| Literature DB >> 31548516 |
Jasmina Cehajic Kapetanovic1,2, Alun R Barnard3,4, Robert E MacLaren3,4.
Abstract
Advances in molecular research have culminated in the development of novel gene-based therapies for inherited retinal diseases. We have recently witnessed several groundbreaking clinical studies that ultimately led to approval of Luxturna, the first gene therapy for an inherited retinal disease. In parallel, international research community has been engaged in conducting gene therapy trials for another more common inherited retinal disease known as choroideremia and with phase III clinical trials now underway, approval of this therapy is poised to follow suit. This chapter discusses new insights into clinical phenotyping and molecular genetic testing in choroideremia with review of molecular mechanisms implicated in its pathogenesis. We provide an update on current gene therapy trials and discuss potential inclusion of female carries in future clinical studies. Alternative molecular therapies are discussed including suitability of CRISPR gene editing, small molecule nonsense suppression therapy and vision restoration strategies in late stage choroideremia.Entities:
Keywords: REP1; choroideremia; gene therapy; inherited retinal disease; treatment
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31548516 PMCID: PMC6826983 DOI: 10.3390/genes10100738
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genes (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4425 Impact factor: 4.096
Summary of interventional gene therapy clinical trials in choroideremia.
| Clinical trial | Intervention | Clinical centre | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Phase I/II | Gene therapy involving subretinal delivery of AAV2-REP1 | University of Oxford, UK | Lancet, 2014 [ |
| Phase I/II | Gene therapy involving subretinal delivery of AAV2-REP1 | Philadelphia, USA | No reports to date |
| Phase I/II | Gene therapy involving subretinal delivery of AAV2-REP1 | University of Alberta, Canada | Am J Ophthalmol, 2018 [ |
| Phase II | Gene therapy involving subretinal delivery of AAV2-REP1 | University of Miami, USA | Am J Ophthalmol, 2019 [ |
| Phase IINCT02671539 | Gene therapy involving subretinal delivery of AAV2-REP1 | University of Tubingen, Germany | Retina, 2018 [ |
| Phase II | Gene therapy involving subretinal delivery of AAV2-REP1 | University of Oxford and Moorfields Eye Hospital, UK | No reports to date |
| Phase II | Gene therapy involving bilateral subretinal delivery of AAV2-REP1 | Nightstar Therapeutics (now Biogen) | No reports to date |
| Phase III | Gene therapy involving subretinal delivery of AAV2-REP1 | Nightstar Therapeutics (now Biogen), International, Multi-centre | No reports to date |
| Observational | Long-term follow up study evaluating the safety and efficacy of AAV2-REP1 used in antecedent interventional choroideremia studies, 100 participants | Nightstar Therapeutics (now Biogen), International, Multi-centre | No reports to date |
Figure 1Retinal imaging in choroideremia. Widefield optomaps, Optos, Dumfernline, UK (A,B) and Heidelberg Spectralis imaging, Heidelberg, Germany (C–F) showing choroideremia phenotype in an affected male. Colour fundus photographs (C,D) show extensive retinal degeneration with choroidal atrophy and visualisation of underlying pale sclera. Fundus autofluorescence (E,F) shows typical patterns of sharply demarcated areas of remaining tissue (hyperfluorescent) against atrophic retina (hypofluorescent background). Mesopic microperimetry, MAIA CenterVue SpA, Padova, Italy (G,H) measures central retinal sensitivity that closely maps areas of residual retina as seen on autofluorescence. Sensitivity maps are shown with corresponding histograms of threshold frequencies. Spectral domain optical coherence tomography, Heidelberg, Germany (I,J) shows retinal structure in cross-section with distribution of ellipsoid zone (yellow line) and preserved inner retinal layers.
Figure 2Retinal imaging in a choroideremia patient showing an area of scaring from an old choroidal neovascular membrane in the left eye. Fundus autofluorescence (A, B), fluorescein angiography (C, D), indocyanine green angiography (E, F) and spectral domain optical coherence tomography (G) with arrows marking the old scar. Imaging was performed with Heidelberg Spectralis, Heidelberg, Germany.
Figure 3Retinal imaging in two female choroideremia carriers. Phenotype of an asymptomatic mild carrier with Snellen visual acuity of 6/5 in both eyes is shown from (A–F) and a carrier with a ‘geographic-pattern’ phenotype and reduced visual acuity of 6/7.5 in the right eye and 6/12 in the left eye is shown from (G–L). Fundus autofluorescence showing very early signs of fine ‘salt and pepper’ mottling (A,B) compared with coarse mottling and atrophic patches resembling geographic patterns (G,H). Mesopic microperimetry, MAIA CenterVue SpA, Padova, Italy showing sensitivity maps with corresponding histograms of threshold frequencies. Near-normal central retinal sensitivity is found in mild, asymptomatic carriers (C,D) compared to reduced retinal sensitivity in affected carriers especially in the left eye of the above case (I,J). OCT imaging is clinically insignificant in mild, asymptomatic carriers (E, F) whereas some disruption of retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) and ellipsoid zone is observed in the affected carrier, particularly in the left eye (K,L).