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Safety and Efficacy of Gene Transfer for Leber’s Congenital Amaurosis. Ryan Smith October 20, 2008. Leber’s Congenital Amaurosis (LCA). Rare inherited eye disease (1 in 80,000 ) Symptoms first occur in early infancy Irregular behavior, nystagmus
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Safety and Efficacy of Gene Transfer for Leber’s Congenital Amaurosis Ryan Smith October 20, 2008
Leber’s Congenital Amaurosis (LCA) • Rare inherited eye disease (1 in 80,000) • Symptoms first occur in early infancy • Irregular behavior, nystagmus • Progresses through time resulting in total blindness by 3rd or 4th decade of life • No treatment (until now?...) • Described by Theodore Leber in 19th Century • Amaurosis – Vision loss without any lesions • Congenital – Not acquired, present at birth
Concept Virus Cell DNA of Interest Nucleus Insert DNA into genome Functional Protein
Adeno-Associated Virus (AAV) • Common human virus (80%) • Not known to cause a disease • Very mild immune response • Advantages • Integrates into the same place in the genome nearly every time • Elicits no clear cytotoxic response • Actually shown to fight cancer
Adeno-associated Virus • Disadvantages • Cannot hold a lot of DNA in the head • Efficiently packing it can require removing the viral DNA • This may cause it to not integrate in the proper location
Method • Identified three subjects (1 male, 2 female) age 19 to 26 with LCA2 and profound vision loss. • Put a cDNA of RPE65 gene with a chicken beta actin promoter into an AAV vector. • Injected AAV2.hRPE65v2 into subretinal tissue under general anesthesia. • Only in one eye (the worse based on objective and subjective measurement) – Right in all three • Other used as a control
Method • Patients’ vision and health evaluated before and after surgery • Subjective Vision tests: • Pupillary light reflex • Nystagmus testing • Objective Vision tests: • Visual Acuity tests • Goldmann visual-field examination • Ability to navigate an obstacle course
Surgery and Immediate Response • Injection caused localized retina detachment • Reattached 14 hours after surgery • All patients showed unremarkable retinas after surgery • Patient 2 • developed outer lamellar cyst in fovea • Also developed a macular hole
Post Surgery – Response to Vector • Vector DNA only found in tear of patient 1 on day 1 after surgery • Vector was not observed to spread through the body • No humoral or cell-mediated immune response in any of the patients • Neutralizing antibody titers to AAV2 capsid observed in Patient 2, but went away over time
Pupillary Light Response • All patients showed an increased light sensitivity • The injected eye was approximately three times as sensitive to light than at baseline • The injected eye drove the light response in both eyes • In each situation the less functional eye became better than the previously better functioning eye
Results • Patient 1 • HM -> 20/1050 (P<0.001) • Patient 2 • HM -> 20/710 (P<0.001) • Patient 3 • 20/640 -> 20/290 (P=0.002) • Visual Field size increased • Nystagmus was reduced • Ability to navigate obstacle course improved (for patient 2)
Discussion • All patients showed improvement for 6 weeks, then improvement slowed (did not go away) • Reduction in nystagmus may account for improvement in uninjected eye • No apparent local or systemic effects of AAV
Macular hole in patient 2 • No inflammation or acute retinal toxicity • Could be contraction of a preexistingmembrane stimulated by the surgery • Could be caused by the surgery • No reported vision loss by the patient • Definitely would cause vision loss to normally functioning retina
Future Work • These three patients will continue to be monitored • This was first of three experiment groups involving 9 people • First group got a small dose • Second group gets a medium dose • Third group gets a large dose • Possible improved response if patients are treated in childhood