Reuters Health Information: Gene therapy found effective in hemophilia B
Gene therapy found effective in hemophilia B
Last Updated: 2014-11-19
By Gene Emery
(Reuters Health) - Ten patients with severe hemophilia B
have remained cured of the inherited bleeding disorder for as
long as three years thanks to gene therapy, according to a new
report in the New England Journal of Medicine.
The study updates an earlier one from 2011, in which six
volunteers were successfully treated with various doses of the
treatment that uses a virus to insert genetic material into the
liver. The four additional patients received the highest dose.
"I believe that, scientifically, this is ready for prime
time," the chief author, Dr. Andrew Davidoff of St. Jude
Children's Research Hospital in Memphis, Tennessee, told Reuters
Health in a telephone interview.
The problem, he said, is that the genetically engineered
virus that delivers the cure "is really a bear to make" and
better methods to produce the treatment are desperately needed.
To engineer enough virus to treat the 10 patients required six
months of work.
Davidoff and his colleagues found that the higher the dose
of the engineered virus, the more factor IX the body produced.
The researchers used an adeno-associated virus or AAV, which
infects the liver without causing apparent illness.
The therapy seemed to have no serious side effects and is
designed to eliminate the need to give patients injections of
factor IX every two or three days at a cost of about $250,000
per year.
The treatment produced factor IX levels in a range of 1% to
6% of normal. But even a few percentage points can be enough to
prevent dangerous bleeding. A single infusion was sufficient.
For the six high-dose recipients, the factor IX level
averaged 5.1%, "which resulted in a reduction of more than 90%
in both bleeding episodes and the use of prophylactic factor IX
concentrate," the research team wrote.
"I think it's going to have a big impact. The study showed
both safety and efficacy and the side effects were minimal,"
said Dr. Timothy Nichols, who heads the Francis Owen Blood
Research Laboratory at the University of North Carolina and was
not involved in the study.
"This is a single shot of medicine given to patients who are
treating themselves two or three times a week," he told Reuters
Health by phone. "Suddenly, they don't have to take the medicine
anymore."
Worldwide, about 1 in 25,000 men are born with hemophilia B
each year. It is less common than hemophilia A, which is caused
by a problem with a different protein and affects about 1 in
5,000 men.
Because the genetic code for the clotting factors is carried
on the X chromosome, and males don't have a backup copy of that
chromosome as women do, the condition is almost exclusively a
disease of men.
Nichols said most people with hemophilia would be "very
eager to consider the treatment and move forward if production
issues can be resolved."
"Hopefully (the new results) will be a catalyst for us and
others to find a more effective way to produce AAV," Davidoff
said. "In fact, we're in discussions with other companies in
terms of investing in our research for improving production."
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/1t6duWb
N Engl J Med 2014.
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