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Phase 2 clinical trial of a recombinant adeno-associated viral vector expressing α1-antitrypsin: interim results

Authors :
Roberto Calcedo
Terence R. Flotte
Anthony T. Yachnis
Farshid N. Rouhani
Noel G. McElvaney
Jeffrey D. Chulay
Mark L. Brantly
Martha Campbell-Thompson
David R. Knop
Christian Mueller
Robert A. Sandhaus
James M. Wilson
Bruce C. Trapnell
Guo-jie Ye
Brenna Carey
Louis M. Messina
Margaret Humphries
Source :
Human gene therapy. 22(10)
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

Recombinant adeno-associated virus (rAAV) vectors offer promise for the gene therapy of α(1)-antitrypsin (AAT) deficiency. In our prior trial, an rAAV vector expressing human AAT (rAAV1-CB-hAAT) provided sustained, vector-derived AAT expression for1 year. In the current phase 2 clinical trial, this same vector, produced by a herpes simplex virus complementation method, was administered to nine AAT-deficient individuals by intramuscular injection at doses of 6.0×10(11), 1.9×10(12), and 6.0×10(12) vector genomes/kg (n=3 subjects/dose). Vector-derived expression of normal (M-type) AAT in serum was dose dependent, peaked on day 30, and persisted for at least 90 days. Vector administration was well tolerated, with only mild injection site reactions and no serious adverse events. Serum creatine kinase was transiently elevated on day 30 in five of six subjects in the two higher dose groups and normalized by day 45. As expected, all subjects developed anti-AAV antibodies and interferon-γ enzyme-linked immunospot responses to AAV peptides, and no subjects developed antibodies to AAT. One subject in the mid-dose group developed T cell responses to a single AAT peptide unassociated with any clinical effects. Muscle biopsies obtained on day 90 showed strong immunostaining for AAT and moderate to marked inflammatory cell infiltrates composed primarily of CD3-reactive T lymphocytes that were primarily of the CD8(+) subtype. These results support the feasibility and safety of AAV gene therapy for AAT deficiency, and indicate that serum levels of vector-derived normal human AAT20 μg/ml can be achieved. However, further improvements in the design or delivery of rAAV-AAT vectors will be required to achieve therapeutic target serum AAT concentrations.

Details

ISSN :
15577422
Volume :
22
Issue :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Human gene therapy
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....623bf818fa24590beca5273d78ab7baf