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Persistent hematopoietic polyclonality after...
Journal article

Persistent hematopoietic polyclonality after lentivirus-mediated gene therapy for Fabry disease

Abstract

The safety and efficacy of lentivirus-mediated gene therapy was recently demonstrated in five male patients with Fabry disease-a rare X-linked lysosomal storage disorder caused by GLA gene mutations that result in multiple end-organ complications. To evaluate the risks of clonal dominance and leukemogenesis, which have been reported in multiple gene therapy trials, we conducted a comprehensive DNA insertion site analysis of peripheral blood samples from the five patients in our gene therapy trial. We found that patients had a polyclonal integration site spectrum and did not find evidence of a dominant clone in any patient. Although we identified vector integrations near proto-oncogenes, these had low percentages of contributions to the overall pool of integrations and did not persist over time. Overall, we show that our trial of lentivirus-mediated gene therapy for Fabry disease did not lead to hematopoietic clonal dominance and likely did not elevate the risk of leukemogenic transformation.

Authors

Saleh AH; Rothe M; Barber DL; McKillop WM; Fraser G; Morel CF; Schambach A; Auray-Blais C; West ML; Khan A

Journal

Molecular Therapy — Methods & Clinical Development, Vol. 28, , pp. 262–271

Publisher

Elsevier

Publication Date

March 9, 2023

DOI

10.1016/j.omtm.2023.01.003

ISSN

2399-6951

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