| Literature DB >> 27129325 |
Maria Pia Cicalese1, Francesca Ferrua2, Laura Castagnaro3, Roberta Pajno4, Federica Barzaghi1, Stefania Giannelli3, Francesca Dionisio3, Immacolata Brigida3, Marco Bonopane3, Miriam Casiraghi1, Antonella Tabucchi5, Filippo Carlucci5, Eyal Grunebaum6, Mehdi Adeli7, Robbert G Bredius8, Jennifer M Puck9, Polina Stepensky10, Ilhan Tezcan11, Katie Rolfe12, Erika De Boever12, Rickey R Reinhardt12, Jonathan Appleby12, Fabio Ciceri13, Maria Grazia Roncarolo14, Alessandro Aiuti2.
Abstract
Adenosine deaminase (ADA) deficiency is a rare, autosomal-recessive systemic metabolic disease characterized by severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID). The treatment of choice for ADA-deficient SCID (ADA-SCID) is hematopoietic stem cell transplant from an HLA-matched sibling donor, although <25% of patients have such a donor available. Enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) partially and temporarily relieves immunodeficiency. We investigated the medium-term outcome of gene therapy (GT) in 18 patients with ADA-SCID for whom an HLA-identical family donor was not available; most were not responding well to ERT. Patients were treated with an autologous CD34(+)-enriched cell fraction that contained CD34(+) cells transduced with a retroviral vector encoding the human ADA complementary DNA sequence (GSK2696273) as part of single-arm, open-label studies or compassionate use programs. Overall survival was 100% over 2.3 to 13.4 years (median, 6.9 years). Gene-modified cells were stably present in multiple lineages throughout follow up. GT resulted in a sustained reduction in the severe infection rate from 1.17 events per person-year to 0.17 events per person-year (n = 17, patient 1 data not available). Immune reconstitution was demonstrated by normalization of T-cell subsets (CD3(+), CD4(+), and CD8(+)), evidence of thymopoiesis, and sustained T-cell proliferative capacity. B-cell function was evidenced by immunoglobulin production, decreased intravenous immunoglobulin use, and antibody response after vaccination. All 18 patients reported infections as adverse events; infections of respiratory and gastrointestinal tracts were reported most frequently. No events indicative of leukemic transformation were reported. Trial details were registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT00598481.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27129325 PMCID: PMC5325048 DOI: 10.1182/blood-2016-01-688226
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 22.113