1. A minimally invasive endovascular approach to the cerebellopontine angle cistern enables broad CNS biodistribution of scAAV9-CB-GFP.
- Author
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Benatti HR, Anagnostakou V, Taghian T, Hall EF, Nath S, Heilman CB, Beneduce BM, Leporati A, Raskett C, Epshtein M, King R, Gounis MJ, Malek AM, and Gray-Edwards HL
- Subjects
- Animals, Sheep, Tissue Distribution, Endovascular Procedures methods, Humans, Central Nervous System metabolism, Cisterna Magna metabolism, Genetic Therapy methods, Gene Transfer Techniques, Dependovirus genetics, Genetic Vectors administration & dosage, Genetic Vectors pharmacokinetics, Genetic Vectors genetics, Cerebellopontine Angle, Green Fluorescent Proteins genetics, Green Fluorescent Proteins metabolism
- Abstract
Neurological disorders pose a challenge for targeted therapy due to restricted access of therapeutic agents to the central nervous system (CNS). Current methods are limited by procedure-related risks, invasiveness, and insufficient CNS biodistribution. A novel percutaneous transvenous technology, currently in clinical trials for communicating hydrocephalus, offers a minimally invasive approach by providing endovascular access to the cerebrospinal fluid-filled cerebellopontine angle (CPA) cistern. We hypothesized that drug delivery to the CPA cistern could yield widespread CNS distribution. Using an ovine model, we compared the biodistribution of scAAV9-CB-GFP following CPA cistern infusion with previously reported cisterna magna (CM) administration. Targeting both the CPA cistern and CM in sheep, we employed a lumbar spine-inserted microcatheter under fluoroscopy. CPA delivery of AAV9 demonstrated biodistribution and transduction in the cerebral cortices, striatum, thalamus, midbrain, cerebellum, and spinal cord, with minor liver distribution comparable to CM. The favorable safety profile in humans with hydrocephalus suggests that percutaneous endovascular injection into the CPA could offer a clinically safer and minimally invasive delivery system for CNS gene and cell-based therapies., Competing Interests: Declaration of interests C.B.H. is a shareholder, consultant, investor, and co-founder of CereVasc, Inc. B.M.B. is a shareholder and employee of CereVasc, Inc. M.J.G. is a consultant on a fee-per-hour basis for Alembic LLC, Astrocyte Pharmaceuticals, BendIt Technologies, Cerenovus, Imperative Care, Jacob’s Institute, Medtronic Neurovascular, Mivi Neurosciences, phenox GMbH, Q’Apel, Route 92 Medical, Scientia, Simcerre, Stryker Neurovascular, Stryker Sustainability Solutions, Wallaby Medical; holds stock in Imperative Care, InNeuroCo, Galaxy Therapeutics, Kapto, Neurogami and Synchron and receives research support from the NIH, the United States-Israel Binational Science Foundation, Anaconda, ApicBio, Arsenal Medical, Axovant, Balt, Cerenovus, Ceretrieve, CereVasc LLC, Cook Medical, Galaxy Therapeutics, Gentuity, Gilbert Foundation, Imperative Care, InNeuroCo, Insera, Jacob’s Institute, Magneto, MicroBot, Microvention, Medtronic Neurovascular, MIVI Neurosciences, Naglreiter MDDO, Neurogami, Q’Apel, Philips Healthcare, Progressive Medical, Pulse Medical, Rapid Medical, Route 92 Medical, Scientia, Stryker Neurovascular, Syntheon, ThrombX Medical, Wallaby Medical, the Wyss Institute, and Xtract Medical. A.M.M. is a shareholder, consultant, investor, and co-founder of CereVasc, Inc., (Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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