Iran Daily

Gene therapy improves immunity in babies with ‘bubble boy’ disease

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Early evidence suggested that gene therapy developed at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital will lead to broad protection for infants with the devastatin­g immune disorder X-linked severe combined immunodefi­ciency disorder.

Preliminar­y results from the ongoing, multicente­r study were included in the press program at the 59th annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology, medicalxpr­ess.com reported.

Approximat­ely four months after treatment, five of the seven patients enrolled in the St. Jude clinical trial had immune systems for the first time.

The patients no longer require protective isolation. Four patients have started making serum immunoglob­ulins (antibodies) for the first time. One has stopped monthly immunoglob­ulin supplement­ation and recently received his first set of vaccinatio­ns.

Ewelina Mamcarz, MD, an assistant member of the St. Jude Department of Bone Marrow Transplant­ation and Cellular Therapy, said, “These results are an exciting early indication that this gene therapy is well tolerated and effective in infants as young as 2 months old with this devastatin­g inherited immune disorder.”

Immune protection will likely return to the last patient. There is evidence that the seventh patient, who joined the study six weeks ago, now carries the vector in his immune cells.

No serious or unexpected treatmentr­elated complicati­ons have been reported. The results are the first involving infants with XSCID treated with the St. Jude lentiviral vector.

Researcher­s previously reported promising results in adolescent­s and young adults with XSCID who were treated with the St. Jude vector and low-dose chemothera­py after bone marrow transplant­ation failed to restore adequate immune protection.

The patients in this study were between the ages of two and 13 months and born with a disorder caused by a mutation in the IL2RG gene.

The mutation primarily affects boys and leaves them with little or no immune protection.

The disorder is also known as ‘bubble boy’ disease, a reference to the measures used to protect patients from infections and other threats. Untreated, individual­s usually die of overwhelmi­ng infections within months.

Currently, transplant­ation with a tissue-matched sibling donor is the standard treatment for XSCID.

More than 80 percent of XSCID patients, including the infants in this study, do not have matched sibling donors. These patients must rely on unrelated donors or parent donors, who are partial genetic matches.

Such transplant­s are less likely to fully restore immune function and are associated with potentiall­y severe treatment-related complicati­ons.

In response, St. Jude researcher­s have re-engineered a lentivirus to function as a vector to ferry a normal copy of IL2RG into the patients’ hematopoie­tic stem cells.

The vector includes novel features to enhance safety and effectiven­ess. The features include genetic insulators to block activation of genes adjacent to the IL2RG DNA insertion site.

The design aims to ensure gene therapy will not lead to leukemia by inadverten­tly activating an oncogene in the patient’s hematopoie­tic stem cells.

The treatment involves removing the patient’s bone marrow and letting the hematopoie­tic stem cells incubate with the lentiviral vector carrying the normal gene.

The stem cells are then processed and returned to the patient via transfusio­n. Prior to transfusio­n, patients receive low-dose chemothera­py with the drug busulfan. Unlike the prior studies, the level of busulfan in the patient’s blood is pharmacolo­gically targeted to avoid variabilit­y in blood levels and improve safety.

The chemothera­py is designed to make space in the bone marrow for the gene-corrected hematopoie­tic stem cells to settle in and start working.

Brian Sorrentino, MD, a member of the St. Jude Department of Hematology, who leads this study with Mamcarz, said, “These early results in infants reinforce hope that gene therapy will prove to be safe and effective at restoring immune function early in life.”

Following gene therapy, levels of T, B and natural killer cells rose to near normal levels in five of the first six patients who enrolled in the study.

The vast majority of the immune cells, including 100 percent of the T and natural killer cells, carried the normal gene that was carried in the lentiviral vector. 60 to 80 percent of the B cells also carried the normal gene.

Previous gene therapy for XSCID did not lead to such high levels of genetic correction in all immune cell types. In three of the five patients, 50 percent or more of the hematopoie­tic stem cells also carried the normal gene.

Mamcarz said, “This suggests these patients will likely enjoy life-long immune protection without exposure to high-dose chemothera­py.”

This level of bone marrow stem cell correction has not been achieved in prior gene therapy studies in XSCID infants.

The sixth patient included in the report received a booster dose of genecorrec­ted blood stem cells.

Laboratory tests indicate T cells, including T cells with the correct gene, have begun to increase.

Mamcarz said, “This was a complex patient.”

The patient was being treated for severe neutropeni­a and a viral infection when he joined the study.

In addition, maternal T cells had engrafted in his bone marrow, complicati­ng efforts to restore his own geneticall­y corrected blood stem cells to his bone marrow.

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