| Literature DB >> 31650869 |
Vicky Ping Chen1, Yang Gao1, Liyi Geng1, Mike Steele2, Nathan Jenks2, Kah-Whye Peng2, Stephen Brimijoin1.
Abstract
Cocaine addiction continues to impose major burdens on affected individuals and broader society but is highly resistant to medical treatment or psychotherapy. This study was undertaken with the goal of Food and Drug Administration (FDA) permission for a first-in-human clinical trial of a gene therapy for treatment-seeking cocaine users to become and remain abstinent. The approach was based on intravenous administration of AAV8-hCocH, an adeno-associated viral vector encoding a modified plasma enzyme that metabolizes cocaine into harmless by-products. To assess systemic safety, we conducted "Good Laboratory Practice" (GLP) studies in cocaine-experienced and cocaine-naive mice at doses of 5E12 and 5E13 vector genomes/kg. Results showed total lack of viral vector-related adverse effects in all tests performed. Instead, mice given one injection of AAV8-hCocH and regular daily injections of cocaine had far less tissue pathology than cocaine-injected mice with no vector treatment. Biodistribution analysis showed the vector located almost exclusively in the liver. These results indicate that a liver-directed AAV8-hCocH gene transfer at reasonable dosage is safe, well tolerated, and effective. Thus, gene transfer therapy emerges as a radically new approach to treat compulsive cocaine abuse. In fact, based on these positive findings, the FDA recently accepted our latest request for investigational new drug application (IND 18579).Entities:
Keywords: IND-enabling study; cocaine abuse; cocaine hydrolase; mutated butyrylcholinesterase; viral vector
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31650869 PMCID: PMC6985763 DOI: 10.1089/hum.2019.233
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Gene Ther ISSN: 1043-0342 Impact factor: 5.695