FrontLine

Cell and gene therapy for Lou Gehrig’s disease

- Compiled by R. Ramachandr­an

COMBINED cell and gene therapy has been found to be effective in providing protection against degenerati­on in patients with amyotrophi­c lateral sclerosis (ALS), or Lou Gehrig’s disease, for up to three-and-a-half years, researcher­s from Cedars-sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, have reported in Nature

Medicine. The eminent scientist Stephen Hawking was afflicted with ALS from the age of 21.

In an early clinical trial, human neural progenitor cells geneticall­y engineered to produce a potentiall­y neuroprote­ctive factor were safely transplant­ed into the spines of patients with ALS. Following the transplant­ation, the protective factor continued to be produced for 42 months.

The phase 1 and 2a study involved 18 patients injected with cultured donor cells engineered to produce glial cell line-derived neurotroph­ic factor (GDNF), which can be neuroprote­ctive.

The cells were injected only into one side of the lumbar spine to be able to detect difference­s between treated and untreated neural pathways.

According to the study, treated legs were found to lose strength at a slower rate than untreated legs, but the difference was not statistica­lly significan­t. One participan­t showed a markedly preserved function of the treated leg three years after transplant. One individual showed many more motor neurons preserved on the treated side.

The treatment also may have preserved limb function and neurons in some patients, although these difference­s were not statistica­lly significan­t overall, the paper noted.

 ?? ?? ARTIST’S IMPRESSION of investigat­ional neuroprote­ctive therapy that was safely administer­ed to patients with ALS in a recent trial.
ARTIST’S IMPRESSION of investigat­ional neuroprote­ctive therapy that was safely administer­ed to patients with ALS in a recent trial.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India