| Literature DB >> 33974038 |
Bryanna Reinhardt1, Omar Habib1, Kit L Shaw1, Elizabeth Garabedian2, Denise A Carbonaro-Sarracino1, Dayna Terrazas1, Beatriz Campo Fernandez1, Satiro De Oliveira3, Theodore B Moore3, Alan K Ikeda3, Barbara C Engel4, Gregory M Podsakoff4, Roger P Hollis1, Augustine Fernandes1, Connie Jackson1, Sally Shupien3, Suparna Mishra1, Alejandra Davila1, Jack Mottahedeh1, Andrej Vitomirov1, Wenzhao Meng5, Aaron M Rosenfeld5, Aoife M Roche6, Pascha Hokama6, Shantan Reddy6, John Everett6, Xiaoyan Wang7, Eline T Luning Prak5, Kenneth Cornetta8, Michael S Hershfield9, Robert Sokolic10, Suk See De Ravin11, Harry L Malech11, Frederic D Bushman6, Fabio Candotti12, Donald B Kohn1,3.
Abstract
Patients lacking functional adenosine deaminase activity have severe combined immunodeficiency (ADA SCID), which can be treated with ADA enzyme replacement therapy (ERT), allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT), or autologous HSCT with gene-corrected cells (gene therapy [GT]). A cohort of 10 ADA SCID patients, aged 3 months to 15 years, underwent GT in a phase 2 clinical trial between 2009 and 2012. Autologous bone marrow CD34+ cells were transduced ex vivo with the MND (myeloproliferative sarcoma virus, negative control region deleted, dl587rev primer binding site)-ADA gammaretroviral vector (gRV) and infused following busulfan reduced-intensity conditioning. These patients were monitored in a long-term follow-up protocol over 8 to 11 years. Nine of 10 patients have sufficient immune reconstitution to protect against serious infections and have not needed to resume ERT or proceed to secondary allogeneic HSCT. ERT was restarted 6 months after GT in the oldest patient who had no evidence of benefit from GT. Four of 9 evaluable patients with the highest gene marking and B-cell numbers remain off immunoglobulin replacement therapy and responded to vaccines. There were broad ranges of responses in normalization of ADA enzyme activity and adenine metabolites in blood cells and levels of cellular and humoral immune reconstitution. Outcomes were generally better in younger patients and those receiving higher doses of gene-marked CD34+ cells. No patient experienced a leukoproliferative event after GT, despite persisting prominent clones with vector integrations adjacent to proto-oncogenes. These long-term findings demonstrate enduring efficacy of GT for ADA SCID but also highlight risks of genotoxicity with gRVs. This trial was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT00794508.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33974038 PMCID: PMC8525336 DOI: 10.1182/blood.2020010260
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 25.476