SKYWAY
(2026)Objective
To investigate the efficacy and safety of soticlestat (TAK-935), a first-in-class cholesterol 24-hydroxylase (CH24H) inhibitor, as adjunctive therapy in children and adults with Lennox–Gastaut syndrome (LGS), a rare and treatment-resistant developmental epileptic encephalopathy.
Study Summary
• No meaningful difference was observed for most key secondary endpoints under prespecified hierarchical testing
• Numerical trends only favored soticlestat for CGI-I Disruptive Behaviors (OR 1.91, nominal p = .032) and CGI-I Seizure Intensity and Duration (OR 1.67, nominal p = .029)
• TEAEs occurred in 74.6% of soticlestat- vs 68.4% of placebo-treated participants; most frequent soticlestat TEAE was somnolence; serious TEAEs in 3 vs 1 participant
• Targeting CH24H does not appear to be an effective pharmacotherapeutic strategy for LGS
Intervention
Soticlestat (TAK-935) ≤300 mg twice daily (weight-adjusted, 20-mg minitablets for <45 kg; up to 300 mg for ≥45 kg) added to stable background antiseizure medications over 16 weeks (4-week titration + 12-week maintenance)
Inclusion Criteria
Age 2–55 years; weight ≥10 kg; adjudicated clinical diagnosis of LGS; ≥8 MMD seizures per month in the 3 months before screening; ≥8 MMD seizures per 28 days during the prospective baseline period
Study Design
Arms: Soticlestat ≤300 mg twice daily (n=134) vs Placebo (n=136), both added to stable background ASMs
Patients per Arm: Soticlestat: 134; Placebo: 136
Outcome
• Nominal secondary trends: CGI-I Non-seizure Symptoms Disruptive Behaviors OR 1.91 (95% CI 1.06–3.43, nominal p = .032); CGI-I Seizure Intensity and Duration OR 1.67 (95% CI 1.06–2.65, nominal p = .029)
• Safety: TEAEs 74.6% soticlestat vs 68.4% placebo; somnolence most common; serious TEAEs 3 vs 1
Bottom Line
Soticlestat did not demonstrate efficacy over placebo in reducing major motor drop seizure frequency in LGS; inhibition of CH24H should not be pursued as a pharmacotherapeutic strategy for this condition.
Major Points
- The primary endpoint was not met: soticlestat produced no meaningful reduction in major motor drop (MMD) seizure frequency compared to placebo (−1.17% difference, p = .785 over full treatment; 2.43% difference, p = .778 over maintenance).
- Hierarchical testing was stopped at the primary endpoint; all key secondary efficacy endpoints are therefore interpreted as nominal only.
- Nominal signals were seen for CGI-I Disruptive Behaviors (OR 1.91, p = .032) and CGI-I Seizure Intensity and Duration (OR 1.67, p = .029), but these were not adjusted for multiplicity.
- TEAEs were slightly more frequent with soticlestat (74.6%) than placebo (68.4%), mostly mild to moderate; somnolence was the most frequent soticlestat-related TEAE.
- Serious treatment-related TEAEs occurred in 3 soticlestat-treated vs 1 placebo-treated participant.
- 95% of participants were on ≥2 background ASMs, reflecting the refractory nature of the LGS population studied.
- The results suggest that CH24H inhibition is not a suitable pharmacotherapeutic target for LGS, despite earlier phase 2 signals.
Study Design
- Study Type
- Phase 3, global, multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel-group
- Randomization
- Yes
- Blinding
- Double-blind (soticlestat and placebo tablets were indistinguishable in number and type)
- Sample Size
- 270
- Follow-up
- 16-week treatment period (4-week titration + 12-week maintenance); optional open-label extension thereafter; 1-week taper + 2-week safety follow-up for discontinuers
- Centers
- 84
- Countries
- China, Japan, United States, Italy, Serbia, Hungary, Canada, France, and 10 additional countries (18 total)
Primary Outcome
Definition: Percentage change from baseline in major motor drop (MMD) seizure frequency per 28 days during the full 16-week treatment period (titration + maintenance); MMD seizure defined as a seizure resulting in or likely to result in a fall due to involvement of major body areas
| Control | Intervention | HR/OR | P-value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Not reported as standalone arm value | Not reported as standalone arm value | - (Full treatment: −13.02 to 9.99; Maintenance: −10.86 to 15.14) | Full treatment: p = .785; Maintenance: p = .778 |
Limitations & Criticisms
- The primary endpoint selection was based on a post-hoc analysis of the phase 2 ELEKTRA study (drop seizures leading to or likely to lead to a fall), introducing risk of bias in endpoint definition.
- Phase 2 efficacy signals were modest and did not reach statistical significance in the LGS subgroup (placebo-adjusted median reduction 17.08%, p = .1160), raising questions about whether the phase 3 was adequately powered for a drug with likely small effect sizes.
- The heterogeneous LGS population (highly varied etiology, age range 2–55 years, polytherapy burden) may have increased outcome variability and diluted any treatment signal.
- High background polytherapy (95% on ≥2 ASMs) limits the ability to detect incremental benefit from adjunctive soticlestat.
- Nominal secondary signals (disruptive behaviors, seizure intensity) could reflect chance findings and should not be interpreted as evidence of efficacy given primary endpoint failure and lack of multiplicity adjustment.
Citation
Guerrini R, et al. A phase 3, randomized clinical trial of soticlestat as adjunctive therapy for Lennox–Gastaut syndrome. Epilepsia. 2026. doi:10.1002/epi.70216