| Literature DB >> 32328988 |
Cristina Has1, Andrew South2, Jouni Uitto2.
Abstract
Epidermolysis bullosa (EB) is a group of rare genetic disorders for which significant progress has been achieved in the development of molecular therapies in the last few decades. Such therapies require knowledge of mutant genes and specific mutations, some of them being allele specific. A relatively large number of clinical trials are ongoing and ascertaining the clinical efficacy of gene, protein or cell therapies or of repurposed drugs, mainly in recessive dystrophic EB. It is expected that some new drugs may emerge in the near future and that combinations of different approaches may result in improved treatment outcomes for individuals with EB.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32328988 PMCID: PMC7264085 DOI: 10.1007/s40291-020-00466-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Diagn Ther ISSN: 1177-1062 Impact factor: 4.074
Gene-replacement therapies for epidermolysis bullosa in clinical trials
| Gene therapy trial | EB type/protein | Approach | Participants (N) | Results | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Phase I | JEB/laminin β3 chain | 2 | One 7-year-old child treated in wounds covering 80% of the total body surface resulted in regeneration of entire epidermis by transgenic stem cells stable over several years. One 49-year-old woman was successfully treated on an 80 cm2 chronic wound | [ | |
Phase I/II; NCT03490331 (HOLOGENE17) | JEB/C17 | 12 | Ongoing | [ | |
Phase I/II; NCT02984085 (HOLOGENE7) | RDEB/C7 | 12 | Ongoing | [ | |
| Phase I; safety and wound outcomes; single center | RDEB/C7 | 4 | Variable response of wound healing and C7; generally declined over 1 year | [ | |
| Phase I/IIa; single center | RDEB/C7 | 7 | C7 expression persisted up to 2 years after treatment in two participants. Treated wounds with ≥ 50% healing demonstrated improvement in patient-reported pain, itch, and wound durability | [ | |
| Phase I; single center | RDEB/C7 | Three intradermal injections (~ 1 × 106 cells/cm2 of intact skin) of | 4 | C7 restoration in vivo in treated skin at 1 year after gene therapy | [ |
| Phase I/II, phase III; NCT04213261 (Castle Creek Biosciences, Inc.) | RDEB/C7 | 20 | Ongoing | ||
| Phase III; NCT04227106 (Abeona Therapeutics Inc.) | RDEB/C7 | Transplantation of ex vivo | 15 | Ongoing | |
| Phase I/II; European (GENEGRAFT) | RDEB/C7 | Skin-equivalent grafts ex vivo genetically corrected with a | 4 | Ongoing | [ |
| Phase I/II; NCT03536143 (Krystall Biotech, Inc.) | RDEB/C7 | Topically administered, replication-deficient HSV-1 vector containing two functional | 6 | Ongoing | |
| Phase I (Amryt Pharma, PLC) | RDEB/C7 | Topically administered synthetic polymer polyplexes containing | NA | NA |
cDNA complementary DNA, C7 type VII collagen, C17 type XVII collagen, EB epidermolysis bullosa, HSV-1 herpes simplex virus type 1, JEB junctional EB, NA not available, RDEB recessive dystrophic EB, SIN self-inactivating
Overview of recently published CRISPR/Cas9- and RNA-based molecular therapies in preclinical development
| Molecular therapy approach | EB type/gene | Correction type, targeted mutation and cells | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Genomic editing using the CRISPR/Cas9 nuclease system | RDEB/ | [ | |
| Correction of a mutation in exon 2 | [ | ||
| Correction of the mutation c.4317delC and generation of iPSC | [ | ||
| Correction of mutations in exon 19 (c.2470insG) and exon 32 (c.3948insT) through homology-directed repair in iPSC | [ | ||
| Gene reframing therapy to a recurrent frameshift mutation, c.5819delC | [ | ||
| Correction of the mutation c.8068_8084delinsGA | [ | ||
| Cas9/sgRNA ribonucleoproteins to excise exon 80 in skin stem cells of recessive dystrophic EB mice | [ | ||
| Targeted deletion of mutation-bearing | [ | ||
| Correction of a frequent inherited mutation in exon 80 | [ | ||
| JEB/ | [ | ||
| EBS/ | Correction of the hotspot missense mutation c.1231G > A in keratinocytes | [ | |
| RNA-based therapies | RDEB/ | Trans-splicing to correct mutations in the 3′ region | [ |
| SIN lentiviral vector at 3′ RNA trans-splicing molecule, capable of replacing exons 65–118 | [ | ||
| 2′-O-methyl ASO for skipping exons 73 and 80 | [ | ||
| ASO for in-frame exon 105 skipping | [ | ||
| ASO for in-frame exon 13 and 105 skipping | [ | ||
| EBS/ | Therapeutic RNA trans-splicing molecule containing wild-type exons 1–7 | [ |
ASO antisense oligonucleotides, EB epidermolysis bullosa, EBS EB simplex, iPSC induced pluripotent stem cells, JEB junctional EB, RDEB recessive dystrophic EB, SIN self-inactivating
| Remarkable progress has been made in understanding the molecular genetics and underlying pathomechanisms of epidermolysis bullosa (EB) forming the platform for development of treatments. |
| Gene-replacement approaches, particularly delivery of |
| Preclinical research explores the applicability of new strategies in regenerative medicine (e.g., induced pluripotent stem cells) and genome editing (e.g., CRISPR/Cas9). |
| Particular effort is focused on severe dystrophic EB, characterized by extensive scarring and aggressive squamous cell carcinomas. Small molecules repurposed to reduce fibrosis, and the multikinase inhibitor rigosertib—for the treatment of recessive dystrophic EB squamous cell carcinomas—are being tested in clinical trials. |