness campaigns
- Evidence: Increased genetic testing in PD clinics
- Status: Partnering with genetic testing companies
Comparison to Other GCase-Targeting Approaches
BIA 28-6156 occupies a unique position in the GCase modulation landscape:
| Compound | Company | Mechanism | Status | Route | Advantages |
|----------|---------|-----------|--------|-------|-------------|
| BIA 28-6156 | Bial | Chaperone | Phase 2 | Oral | Non-competitive, reversible |
| Venglustat | Sanofi | GCase inhibitor | Phase 2 | Oral | Different mechanism (substrate reduction) |
| AT3375 | Astellas | Chaperone | Phase 1 | IV | Higher potency |
| Ambroxol | Repurposed | Chaperone | Phase 2/3 | Oral | Generic, established safety |
| GZ161 | Sanofi | Chaperone | Preclinical | Oral | Next-generation |
| PR001 | Prev Ambros | Gene therapy | Phase 1/2 | AAV | Single administration |
Why BIA 28-6156 stands out:
Biomarkers for Patient Selection
Key biomarkers being explored for patient selection and response monitoring:
Genetic Biomarkers
- GBA mutation genotyping (required for enrollment)
- Mutation severity classification (severe vs. mild)
- TMEM106B genotype (potential modifier)
- GCase activity in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs)
- Primary pharmacodynamic marker of target engagement
- Glucosylceramide (GlcCer) levels in plasma/CSF
- Upstream substrate accumulation reflects GCase dysfunction
- Glucosylsphingosine (Lyso-Gb1) in CSF
- More sensitive biomarker than GlcCer[@silt2023]
- Cathepsin D activity
- β-Galactosidase activity
- Lysosomal lipid profiling
- RT-QuIC seeding activity in CSF
- pS129 α-synuclein in CSF
- Skin biopsy immunohistochemistry
- Neurofilament light chain (NfL) in plasma/CSF
- General marker of neuronal injury
- DaT-SPECT: Dopaminergic terminal integrity
- FDG-PET: GBA-PD shows distinct frontotemporal hypometabolism
- MRI: Caudate and cortical atrophy patterns
- PET: Ongoing development of GCase-specific tracers
Clinical Translation
Biomarker Development and Patient Selection
The development of BIA 28-6156 relies heavily on biomarker stratification for patient selection and treatment response monitoring. GBA-PD represents a genetically distinct subtype that requires specific biomarker approaches[@mallory2022]:
Genetic Biomarkers
- GBA mutation genotyping: Required for trial enrollment; identifies pathogenic variants (N370S, L444P, E326K, etc.)
- Mutation severity classification: Severe vs. mild mutations influence expected treatment response
- TMEM106B genotype: Potential modifier of GBA-PD phenotype and treatment response
- GCase activity in PBMCs: Primary pharmacodynamic biomarker; measures target engagement
- Glucosylceramide (GlcCer) levels: Upstream substrate accumulation reflects GCase dysfunction
- Glucosylsphingosine (Lyso-Gb1): More sensitive substrate marker than GlcCer[@silt2023]
- CSF α-synuclein: RT-QuIC seeding activity may track disease modification
- Neurofilament light chain (NfL): General neurodegeneration marker
- Lysosomal function panels: Cathepsin D activity, β-galactosidase, etc.
- DaT-SPECT: Dopaminergic terminal integrity; tracks disease progression
- FDG-PET: Pattern of brain metabolism; GBA-PD shows distinct hypometabolism
- MRI: Regional atrophy patterns; caudate and cortical involvement
Regulatory Considerations
The regulatory pathway for GCase-targeted therapies has several considerations[@migliore2022]:
Clinical Practice Integration
Patient Selection in Clinical Practice
- Genetic testing for GBA mutations in early-onset PD or family history
- Counseling on genetic implications for patients and family members
- Discussion of clinical trial eligibility
- Baseline and longitudinal GCase activity measurement
- Cognitive monitoring (higher dementia risk in GBA-PD)
- Motor assessment using MDS-UPDRS
- If approved, BIA 28-6156 would represent first disease-modifying therapy for GBA-PD
- Potential to slow disease progression rather than just manage symptoms
- May require combination with standard dopaminergic therapies
Competitive Landscape
BIA 28-6156 enters a competitive GCase modulation field[@orr2023]:
| Agent | Company | Mechanism | Status | Notes |
|-------|---------|-----------|--------|-------|
| BIA 28-6156 | Bial | Chaperone | Phase 2 | Oral small molecule |
| Venglustat | Sanofi | GCase inhibitor | Phase 2 | May worsen PD |
| AT3375 | Astellas | Chaperone | Phase 1 | IV administration |
| Ambroxol | Repurposed | Chaperone | Phase 2/3 | Generic available |
| GZ161 | Sanofi | Chaperone | Preclinical | Next-gen |
Challenges and Mitigation Strategies
Challenge: BBB Penetration
- Mitigation: Optimizing lipophilicity while maintaining GCase affinity
- Status: BIA 28-6156 designed for CNS penetration
- Mitigation: Stratified analysis by mutation severity
- Status: Pre-specified subgroup analyses in trial design
- Mitigation: 24-month open-label extension planned
- Status: Ongoing monitoring for enzyme replacement effects
- Mitigation: Cross-validation across multiple assay platforms
- Status: Consortium efforts for standardization
Company: Bial Pharmaceutical
[Bial Pharmaceutical](https://bial.com) is a Portuguese pharmaceutical company founded in 1914, with headquarters in Lisbon. The company focuses on CNS disorders and has a diversified pipeline:
Pipeline Focus Areas
- Parkinson's disease and movement disorders
- Epilepsy
- Multiple sclerosis
- Pain management
- FDA orphan drug designation for BIA 28-6156 in GBA-PD
- European orphan drug designation
- Partnership discussions for potential commercialization
- Private company with consistent R&D investment
- Focus on specialty CNS indications
- International expansion plans
See Also
- [Parkinson's Disease](/diseases/parkinsons-disease)
- [GBA Gene](/genes/gba)
- [Glucocerebrosidase](/proteins/gba-protein)
- [Parkinson's Disease Genetic Risk Factors](/mechanisms/parkinsons-genetic-risk-factors)
- [Lysosomal Dysfunction in PD](/mechanisms/lysosomal-dysfunction-parkinsons)
- [Alpha-Synuclein Pathology](/mechanisms/alpha-synuclein-pathology)
References
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