Towards a one-time cure for Fabry disease: Lentivirus-mediated haematopoietic stem and progenitor cell gene therapy

Rina Kansal
{"title":"Towards a one-time cure for Fabry disease: Lentivirus-mediated haematopoietic stem and progenitor cell gene therapy","authors":"Rina Kansal","doi":"10.1002/ctd2.70042","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>Fabry disease, also known as Anderson‒Fabry disease, is an X-linked systemic disease first described independently in Germany and England over 125 years ago, in 1898, in patients presenting with small, reddish purple telangiectatic cutaneous papules called <i>angiokeratoma corporis diffusum</i>.<span><sup>1</sup></span> Five decades later, in 1947, the concept of a lipid storage disease emerged following postmortem studies, and the abnormal lipid was identified as trihexosyl ceramide in 1963.<span><sup>1</sup></span> Subsequently, the underlying deficiency of the lysosomal enzyme α-galactosidase, which cleaves galactose from the neutral glycosphingolipid, globotriaosylceramide (Gb<sub>3</sub>) or trihexosyl ceramide, in the normal cellular degradation pathway, was identified.<span><sup>1, 2</sup></span> The enzyme activity was near-completely deficient in leukocytes in affected males and reduced in female carriers of the disease compared to normal leukocytes.<span><sup>2</sup></span> In 1978, the α-galactosidase A (<i>GLA)</i> gene, which encodes the enzyme, was found to be located in the Xq22 chromosomal region, and the gene's nucleotide sequence was identified in 1986. Gene mutations in <i>GLA</i> that do not allow enzyme expression were recognised as the fundamental cause of Fabry disease.<span><sup>3</sup></span></p><p>Although the clinical features of this inherited disease, including neurologic pain in the extremities, cutaneous angiokeratomas, hypohidrosis, and corneal opacities, are evident in childhood, the diagnosis of classic Fabry disease is often missed and delayed, with an average age of 29 years at diagnosis.<span><sup>3, 4</sup></span> The disease worsens in untreated adults due to the progressive accumulation of glycosphingolipids in various cells across multiple organ systems, leading to cardiovascular, cerebrovascular, and renal damage that shortens lifespan. Females exhibit variability in disease severity and may be asymptomatic or experience complications like affected males. Until 2001, no treatment was available to halt disease progression, when enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) was approved for treating Fabry disease in Europe, followed by approval in the United States in 2003.<span><sup>4</sup></span> Nonetheless, ERT is very expensive, requires biweekly infusions for life, and its efficacy may be reduced if the patient develops an antibody response. Migalastat, a pharmacologic chaperone therapy approved for adults with Fabry disease since 2016, is only applicable for 30%–50% of patients who have <i>GLA</i> mutations that are amenable to increase the activity of the deficient enzyme with the drug; furthermore, the in vitro determinations of amenability do not translate to in vivo drug efficacy.<span><sup>5</sup></span></p><p>Medin et al. began their gene therapy efforts more than two decades ago with the vision of developing a one-time cure for Fabry disease.<span><sup>6, 7</sup></span> In an accompanying article in this journal, Medin's team described the 5-year end-of-study results from the Canadian Fabry Disease Clinical Research and Therapeutics (FACTs) trial, which was the first gene therapy trial—single-arm, non-randomised phase I clinical trial (NCT02800070) of ex vivo recombinant lentivirus-induced autologous haematopoietic stem and progenitor cell (HSPC)-mediated—to be completed for Fabry disease.<span><sup>8, 9</sup></span> In this therapy, the virus-induced bone marrow-derived HSPCs with functional <i>GLA</i> differentiate into circulating myeloid cells, which secrete α-galactosidase A that acts by metabolic co-operativity or cross-correction, as depicted in Figure 1.<span><sup>6, 8</sup></span> The enzyme uptakes into the uncorrected cells in various tissues in a mannose-6-phosphate receptor-dependent manner, allowing it to degrade the accumulated glycosphingolipid substrates within non-haematopoietic cells.<span><sup>6</sup></span></p><p>Previously, the preclinical mouse models of this therapy demonstrated even higher levels of α-galactosidase activity with the lentivirus-induced CD34+-enriched HSPCs compared to normal CD34+ HSPCs, alongside a concurrent reduction in substrate accumulation.<span><sup>7</sup></span> The FACTs trial was initiated in 2016 to evaluate the safety of the lentiviral gene therapy developed by the authors over at least the past 25 years for Fabry disease. Five adult males with four distinct classic Fabry disease mutations confirmed by genotyping, all of whom were receiving ERT, were enrolled. All patients had their bone marrow HSPCs collected and underwent non-myeloablative conditioning with reduced-intensity melphalan. Stronger myeloablation was deemed unnecessary since, for metabolic diseases, even partial improvements in enzyme levels might be enough to discontinue ERT. The CD34+-enriched HSPCs were transduced with a recombinant lentivirus that induced the expression of α-galactosidase A. The patients received the transduced CD34+-enriched HSPCs via infusion as the gene therapy. Circulating α-galactosidase activity began to appear within 6–8 days of the infusion, and this activity remained durable for 5 years in all patients. Leukocyte α-galactosidase-specific activity was comparable to enzyme activity in plasma. The vector copy number, which estimates the average number of integration sites per cell, was analysed in the leukocytes of all treated patients, and this number stabilised throughout the study period. Deacetylated Gb<sub>3</sub> (lyso-Gb<sub>3</sub>) is recognised as a metabolite that is more soluble than plasma Gb<sub>3</sub> and correlates with Fabry disease outcome; α-galactosidase A expression decreased the levels of plasma Gb<sub>3</sub> in four of five patients and stabilised the renal symptoms in all patients.<span><sup>8</sup></span> After an initial transient rise in anti-α-galactosidase A antibody titres in plasma in three patients, the reactivity decreased early in the trial, and the antibody titres remained at or near baseline beyond 18 months. All five patients were eligible to discontinue ERT: three of five elected to do so. The therapy was well-tolerated. Only two severe adverse events occurred in the treatment phase,<span><sup>9</sup></span> with two additional adverse events documented since then.<span><sup>8</sup></span> The trial was designed as a safety study and was not adequately powered to investigate correlations between gene therapy and specific clinical parameters.<span><sup>8</sup></span> After haematologic malignancies occurred in patients in a gene therapy trial for another disease, the investigators performed additional experiments to study viral integration sites following gene therapy.<span><sup>10</sup></span> These studies provided evidence for persistent polyclonal haematopoiesis and no evidence of clonal dominance in any patient.<span><sup>10</sup></span></p><p>Notably, ERT discontinuation in three patients alone saved the Canadian health system $4.8 million; these savings will increase over the 15-year follow-up period. In their carefully planned work, in addition to demonstrating safety features, Medin's group showed the feasibility of a multisite model for designing and delivering gene therapy and conducting the trial in an academic university setting. Their future efforts to include more patients, including at a younger age and females, will undoubtedly be eagerly anticipated by the Fabry disease community worldwide towards the long-standing goal of achieving a one-time cure for this disease.</p><p>The author is solely responsible for drafting and writing this article.</p><p>The author declares she has no conflicts of interest.</p><p>This work did not receive any funding from any source.</p><p>Not applicable.</p>","PeriodicalId":72605,"journal":{"name":"Clinical and translational discovery","volume":"5 2","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2025-03-11","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1002/ctd2.70042","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Clinical and translational discovery","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ctd2.70042","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

