Clinical experience on switching trientine tetrahydrochloride to trientine dihydrochloride in Wilson disease patients
- PMID: 39512437
- PMCID: PMC11540566
- DOI: 10.1002/jmd2.12451
Clinical experience on switching trientine tetrahydrochloride to trientine dihydrochloride in Wilson disease patients
Abstract
This study evaluates the effectiveness and safety of trientine dihydrochloride (TETA 2-HCl) in patients with Wilson disease (WD) following a switch from trientine tetrahydrochloride (TETA 4-HCl). A total of 30 WD patients with stable copper metabolism were identified for treatment with TETA 2-HCl (Cufence™) after prior use of TETA 4-HCl (Cuprior™). Biochemical markers including urinary copper, non-ceruloplasmin bound copper (NCC) and liver function were analyzed at baseline and followed up over 12 months. Safety was assessed based on reported adverse events (AEs). Urinary copper levels and NCC remained stable across all follow-ups, indicating adequate copper metabolism control. Reported AEs during TETA 2-HCl treatment were mostly gastrointestinal discomfort (n = 6). In two patients, progressive elevation of transaminases occurred (despite stable copper metabolism). AEs led to discontinuation of treatment in five cases. Median baseline dose per day was 10.2 mg TETA 4-HCl/kg bodyweight, whereas median baseline dose after therapeutic switch to TETA 2-HCl was 12.8 mg/kg bodyweight. Median daily dose at 12 months did not differ significantly from TETA 2-HCl dose at switching timepoint, with stable biochemical markers and markers of copper metabolism in most (25/30) of the patients. Transitioning from TETA 4-HCl to TETA 2-HCl maintained stable copper parameters and liver function in most of analyzed patients. TETA 2-HCl treatment was generally well tolerated, suggesting that switching medications is safe and effective. In our real-life cohort, adjustment factor of ~1.25× for the switch of TETA 4-HCl to TETA 2-HCl resulted in adequate copper metabolism control.
Keywords: Wilson disease; trientine dihydrochloride (TETA 2‐HCl); trientine tetrahydrochloride (TETA 4‐HCl).
© 2024 The Author(s). JIMD Reports published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of SSIEM.
Conflict of interest statement
I Mohr advises for Univar and Vivet therapeutics. I Mohr received travel grants from Univar, is Principal Investigator on sponsored studies with Alexion and Univar and received speaker's fees from Orphalan. T. Schmitt, C. Weber, N. Schall, V.Y. Leidner, A. Langel, and J. Langel declare no conflicts of interest. A. Poujois is an advisor for Vivet therapeutics, Alexion, Orphalan and Univar and PI on sponsored studies with Alexion, Univar and Orphalan. K.H. Weiss has received research (institutional) grants from Orphalan; consulting fees from Orphalan, Univar, Pfizer, Alexion, and Vivet Therapeutics; speaker's fees from Falk, AbbVie, Alexion, and Orphalan; travel assistance to meetings from Alexion and Univar; and advisory board payments from Ultragenyx. U. Merle received honoraria for teaching from Falk and Univar. U. Merle received travel grants from Gilead and Falk. All other authors declare no competing interests.
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