Establishing a National Platform for the Development of Nucleic Acid Therapy for Rare Disease

Lead Research Organisation: University College London
Department Name: Great Ormond St. Instit of Child Health

Abstract

Nucleic acid therapeutics (NATs) offer great potential to treat rare diseases (RDs) by addressing their genetic causes in a target-specific manner. The exponential increase in NAT clinical trials in the last few years clearly demonstrates the role of these molecules in translational research and unique opportunities for investigator-led preclinical and clinical studies, in which the UK has particular track record strengths.

To further promote the development of NATs for RD patients in the UK, we are creating the node entitled, 'Establishing a UK Platform for the Development of Nucleic Acid Therapy for Rare Disease' (UPNAT). UPNAT will bring together relevant stakeholders, comprising of scientists, clinicians, geneticists, trainees, patient advocacy groups and charities, industrial partners, international non-profit organizations and regulatory bodies, to establish and coordinate a national network that will facilitate the exploitation of the rapid development of NATs.

UPNAT intends to address a number of challenges that NAT research and development is currently encountering in the RD field within the UK, including 1) a lack of a national infrastructure for cross-disciplinary knowledge exchange and expertise sharing between centres leading NAT preclinical and clinical development; 2) a clear path for systematically linking patients carrying unique mutations to NAT expertise; and 3) the need for continuous dialogue between regulators and researchers to streamline the process of regulatory approvals, monitoring of outcomes, and accelerating the clinical translation of RD-specific NATs.

To tackle these challenges, UPNAT will create the following networking opportunities: 1) scientific symposia to promote cross-disciplinary knowledge exchange between researchers, clinical and industry stakeholders; 2) webinars and activities between patient advocacy groups, charities, and researchers to promote public engagement; 3) training schemes to educate and equip the next generation of scientists and clinicians with the knowledge and skills to lead future NAT research programs.

The node encompasses three complementary projects, to address the overall objectives and crucial bottlenecks. These projects focus on 1) Target selection, NAT strategy design and pre-clinical development; 2) Enhancing UK's capability in NAT scale-up synthesis and pilot toxicology studies tailored for RD; 3) NAT clinical trial design and regulatory approval. Collectively these work packages will enable a robust framework for the design, development, and clinical translation of NAT to be adopted by RD centres in the UK.

UPNAT will focus on areas of unique strength in rare paediatric and adult disorders, including six paediatric highly specialised services provided by the partner organisations in London, Oxford, Cambridge, Birmingham, Liverpool and Sheffield, and the adult expert centres at the University College London (UCL) Institute of Ophthalmology, Institute of Neurology, Moorfields Eye Hospital and University College Hospital. The node will be focused on neurological, neurodegenerative, metabolic and ophthalmological diseases which are uniquely conducive for NAT applications and remain open to other disease areas as NAT technology rapidly advances and Node develops.

UPNAT will be led by investigators and collaborators from UCL Great Ormond Street Institute of Child Health, Institute of Ophthalmology, Institute of Neurology, Great Ormond Street Hospital (GOSH), Moorfields Eye Hospital, UKRI NATA (Oxford) and investigators from Oxford, Cambridge and Birmingham. Node members will work in partnership with Genomics England, five NIHR BRCs (GOSH, UCLH, Moorfields, Oxford and Cambridge), industry, patient advocacy groups and charities, the UK regulators, and the international consortia on NAT in RD. Collectively, we are well equipped and determined to maximise the transformative potential NATs offer for the RD patient community within the UK and beyond.

Technical Summary

The UPNAT Node will bring together relevant stakeholders to establish a national network to promote innovation and accelerate the translation of nucleic acid-based rare disease (RD) therapeutics within the UK and beyond.

UPNAT will: 1) Engage researchers, clinicians, wider healthcare workers with patients and advocates, charities, pharma industry and regulatory bodies to promote NAT awareness and innovation; 2) Provide a cross-disciplinary platform to stimulate knowledge exchange in NAT development; 3) Partner with UKRI Nucleic Acid Therapy Accelerator (NATA), NIHR Biomedical Research Centres (BRCs) and Genomics England to accelerate NAT research and clinical translation amongst diverse RD populations; 4) Engage with international collaborators to facilitate data sharing schemes to fast-track NAT innovation and maximise potential patient benefit; 5) Establish cross-node collaborations with other RD nodes to support NAT development in more RD specialities; 6) Embed and prioritise PPIE through all aspects of the Node to support the RD community across the UK.

Our Node mission will be implemented through three synergistic work packages (WP). WP1 will pioneer a strategic target selection process and focus on NAT preclinical development. WP2 will act as an exemplar study, led by NATA, to pilot the preclinical assessment and scale-up synthesis of NAT. This will function as a pilot scheme to establish a NATA-based NAT manufacturing facility future in the UK. WP3 will provide an interdisciplinary framework to facilitate NAT clinical translation focussing on trial design principles, and to streamline the regulatory approval process.

UPNAT will be led by investigators from University College London, NATA, University of Oxford, in partnership at national level with NIHR BRCs, NIHR Bioresources, Genomics England and a broad range of pharmaceutical companies, charities as well as international RD consortia.

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