Abstract

Fabry disease, also known as Anderson‒Fabry disease, is an X-linked systemic disease first described independently in Germany and England over 125 years ago, in 1898, in patients presenting with small, reddish purple telangiectatic cutaneous papules called angiokeratoma corporis diffusum.1 Five decades later, in 1947, the concept of a lipid storage disease emerged following postmortem studies, and the abnormal lipid was identified as trihexosyl ceramide in 1963.1 Subsequently, the underlying deficiency of the lysosomal enzyme α-galactosidase, which cleaves galactose from the neutral glycosphingolipid, globotriaosylceramide (Gb3) or trihexosyl ceramide, in the normal cellular degradation pathway, was identified.1, 2 The enzyme activity was near-completely deficient in leukocytes in affected males and reduced in female carriers of the disease compared to normal leukocytes.2 In 1978, the α-galactosidase A (GLA) gene, which encodes the enzyme, was found to be located in the Xq22 chromosomal region, and the gene's nucleotide sequence was identified in 1986. Gene mutations in GLA that do not allow enzyme expression were recognised as the fundamental cause of Fabry disease.3

Although the clinical features of this inherited disease, including neurologic pain in the extremities, cutaneous angiokeratomas, hypohidrosis, and corneal opacities, are evident in childhood, the diagnosis of classic Fabry disease is often missed and delayed, with an average age of 29 years at diagnosis.3, 4 The disease worsens in untreated adults due to the progressive accumulation of glycosphingolipids in various cells across multiple organ systems, leading to cardiovascular, cerebrovascular, and renal damage that shortens lifespan. Females exhibit variability in disease severity and may be asymptomatic or experience complications like affected males. Until 2001, no treatment was available to halt disease progression, when enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) was approved for treating Fabry disease in Europe, followed by approval in the United States in 2003.4 Nonetheless, ERT is very expensive, requires biweekly infusions for life, and its efficacy may be reduced if the patient develops an antibody response. Migalastat, a pharmacologic chaperone therapy approved for adults with Fabry disease since 2016, is only applicable for 30%–50% of patients who have GLA mutations that are amenable to increase the activity of the deficient enzyme with the drug; furthermore, the in vitro determinations of amenability do not translate to in vivo drug efficacy.5

