Vutrisiran belongs to the substance group of siRNA therapeutics (small interfering RNA), also known as RNAi therapeutics or gene silencers, and works by inhibiting transthyretin (TTR) mRNA and translation, leading to a reduction in TTR protein production.
Vutrisiran is a chemically stabilized double-stranded small interfering ribonucleic acid (siRNA) that specifically targets variants of transthyretin (TTR) messenger RNA (mRNA) and/or its wild type.
It is covalently bound to a ligand consisting of three N-acetylgalactosamine (GalNAc) residues to enable uptake of the siRNA into the hepatocytes.
Through so-called RNA interference (RNAi), vutrisiran causes the catalytic degradation of TTR mRNA in the liver, which leads to a reduction in serum levels of variant and amyloidogenic wild-type TTR proteins in the serum, and thus to a reduction in the deposition of TTR amyloid in the tissue.
RNAi is a cellular mechanism that regulates gene expression in the cell by preventing the translation of mRNA into proteins. RNAi is triggered by double-stranded RNA.
A reduction of the TTR level in the serum by approx. 75% can be achieved after just 6 weeks. After 9 months of treatment, an average reduction in TTR of approx. 85% can be achieved (Helios A study)(Adams D etal 2023). With a reduction in TTR, there is a decrease in serum vitamin A levels of approx. 60-70%.
Cardiac biomarkers (NT-proBNP and troponin I) showed relative stability compared to an increase in biomarkers as a sign of deterioration with placebo (Helios B study)(Fontana M et al 2025). The echocardiogram showed a decrease in left ventricular wall thickness and longitudinal strain with vutrisiran treatment.
Treatment with vutrisiran resulted in a reduction in the risk of mortality and cardiovascular events by approx. 30% compared to placebo (approx. 20% reduction in the risk of mortality in patients with tafamidis background therapy).
There was a statistically significant improvement in functional tests and quality of life scores in favor of treatment with vutrisiran.
Vutrisiran was non-inferior to patisiran, a previously approved siRNA for the intravenous treatment of hATTR-PN.