Outcomes following gene therapy in patients with severe Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome

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Hacein-Bey Abina, Salima | Gaspar, H Bobby | Blondeau, Johanna | Caccavelli, Laure | Charrier, Sabine | Buckland, Karen | Picard, Capucine | Six, Emmanuelle | Himoudi, Nourredine | Gilmour, Kimberly | Mcnicol, Anne-Marie | Hara, Havinder | Xu-Bayford, Jinhua | Rivat, Christine | Touzot, Fabien | Mavilio, Fulvio | Lim, Annick | Tréluyer, Jean-Marc | Héritier, Sébastien | Lefrère, François | Magalon, Jeremy | Pengue-Koyi, Isabelle | Honnet, Géraldine | Blanche, Stephane | Sherman, E. A. | Male, Frances | Berry, Charles | Malani, Nirav | Bushman, Frederic | Fischer, Alain | Thrasher, Adrian, J. | Galy, Anne | Cavazzana, Marina

Edité par CCSD ; American Medical Association (AMA) -

International audience. IMPORTANCE: Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome is a rare primary immunodeficiency associated with severe microthrombocytopenia. Partially HLA antigen-matched allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) transplantation is often curative but is associated with significant comorbidity. OBJECTIVE: To assess the outcomes and safety of autologous HSC gene therapy in Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Gene-corrected autologous HSCs were infused in 7 consecutive patients with severe Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome lacking HLA antigen-matched related or unrelated HSC donors (age range, 0.8-15.5 years; mean, 7 years) following myeloablative conditioning. Patients were enrolled in France and England and treated between December 2010 and January 2014. Follow-up of patients in this intermediate analysis ranged from 9 to 42 months. INTERVENTION: A single infusion of gene-modified CD34+ cells with an advanced lentiviral vector. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Primary outcomes were improvement at 24 months in eczema, frequency and severity of infections, bleeding tendency, and autoimmunity and reduction in disease-related days of hospitalization. Secondary outcomes were improvement in immunological and hematological characteristics and evidence of safety through vector integration analysis. RESULTS: Six of the 7 patients were alive at the time of last follow-up (mean and median follow-up, 28 months and 27 months, respectively) and showed sustained clinical benefit. One patient died 7 months after treatment of preexisting drug-resistant herpes virus infection. Eczema and susceptibility to infections resolved in all 6 patients. Autoimmunity improved in 5 of 5 patients. No severe bleeding episodes were recorded after treatment, and at last follow-up, all 6 surviving patients were free of blood product support and thrombopoietic agonists. Hospitalization days were reduced from a median of 25 days during the 2 years before treatment to a median of 0 days during the 2 years after treatment. All 6 surviving patients exhibited high-level, stable engraftment of functionally corrected lymphoid cells. The degree of myeloid cell engraftment and of platelet reconstitution correlated with the dose of gene-corrected cells administered. No evidence of vector-related toxicity was observed clinically or by molecular analysis. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: This study demonstrated the feasibility of the use of gene therapy in patients with Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome. Controlled trials with larger numbers of patients are necessary to assess long-term outcomes and safety.

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