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Fido's Gene Therapy Success Bodes Well

By Sean Henahan, Access Excellence

Washington, DC (12/11/98)- The apparent success of a hemophilia gene therapy experiment with dogs suggests the chances are good for similar success in humans, report researchers.

Scientists at The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia conducted an experimental protocol involving dogs with a genetic defect predisposing them to develop hemophilia B, a blood clotting disorder. Functional genes capable of producing the clotting factor known as Factor IX were attached to an adeno-associated virus vector and injected into the leg muscles of the animals. The theory was that the genetically modified virus would carry the missing gene to muscle cells, which in turn would take up the gene and begin producing the clotting factor and releasing it into the blood stream.

gene therapySure enough, the treatment produced lasting improvement in the animals. After the gene therapy, blood-clotting times dropped from more than an hour's time to 15 to 20 minutes. Normal clotting time in healthy animals is about six minutes. It took about two months for the genes to maximize expression of the missing protein. The researchers were encouraged to find that expression levels remained stable for more than a year after the one-time treatment. Moreover, no side effects or limiting immune responses occurred as a result of treatment.

"The gene transfer strategy that we used resulted in sustained expression of Factor IX at levels adequate to show improvement in two different blood coagulation assays. Many gene transfer strategies that seemed promising in mice failed to show efficacy in large-animal models. However, our success with large animal models here increases our expectation that similar effects may be seen in humans," said Katherine High, M.D., Director of Research of the Hematology Division at The Children's Hospital.

A team of researchers at Stanford University School of Medicine reported similar findings with a slightly different approach. The researchers infused the Factor IX gene into the blood vessels leading to the liver, first in mice, then in dogs. This approach improved blood clotting in the hemophiliac animals for up to 17 months in mice and for up to eight months in dogs.

"This is something that we've worked out in the lab that has a high potential of working in people," said Mark Kay, MD, PhD, associate professor of pediatrics and genetics, director of Stanford's program in human gene therapy.

Hemophilia is one of a small number of diseases that are caused by a single, known genetic defect. This makes it an ideal candidate for gene therapy approaches. Current treatments for hemophilia involve intravenous infusions of expensive versions of missing clotting factors into the bloodstream. Some of these blood products are derived from pooled blood, while others are produced using recombinant DNA technology. Researchers would like to avoid using factors derived from blood banks because of a risk of transmitting disease including hepatitis and HIV.

Both teams are now collaborating to move the research along to clinical trials for human hemophilia B. They have already filed an application with the Food and Drug Administration to begin the first phase of clinical trials in 10 to 20 adult patients with hemophilia B.

The research appears in the January 1999 edition of the journal Nature Medicine.

Copyright 1999© Info

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