Ken Mills
Analyst · Brian Skorney with Baird
Yes. It’s also a great question because I think we’ve brought forward this really interesting data in terms of stratification. We had a call today. We’ve had calls recently with rare disease families and parents and investigators and partners. And I think one way to answer that, Charlie, is disease stabilization is improvement for families. Right now in Hunter and in Duchenne are going to be able to be finding access to things like gene therapy and other care at a point in time where you can expect to see the type of improvement that we’re seeing in the kids that are within two standard deviations of the mean, and usually that’s age correlated. But we’ve decided to step out a little bit under the spotlight of just saying it’s about age and getting kids younger, I mean, that’s certainly true, but it’s not exclusively yet, it is about progression as well. When it comes to thinking about the commercial benefit and the clinical benefit in the commercial setting rather, I have to say, I mean we’ve shown the Baileys and we’re very transparent about what we’re seeing in terms of the different functional indices in the assessments that we do clinically, and that there can be differences. What we sometimes talk about less, and though I think is going to be a part of the conversation with payers and in the commercial setting is, when we are seeing stabilization, what impact is that having at home? What impact is that having on family? What impact is that having on sleep patterns, on toileting, on engagement with the boys among their families? And those things are not to be discounted in any way, shape or form. They are more caregiver and patient reported outcomes different than the sort of analyses that we do in these structured forms of evaluating behavior and neurodevelopment. So, I think we’ve also, even in this program for RGX-121, had a trial publicly available that we’ve dosed kids over the age of five that are much older than any place that you would even expect to even potentially see the type of stabilization that we’ve shown in the setting so far. And there are things to take away from that that are valuable for patients and families. So, look, overall, I think getting kids earlier, earlier in the progression of the disease, and younger is going to result in some of, I think, the strongest outcomes when it comes to the literal interpretations of neurological development, behavioral development, fine motor skills, and so forth. But there’s a lot of kids, I think, that also can benefit from gene therapy on the basis of that stabilization comment. And those are also some of the kids that may benefit from the discontinuation of enzyme replacement therapy, which, while it may not be something that is part of the label initially, I think it’s going to creep into the clinical and commercial consciousness over time. So, I feel like RGX-121 is a very strong clinical data set to support high unmet need across a lot of boys with Hunter.