Autologous Ex Vivo Lentiviral Gene Therapy for Adenosine Deaminase Deficiency.

N Engl J Med

From the Departments of Microbiology, Immunology, and Molecular Genetics (D.B.K., K.L.S., D.A.C.-S., D.T., A.D., A. Icreverzi, P.B., B.C.F., R.P.H., M.C., A.Y., K.M.C., C.E.C., R.Z.), Pediatrics (D.B.K., T.B.M., S.D.O., S.S.), and Pathology and Laboratory Medicine (G.M.C.) and the Eli and Edythe Broad Center of Regenerative Medicine and Stem Cell Research (D.B.K., G.M.C.), University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), and the Department of Pharmaceutical Services, Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center (J.T.), Los Angeles, and Stanford School of Medicine, Palo Alto (A.J.S.) - all in California; University College London Great Ormond Street Institute of Child Health and Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children NHS Foundation Trust (C.B., J.X.-B., V.T., K. Soni, K. Snell, D.L.-R., K.F.B., K.C.G., C.R., N.I., S.A., H.R., C.U., A.J.T., H.B.G.), and Orchard Therapeutics (Europe) (D.A.C.-S., S.A., F.L., M.K., A.S., H.B.G.) - all in London; the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (H.L.M.) and the National Human Genome Research Institute (E.G., R.S., F.C.), National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD; Cure 4 The Kids Foundation, Las Vegas (A. Ikeda); Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati (L.R.); Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis (K.C.); Duke University, Durham, NC (R.P., R.H.B., M.H.); Division of Immunology and Allergy, Lausanne University Hospital and University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland (F.C.); and GeneWerk (M.Z., R.H., I.L., M.S.) and the German Cancer Research Center and the National Center for Tumor Diseases (M.Z., M.S.) - all in Heidelberg, Germany.

Published: May 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • ADA deficiency (ADA-SCID) is a serious and rare condition affecting the immune system, requiring innovative treatments like gene therapy.
  • Researchers treated 50 ADA-SCID patients using a method involving their own modified stem cells and saw a 100% survival rate over 24-36 months, with high levels of event-free survival and successful immune reconstitution.
  • The study concluded that this gene therapy is effective and safe, with minimal adverse effects and no serious complications reported, highlighting its potential as a promising treatment for ADA-SCID.

Article Abstract

Background: Severe combined immunodeficiency due to adenosine deaminase (ADA) deficiency (ADA-SCID) is a rare and life-threatening primary immunodeficiency.

Methods: We treated 50 patients with ADA-SCID (30 in the United States and 20 in the United Kingdom) with an investigational gene therapy composed of autologous CD34+ hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs) transduced ex vivo with a self-inactivating lentiviral vector encoding human . Data from the two U.S. studies (in which fresh and cryopreserved formulations were used) at 24 months of follow-up were analyzed alongside data from the U.K. study (in which a fresh formulation was used) at 36 months of follow-up.

Results: Overall survival was 100% in all studies up to 24 and 36 months. Event-free survival (in the absence of reinitiation of enzyme-replacement therapy or rescue allogeneic hematopoietic stem-cell transplantation) was 97% (U.S. studies) and 100% (U.K. study) at 12 months; 97% and 95%, respectively, at 24 months; and 95% (U.K. study) at 36 months. Engraftment of genetically modified HSPCs persisted in 29 of 30 patients in the U.S. studies and in 19 of 20 patients in the U.K. study. Patients had sustained metabolic detoxification and normalization of ADA activity levels. Immune reconstitution was robust, with 90% of the patients in the U.S. studies and 100% of those in the U.K. study discontinuing immunoglobulin-replacement therapy by 24 months and 36 months, respectively. No evidence of monoclonal expansion, leukoproliferative complications, or emergence of replication-competent lentivirus was noted, and no events of autoimmunity or graft-versus-host disease occurred. Most adverse events were of low grade.

Conclusions: Treatment of ADA-SCID with ex vivo lentiviral HSPC gene therapy resulted in high overall and event-free survival with sustained expression, metabolic correction, and functional immune reconstitution. (Funded by the National Institutes of Health and others; ClinicalTrials.gov numbers, NCT01852071, NCT02999984, and NCT01380990.).

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8240285PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1056/NEJMoa2027675DOI Listing

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