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Gene therapy for adenosine deaminase–deficient severe combined immune deficiency: clinical comparison of retroviral vectors and treatment plans

Authors :
Fabio Candotti
Kit L. Shaw
Linda Muul
Denise Carbonaro
Robert Sokolic
Christopher Choi
Shepherd H. Schurman
Elizabeth Garabedian
Chimene Kesserwan
G. Jayashree Jagadeesh
Pei-Yu Fu
Eric Gschweng
Aaron Cooper
John F. Tisdale
Kenneth I. Weinberg
Gay M. Crooks
Neena Kapoor
Ami Shah
Hisham Abdel-Azim
Xiao-Jin Yu
Monika Smogorzewska
Alan S. Wayne
Howard M. Rosenblatt
Carla M. Davis
Celine Hanson
Radha G. Rishi
Xiaoyan Wang
David Gjertson
Otto O. Yang
Arumugam Balamurugan
Gerhard Bauer
Joanna A. Ireland
Barbara C. Engel
Gregory M. Podsakoff
Michael S. Hershfield
R. Michael Blaese
Robertson Parkman
Donald B. Kohn
Source :
Blood. 120:3635-3646
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
American Society of Hematology, 2012.

Abstract

We conducted a gene therapy trial in 10 patients with adenosine deaminase (ADA)–deficient severe combined immunodeficiency using 2 slightly different retroviral vectors for the transduction of patients' bone marrow CD34+ cells. Four subjects were treated without pretransplantation cytoreduction and remained on ADA enzyme-replacement therapy (ERT) throughout the procedure. Only transient (months), low-level (< 0.01%) gene marking was observed in PBMCs of 2 older subjects (15 and 20 years of age), whereas some gene marking of PBMC has persisted for the past 9 years in 2 younger subjects (4 and 6 years). Six additional subjects were treated using the same gene transfer protocol, but after withdrawal of ERT and administration of low-dose busulfan (65-90 mg/m2). Three of these remain well, off ERT (5, 4, and 3 years postprocedure), with gene marking in PBMC of 1%-10%, and ADA enzyme expression in PBMC near or in the normal range. Two subjects were restarted on ERT because of poor gene marking and immune recovery, and one had a subsequent allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. These studies directly demonstrate the importance of providing nonmyeloablative pretransplantation conditioning to achieve therapeutic benefits with gene therapy for ADA-deficient severe combined immunodeficiency.

Details

ISSN :
15280020 and 00064971
Volume :
120
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Blood
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ee6368c410c1271964561f3a41d89826
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1182/blood-2012-02-400937