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Gene therapy for the treatment of hip prosthesis loosening: adverse events in a phase 1 clinical study.

Human gene therapy (2008-10-30)
Jolanda J de Poorter, Rob C Hoeben, Willem R Obermann, Tom W J Huizinga, Rob G H H Nelissen
RÉSUMÉ

Revision surgery for loosened hip prostheses is a heavy burden for elderly patients with comorbidity. As an alternative to surgery we performed a study to stabilize the prosthesis by percutaneous cement injection after removing inflammatory tissue with an intraarticular virus-directed enzyme prodrug approach. Twelve elderly patients with debilitating pain from a loosened hip prosthesis were included in a phase 1 dose-escalating clinical study. The patients were admitted to the hospital for 10 days for an intraarticular vector and prodrug injection, and subsequently for a percutaneous bone cement injection. This paper reports the adverse and serious adverse events of the study. After prodrug injection 9 of 12 patients had gastrointestinal adverse events (nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea), and 8 patients had hepatic adverse events (rise in aspartate aminotransferase and alanine aminotransferase). Five patients developed anemia (World Health Organization grade 1 or 2) from hematomas after cement injection. There were four serious adverse events in the first 6 months after vector injection, but these were not related to gene therapy as judged by an independent safety committee. There was no dose-limiting toxicity. However, the extensive comorbidity in these patients makes it difficult to fully establish the safety of the approach in this small and heterogeneous patient population.

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Sigma-Aldrich
CB 1954, solid