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Development of neural repair therapy for chronic spinal cord trauma: soluble Nogo receptor decoy from discovery to clinical trial.

PURPOSE OF REVIEW: After traumatic spinal cord injury (SCI), neurological deficits persist due to the disconnection of surviving neurons. While repair of connectivity may restore function, no medical therapy exists today.This review traces the development of the neural repair-based therapeutic AXER-204 from animal studies to the recent clinical trial for chronic cervical SCI.

RECENT FINDINGS: Molecular studies reveal a Nogo-66 Receptor 1 (NgR1, RTN4R) pathway inhibiting axon regeneration, sprouting, and plasticity in the adult mammalian central nervous system (CNS). Rodent and nonhuman primate studies demonstrate that the soluble receptor decoy NgR(310)ecto-Fc or AXER-204 promotes neural repair and functional recovery in transection and contusion SCI. Recently, this biological agent completed a first-in-human and randomized clinical trial for chronic cervical SCI. The intervention was safe and well tolerated. Across all participants, upper extremity strength did not improve with treatment. However, posthoc and biomarker analyses suggest that AXER-204 may benefit treatment-naïve patients with incomplete SCI in the chronic stage.

SUMMARY: NgR1 signaling restricts neurological recovery in animal studies of CNS injury. The recent clinical trial of AXER-204 provides encouraging signals supporting future focused trials of this neural repair therapeutic. Further, AXER-204 studies provide a roadmap for the development of additional and synergistic therapies for chronic SCI.

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