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  • Long-term safety and efficacy of factor IX gene therapy in hemophilia B.

Long-term safety and efficacy of factor IX gene therapy in hemophilia B.

The New England journal of medicine (2014-11-20)
Amit C Nathwani, Ulreke M Reiss, Edward G D Tuddenham, Cecilia Rosales, Pratima Chowdary, Jenny McIntosh, Marco Della Peruta, Elsa Lheriteau, Nishal Patel, Deepak Raj, Anne Riddell, Jun Pie, Savita Rangarajan, David Bevan, Michael Recht, Yu-Min Shen, Kathleen G Halka, Etiena Basner-Tschakarjan, Federico Mingozzi, Katherine A High, James Allay, Mark A Kay, Catherine Y C Ng, Junfang Zhou, Maria Cancio, Christopher L Morton, John T Gray, Deokumar Srivastava, Arthur W Nienhuis, Andrew M Davidoff
ABSTRACT

In patients with severe hemophilia B, gene therapy that is mediated by a novel self-complementary adeno-associated virus serotype 8 (AAV8) vector has been shown to raise factor IX levels for periods of up to 16 months. We wanted to determine the durability of transgene expression, the vector dose-response relationship, and the level of persistent or late toxicity. We evaluated the stability of transgene expression and long-term safety in 10 patients with severe hemophilia B: 6 patients who had been enrolled in an initial phase 1 dose-escalation trial, with 2 patients each receiving a low, intermediate, or high dose, and 4 additional patients who received the high dose (2×10(12) vector genomes per kilogram of body weight). The patients subsequently underwent extensive clinical and laboratory monitoring. A single intravenous infusion of vector in all 10 patients with severe hemophilia B resulted in a dose-dependent increase in circulating factor IX to a level that was 1 to 6% of the normal value over a median period of 3.2 years, with observation ongoing. In the high-dose group, a consistent increase in the factor IX level to a mean (±SD) of 5.1±1.7% was observed in all 6 patients, which resulted in a reduction of more than 90% in both bleeding episodes and the use of prophylactic factor IX concentrate. A transient increase in the mean alanine aminotransferase level to 86 IU per liter (range, 36 to 202) occurred between week 7 and week 10 in 4 of the 6 patients in the high-dose group but resolved over a median of 5 days (range, 2 to 35) after prednisolone treatment. In 10 patients with severe hemophilia B, the infusion of a single dose of AAV8 vector resulted in long-term therapeutic factor IX expression associated with clinical improvement. With a follow-up period of up to 3 years, no late toxic effects from the therapy were reported. (Funded by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute and others; ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT00979238.).