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Current and emerging gene therapies for haemophilia A and B. | LitMetric

Current and emerging gene therapies for haemophilia A and B.

Haemophilia

Katharine Dormandy Haemophilia and Thrombosis Centre, Royal Free Hospital, London, UK.

Published: April 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • - After years of development, gene therapies for hemophilia A and B have been commercialized, effectively normalizing factor levels in some patients but demonstrating variable long-term efficacy.
  • - Clinical trials reveal issues such as liver toxicities and potential oncogenicity of AAV vectors, which complicate their long-term safety and efficacy, alongside the challenge of immune responses limiting the possibility for repeat dosing.
  • - While AAV gene therapies present new treatment options, they are not universal cures, necessitating the development of alternative gene transfer systems to address efficacy variability and improve access for ineligible patients.

Article Abstract

Introduction: After decades of stumbling clinical development, the first gene therapies for haemophilia A and B have been commercialized and have normalized factor (F)VIII and factor (F)IX levels in some individuals in the long term. Several other clinical programs testing adeno-associated viral (AAV) vector gene therapy are at various stages of clinical testing.

Discussion: Multiyear follow-up in phase 1/2 and 3 studies showed long-term and sometimes curative but widely variable and unpredictable efficacy. Liver toxicities, mostly low-grade, occur in the 1st year in at least some individuals in all haemophilia A and B trials and are poorly understood. Wide variability and unpredictability of outcome and slow decline of FVIII levels are a major disadvantage because immune responses to AAV vectors preclude repeat dosing, which otherwise could improve suboptimal or restore declining expression, while overexpression may predispose to thrombosis. Long-term safety outcomes will need lifelong monitoring because AAV vectors infused at high doses integrate into chromosomes at rates that raise questions about potential oncogenicity and necessitate vigilance. Alternative gene transfer systems employing gene editing and/or non-viral vectors are under development and promise to overcome some limitations of the current state of the art for both haemophilia A and B.

Conclusions: AAV gene therapies for haemophilia have now become new treatment options but not universal cures. AAV is a powerful but imperfect gene transfer platform. Biobetter FVIII transgenes may help solve some problems plaguing gene therapy for haemophilia A. Addressing variability and unpredictability of efficacy, and delivery of gene therapy to ineligible patient subgroups may require different gene transfer systems, most of which are not ready for clinical translation yet but bring innovations needed to overcome the current limitations of gene therapy.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/hae.14984DOI Listing

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