| Literature DB >> 33633114 |
Aneal Khan1, Dwayne L Barber2,3, Ju Huang2, C Anthony Rupar4,5,6, Jack W Rip4, Christiane Auray-Blais7, Michel Boutin7, Pamela O'Hoski8, Kristy Gargulak9, William M McKillop9, Graeme Fraser10, Syed Wasim11, Kaye LeMoine12, Shelly Jelinski13,14, Ahsan Chaudhry15, Nicole Prokopishyn16, Chantal F Morel17, Stephen Couban18, Peter R Duggan19, Daniel H Fowler20, Armand Keating2,21, Michael L West22, Ronan Foley8, Jeffrey A Medin23,24,25.
Abstract
Enzyme and chaperone therapies are used to treat Fabry disease. Such treatments are expensive and require intrusive biweekly infusions; they are also not particularly efficacious. In this pilot, single-arm study (NCT02800070), five adult males with Type 1 (classical) phenotype Fabry disease were infused with autologous lentivirus-transduced, CD34+-selected, hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells engineered to express alpha-galactosidase A (α-gal A). Safety and toxicity are the primary endpoints. The non-myeloablative preparative regimen consisted of intravenous melphalan. No serious adverse events (AEs) are attributable to the investigational product. All patients produced α-gal A to near normal levels within one week. Vector is detected in peripheral blood and bone marrow cells, plasma and leukocytes demonstrate α-gal A activity within or above the reference range, and reductions in plasma and urine globotriaosylceramide (Gb3) and globotriaosylsphingosine (lyso-Gb3) are seen. While the study and evaluations are still ongoing, the first patient is nearly three years post-infusion. Three patients have elected to discontinue enzyme therapy.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33633114 PMCID: PMC7907075 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-21371-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919