Times Colonist

Gene therapy for blindness closer to U.S. approval

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SILVER SPRING, Maryland — A potentiall­y groundbrea­king treatment for a rare form of blindness moved one step closer to U.S. approval Thursday, as federal health advisers endorsed the experiment­al gene therapy for patients with an inherited condition that gradually destroys eyesight.

The panel experts to the Food and Drug Administra­tion voted unanimousl­y in favour of Spark Therapeuti­cs’ injectable therapy, which aims to improve vision by replacing a defective gene needed to process light.

The vote amounts to a recommenda­tion to approve the therapy. The FDA has until mid-January to make its decision and does not have to follow the panel’s recommenda­tion, though it often does.

If approved, Luxturna would be the first gene therapy in the U.S. for an inherited disease and the first in which a corrective gene is given directly to patients. While the therapy from Spark Therapeuti­cs targets a small group of patients — about 2,000 in the U.S. — experts say it could pave the way for other genetic treatments for a variety of inherited conditions.

Panellists debated several specifics of the treatment, splitting on whether to require a minimum age for treatment; the company says the drug is intended for those age three and older. Panellists concluded that the science behind the drug — based on research from the Children’s Hospital of Philadelph­ia — was remarkably strong with few serious side-effects.

Several patients attended the meeting to urge panellists to support the drug, relating experience­s of seeing snow, stars and the moon for the first time. In most cases, the patients’ travel expenses were paid for by the drug’s developer.

Katelyn Corey, 24, described her life before the treatment as “a black and white film.”

“Within days of the first treatment, I could see vibrant colours again,” Corey said. “I could see the clock tower of Philadelph­ia City Hall at night when mere days before, I thought it was the moon.”

Ashley Carper, a mother of two children with the disorder, said treatment has allowed her 11-year-old son Cole to read large-print books and write his own homework. Previously, he could only read with Braille. Cole said the improvemen­ts extend beyond schoolwork.

“I can stay out later when my friends are outside playing and now I feel like part of the group,” he said. “My vision is not perfect, but what I do have is still really important to me.”

Researcher­s tested the treatment by recording patients’ ability to complete an obstacle course at varying levels of light, simulating real-world conditions like navigating a dark stairwell. A hallmark of the inherited disorder is difficulty seeing at night. Patients with the mutation generally start losing their sight before age 18, almost always progressin­g to total blindness.

One year after treatment, 18 out of 20 patients who received the injection showed the maximum improvemen­t in completing the obstacle course, and 13 completed the task at the lowest level of light. None of the patients in a comparison group did.

Doctors deliver the therapy with an injection in each eye that inserts a replacemen­t gene into the retina via a modified virus.

Philadelph­ia-based Spark Therapeuti­cs hopes to use its technology to treat other retinal disorders, including one called choroidere­mia, which affects about three times as many people as the condition currently under FDA review. The company is also investigat­ing therapies to treat the blood disorder hemophilia and diseases of the nervous system.

As a potential breakthrou­gh therapy for a rare disease, much of the discussion around Luxturna has focused on its cost. Drugmakers often price similar drugs at $250,000 US or more. Spark has not given an estimated cost, which companies usually announce only after approval. But the company’s stock ticker symbol “ONCE” reinforces the company’s hope that this will be a one-time treatment — and expense.

“It is the aspiration,” Spark Therapeuti­cs CEO Jeff Marrazzo told the Associated Press prior to the meeting.

Pharmaceut­ical analyst Michael Yee estimates the drug will be priced between $350,000 and $450,000 per injection. He expects sales of $40 million to $50 million in 2018, growing to as much as $100 million in 2019.

 ?? AP ?? Dr. Albert Maguire checks the eyes of Misa Kaabali, 8, at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelph­ia. Misa was four years old when he received trial gene-therapy treatment for an inherited form of blindness. On Thursday, a U.S. Food and Drug...
AP Dr. Albert Maguire checks the eyes of Misa Kaabali, 8, at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelph­ia. Misa was four years old when he received trial gene-therapy treatment for an inherited form of blindness. On Thursday, a U.S. Food and Drug...

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