BACKGROUND: The experience with direct myocardial injection of adenovirus encoding angiogenic growth factor is limited to invasive surgical approach. Accordingly, we sought to evaluate, for the first time, in a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, phase I pilot study the safety and feasibility of percutaneous catheter-based intramyocardial delivery of a replication-deficient adenovector encoding the 121-amino-acid isoform of vascular endothelial growth factor (AdVEGF121). METHODS:Ten "no-option" patients with severe coronary artery disease were randomized (2:1) to receive AdVEGF121 (4 x 10(10) pu) or placebo as fifteen 100 microL, evenly distributed, endomyocardial injections using a nonflouroscopic, 3-dimensional mapping and injection (NOGA) catheter-based system. RESULTS: Injection procedure was successfully completed in all cases and was associated with no major adverse events. AdVEGF121 was considered potentially associated with a single serious adverse event of transient moderate fever. Elevated postprocedure CK and CK-MB fraction levels were recorded in two placebo-treated and three AdVEGF121-treated patients; all CK measured values were <1.5 times upper limit of normal. All adenoviral cultures (urine and throat swab) were negative 24-hr after dosing, and no significant changes in serial plasma VEGF levels were noted over time. At 12 months follow-up, no cancers, proliferative retinal changes, or significant abnormalities in hepatic, renal or hematological indices were observed. CONCLUSIONS:Percutaneous, catheter-based AdVEGF121 intramyocardial injection is a practical, feasible, and potentially safe approach for intramyocardial gene transfer. A larger randomized, phase II efficacy study is warranted.
RCT Entities:
BACKGROUND: The experience with direct myocardial injection of adenovirus encoding angiogenic growth factor is limited to invasive surgical approach. Accordingly, we sought to evaluate, for the first time, in a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, phase I pilot study the safety and feasibility of percutaneous catheter-based intramyocardial delivery of a replication-deficient adenovector encoding the 121-amino-acid isoform of vascular endothelial growth factor (AdVEGF121). METHODS: Ten "no-option" patients with severe coronary artery disease were randomized (2:1) to receive AdVEGF121 (4 x 10(10) pu) or placebo as fifteen 100 microL, evenly distributed, endomyocardial injections using a nonflouroscopic, 3-dimensional mapping and injection (NOGA) catheter-based system. RESULTS: Injection procedure was successfully completed in all cases and was associated with no major adverse events. AdVEGF121 was considered potentially associated with a single serious adverse event of transient moderate fever. Elevated postprocedure CK and CK-MB fraction levels were recorded in two placebo-treated and three AdVEGF121-treated patients; all CK measured values were <1.5 times upper limit of normal. All adenoviral cultures (urine and throat swab) were negative 24-hr after dosing, and no significant changes in serial plasma VEGF levels were noted over time. At 12 months follow-up, no cancers, proliferative retinal changes, or significant abnormalities in hepatic, renal or hematological indices were observed. CONCLUSIONS: Percutaneous, catheter-based AdVEGF121 intramyocardial injection is a practical, feasible, and potentially safe approach for intramyocardial gene transfer. A larger randomized, phase II efficacy study is warranted.
Authors: Lawrence T Bish; Meg M Sleeper; Benjamin Brainard; Stephen Cole; Nicholas Russell; Elanor Withnall; Jason Arndt; Caryn Reynolds; Ellen Davison; Julio Sanmiguel; Di Wu; Guangping Gao; James M Wilson; H L Sweeney Journal: Mol Ther Date: 2008-09-23 Impact factor: 11.454
Authors: Maythem Saeed; Alastair Martin; Alexis Jacquier; Matthew Bucknor; David Saloner; Loi Do; Philip Ursell; Hua Su; Yuet W Kan; Charles B Higgins Journal: Radiology Date: 2008-09-09 Impact factor: 11.105