| Literature DB >> 23237078 |
Antonio Liras1, Cristina Segovia, Aline S Gabán.
Abstract
Monogenic diseases are ideal candidates for treatment by the emerging advanced therapies, which are capable of correcting alterations in protein expression that result from genetic mutation. In hemophilia A and B such alterations affect the activity of coagulation factors VIII and IX, respectively, and are responsible for the development of the disease. Advanced therapies may involve the replacement of a deficient gene by a healthy gene so that it generates a certain functional, structural or transport protein (gene therapy); the incorporation of a full array of healthy genes and proteins through perfusion or transplantation of healthy cells (cell therapy); or tissue transplantation and formation of healthy organs (tissue engineering). For their part, induced pluripotent stem cells have recently been shown to also play a significant role in the fields of cell therapy and tissue engineering. Hemophilia is optimally suited for advanced therapies owing to the fact that, as a monogenic condition, it does not require very high expression levels of a coagulation factor to reach moderate disease status. As a result, significant progress has been possible with respect to these kinds of strategies, especially in the fields of gene therapy (by using viral and non-viral vectors) and cell therapy (by means of several types of target cells). Thus, although still considered a rare disorder, hemophilia is now recognized as a condition amenable to gene therapy, which can be administered in the form of lentiviral and adeno-associated vectors applied to adult stem cells, autologous fibroblasts, platelets and hematopoietic stem cells; by means of non-viral vectors; or through the repair of mutations by chimeric oligonucleotides. In hemophilia, cell therapy approaches have been based mainly on transplantation of healthy cells (adult stem cells or induced pluripotent cell-derived progenitor cells) in order to restore alterations in coagulation factor expression.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23237078 PMCID: PMC3551751 DOI: 10.1186/1750-1172-7-97
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orphanet J Rare Dis ISSN: 1750-1172 Impact factor: 4.123
Classification (Orpha number), synonyms, prevalence and clinical description of hemophilia (Adapted from Orphanet portal [])
| Hemophilia (general) | 448 | Factor VIII or IX deficiency | 7.7/100,000 | Bleeding episodes. |
| Hemophilia A | 98878 | Factor VIII deficiency | 1/6,000 | Spontaneous or prolonged hemorrhages. |
| Hemophilia B | 98879 | Factor IX deficiency | 1/30,000 | Spontaneous or prolonged hemorrhages. |
| Mild hemophilia A | 169808 | Mild factor VIII deficiency | 40% of all cases of hemophilia A | Small deficiency of factor VIII leading to abnormal bleeding as a result of minor injuries, or following surgery or tooth extraction. The biological activity of factor VIII is between 5 and 40%. Spontaneous hemorrhages do not occur. |
| Mild hemophilia B | 169799 | Mild factor IX deficiency | 30% of all cases of hemophilia B | Small deficiency of factor IX leading to abnormal bleeding as a result of minor injuries, or following surgery or tooth extraction. The biological activity of factor IX is between 5 and 40%. Spontaneous hemorrhages do not occur. |
| Moderately severe hemophilia A | 169805 | Moderately severe factor VIII deficiency | 20% of all cases of hemophilia A | Abnormal bleeding as a result of minor injuries, or following surgery or tooth extraction. The biological activity of factor VIII is between 1% and 5%. Spontaneous hemorrhages are rare. |
| Moderately severe hemophilia B | 169796 | Moderately severe factor IX deficiency | 30% of all cases of hemophilia B | Abnormal bleeding as a result of minor injuries, or following surgery or tooth extraction. The biological activity of factor IX is between 1% and 5%. Spontaneous hemorrhages are rare. |
| Severe hemophilia A | 169802 | Severe factor VIII deficiency | 40% of all cases of hemophilia A | Frequent spontaneous hemorrhage and abnormal bleeding as a result of minor injuries, or following surgery or tooth extraction. The biological activity of factor VIII is below 1%. |
| Severe hemophilia B | 169793 | Severe factor IX deficiency | 40% of all cases of hemophilia B | Frequent spontaneous hemorrhage and abnormal bleeding as a result of minor injuries, or following surgery or tooth extraction. The biological activity of factor IX is below 1%. |
| Symptomatic form of hemophilia A in female carriers | 177926 | Hemophilia A carriers | Unknown(very rare) | In some women with mutations in the |
| Symptomatic form of hemophilia B in female carriers | 177929 | Hemophilia B carriers | Unknown (very rare) | In some women with mutations in the |
Some molecular and physiological characteristics of hemophilia A and B
| | | | | | | Mild hemophilia | Moderately Severe Hemophilia | Severe Hemophilia |
| Hemophilia A | VIII | 280 | 7056 | 8-12 | Activated by thrombin and activates to FX3 | 10-80 (5-40%) | 2-10 (1-5%) | < 2 (<1%) |
| Hemophilia B | IX | 68 | 1389 | 15-25 | Activated by FXIa4, and activates to FX | 500-2000 (5-40%) | 50-500 (1-5%) | < 50 (<1%) |
1Normal plasma level of coagulation factors: Factor VIII, 200 ng/mL; factor IX, 5000 ng/mL; 2One International Unit (IU) of factor VIII or IX, per kg of body weight, increases the activity of factor in plasma, 1% to 2% of normal level; 3FX, factor X; 4FXIa, factor XI activated.
Preclinical studies and clinical trials on gene- and cell therapy for hemophilia
| Jeon | LVV | VIII | 1-5 |
| Brown | LVV | IX | 10 |
| Ramezani | LVV | VIII | <40 |
| Matsui. Ref.[ | LVV | VIII | <40 |
| Montgomery and Shi. Ref.[ | LVV | VIII | <40 |
| Nathwani | AAV (Immunosuppressive therapy) | IX | 2-11 |
| Buchlis | AAV | IX | FIX RNA expression and AAV DNA persistence (<1% FIX) |
| Aronovich | Embryonic day 42 spleen tissue | VIII | 30-40 |
| Follenzi | Liver sinusoidal endothelial cells | VIII | 14-25 |
| Follenzi | Kupffer cells. Bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stromal cells | VIII | 10-15 |
| Xu | iPSCs from tail-tip fibroblasts and their differentiation into endothelial cells and their precursors | VIII | 8-12 |
| Yudav | Transdifferentiation of iPSC-derived endothelial progenitor cells into hepatocytes | VIII | 20 |
LVV, lentiviral vector; AAV, adeno-associated vector; FIX, factor IX.