| Literature DB >> 16149901 |
Lisa M Arkin1, Dolan Sondhi, Stefan Worgall, Lily Hyon K Suh, Neil R Hackett, Stephen M Kaminsky, Syed A Hosain, Mark M Souweidane, Michael G Kaplitt, Jonathan P Dyke, Linda A Heier, Douglas J Ballon, Dikoma C Shungu, Krystyna E Wisniewski, Bruce M Greenwald, Charleen Hollmann, Ronald G Crystal.
Abstract
Genetic medicine-based therapies have unlocked the potential for ameliorating diseases previously considered inevitably fatal. Inherent in the clinical trials of genetic medicines are ethical issues of therapeutic misconception, enrollment decisions as they relate to the risks and benefits of research, and the complex relationships among funding sources, investigators, and the families of affected individuals. The purpose of this paper is to help define these complex issues relevant to the use of genetic medicines and to describe the strategy we have used to confront these issues in a phase I trial of adeno-associated virus-mediated gene transfer to the central nervous system of children with late infantile neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis (LINCL), a fatal lysosomal storage disease associated with progressive neurodegeneration and death by mid-childhood. Our approach to these challenges should provide a useful paradigm for investigators initiating other genetic medicine- based studies to treat inevitably fatal diseases.Entities:
Keywords: Biomedical and Behavioral Research; Genetics and Reproduction
Mesh:
Year: 2005 PMID: 16149901 DOI: 10.1089/hum.2005.16.1028
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Gene Ther ISSN: 1043-0342 Impact factor: 5.695