Preclinical optimization of a gene therapy for erythromelalgia and chronic pain
Project Number3U44NS122114-04S1
Contact PI/Project LeaderALEMAN GUILLEN, FERNANDO Other PIs
Awardee OrganizationNAVEGA THERAPEUTICS, INC.
Description
Abstract Text
ABSTRACT
Chronic pain is pain that persists past the normal time of healing. 1.5 billion people
worldwide suffer from chronic pain and this number continues to increase as the elderly population
grows, the prevalence of diabetes rises, and cancer survival rates improve. Chronic pain not only
severely impacts daily quality of life for many patients, it also places a heavy socioeconomic
burden on society. Due to the limited number of efficacious treatment options available, chronic
pain is often treated with opioids despite the risk of addiction and side effects. Unfortunately, the
prescribing of opioids to treat chronic pain has largely fueled the current opioid epidemic.
Therefore, there is an urgent and clear unmet need for non-addictive alternative analgesics for
the treatment of chronic pain. The push to develop specific and non-addictive alternative
painkillers has brought interest to a particular sodium channel, NaV1.7, shown to be important for
pain sensing. Gain-of-function mutations in NaV1.7 are associated with a disorder characterized
by intense burning pain in the extremities: primary erythromelalgia. Conversely, loss-of function
of NaV1.7 results in the inability to feel pain. Therefore, inhibiting NaV1.7 can be an effective
method of reducing pain and treat erythromelalgia patients. To accomplish this, we designed
epigenetic modulators to repress expression of NaV1.7. Rather than making permanent edits to
the genome, these epigenetic modulators will transiently inhibit expression of NaV1.7. By targeting
NaV1.7 at the DNA-level, we can achieve specific and long-lasting modulation of NaV1.7, with
better pharmacokinetics prospects than RNA- and protein-targeting approaches. In this study, we
propose to optimize these epigenetic modulators as well as their delivery in order to achieve high
specificity and efficacy. In addition, we will evaluate our optimized modulators in small-scale
manufacturing studies as well as toxicological studies in a large animal model. The result of this
study will be an optimized gene therapy that is not only non-addictive and efficacious for treatment
of chronic pain but also highly specific and long-lasting.
Public Health Relevance Statement
PROJECT NARRATIVE
Due to the lack of efficacious alternative treatment options, chronic pain is often treated with
opioids despite the risk of addiction and side effects. With the advent of gene therapy, it is now
possible to specifically target pain pathways at the molecular level. The goal of this study is to
further develop and evaluate the efficacy and safety of a non-addictive, alternative analgesic that
can epigenetically repress expression of NaV1.7, a sodium channel that is important for sensing
pain.
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke
CFDA Code
853
DUNS Number
081266832
UEI
EDSAQ1DMYLK7
Project Start Date
01-June-2021
Project End Date
31-May-2025
Budget Start Date
01-June-2024
Budget End Date
31-May-2025
Project Funding Information for 2024
Total Funding
$98,701
Direct Costs
$70,501
Indirect Costs
$28,200
Year
Funding IC
FY Total Cost by IC
2024
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke
$98,701
Year
Funding IC
FY Total Cost by IC
Sub Projects
No Sub Projects information available for 3U44NS122114-04S1
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