Medin et al. began their gene therapy efforts more than two decades ago with the vision of developing a one-time cure for Fabry disease.6, 7 In an accompanying article in this journal, Medin's team described the 5-year end-of-study results from the Canadian Fabry Disease Clinical Research and Therapeutics (FACTs) trial, which was the first gene therapy trial—single-arm, non-randomised phase I clinical trial (NCT02800070) of ex vivo recombinant lentivirus-induced autologous haematopoietic stem and progenitor cell (HSPC)-mediated—to be completed for Fabry disease.8, 9 In this therapy, the virus-induced bone marrow-derived HSPCs with functional GLA differentiate into circulating myeloid cells, which secrete α-galactosidase A that acts by metabolic co-operativity or cross-correction, as depicted in Figure 1.6, 8 The enzyme uptakes into the uncorrected cells in various tissues in a mannose-6-phosphate receptor-dependent manner, allowing it to degrade the accumulated glycosphingolipid substrates within non-haematopoietic cells.6

Previously, the preclinical mouse models of this therapy demonstrated even higher levels of α-galactosidase activity with the lentivirus-induced CD34+-enriched HSPCs compared to normal CD34+ HSPCs, alongside a concurrent reduction in substrate accumulation.7 The FACTs trial was initiated in 2016 to evaluate the safety of the lentiviral gene therapy developed by the authors over at least the past 25 years for Fabry disease. Five adult males with four distinct classic Fabry disease mutations confirmed by genotyping, all of whom were receiving ERT, were enrolled. All patients had their bone marrow HSPCs collected and underwent non-myeloablative conditioning with reduced-intensity melphalan. Stronger myeloablation was deemed unnecessary since, for metabolic diseases, even partial improvements in enzyme levels might be enough to discontinue ERT. The CD34+-enriched HSPCs were transduced with a recombinant lentivirus that induced the expression of α-galactosidase A. The patients received the transduced CD34+-enriched HSPCs via infusion as the gene therapy. Circulating α-galactosidase activity began to appear within 6–8 days of the infusion, and this activity remained durable for 5 years in all patients. Leukocyte α-galactosidase-specific activity was comparable to enzyme activity in plasma. The vector copy number, which estimates the average number of integration sites per cell, was analysed in the leukocytes of all treated patients, and this number stabilised throughout the study period. Deacetylated Gb3 (lyso-Gb3) is recognised as a metabolite that is more soluble than plasma Gb3 and correlates with Fabry disease outcome; α-galactosidase A expression decreased the levels of plasma Gb3 in four of five patients and stabilised the renal symptoms in all patients.8 After an initial transient rise in anti-α-galactosidase A antibody titres in plasma in three patients, the reactivity decreased early in the trial, and the antibody titres remained at or near baseline beyond 18 months. All five patients were eligible to discontinue ERT: three of five elected to do so. The therapy was well-tolerated. Only two severe adverse events occurred in the treatment phase,9 with two additional adverse events documented since then.8 The trial was designed as a safety study and was not adequately powered to investigate correlations between gene therapy and specific clinical parameters.8 After haematologic malignancies occurred in patients in a gene therapy trial for another disease, the investigators performed additional experiments to study viral integration sites following gene therapy.10 These studies provided evidence for persistent polyclonal haematopoiesis and no evidence of clonal dominance in any patient.10

Notably, ERT discontinuation in three patients alone saved the Canadian health system $4.8 million; these savings will increase over the 15-year follow-up period. In their carefully planned work, in addition to demonstrating safety features, Medin's group showed the feasibility of a multisite model for designing and delivering gene therapy and conducting the trial in an academic university setting. Their future efforts to include more patients, including at a younger age and females, will undoubtedly be eagerly anticipated by the Fabry disease community worldwide towards the long-standing goal of achieving a one-time cure for this disease.

The author is solely responsible for drafting and writing this article.

The author declares she has no conflicts of interest.

This work did not receive any funding from any source.

Not applicable.

Abstract Image

迈向法布里病的一次性治愈:慢病毒介导的造血干细胞和祖细胞基因治疗
法布里病,也称为安德森-法布里病,是一种x系全身性疾病,于125年前的1898年在德国和英国首次被独立描述,患者表现为小的、红紫色毛细血管扩张性皮肤丘疹,称为公司弥漫性血管角化瘤50年后的1947年,在死后研究中出现了脂质储存疾病的概念,并于1963年确定异常脂质为三己糖基神经酰胺。3.1随后,在正常细胞降解途径中,发现了溶酶体酶α-半乳糖苷酶的潜在缺乏,该酶能从中性鞘糖脂、球状三己糖神经酰胺(Gb3)或三己糖基神经酰胺中分离半乳糖。1,2与正常白细胞相比,患病男性白细胞中的酶活性几乎完全缺乏,而患病女性白细胞中的酶活性则降低1978年发现编码该酶的α-半乳糖苷酶A (α-半乳糖苷酶A, GLA)基因位于Xq22染色体区域,1986年鉴定出该基因的核苷酸序列。GLA中不允许酶表达的基因突变被认为是法布里病的根本原因。虽然这种遗传性疾病的临床特征,包括四肢神经性疼痛、皮肤血管角化瘤、多汗症和角膜混浊,在儿童时期很明显,但经典法布里病的诊断经常被遗漏和延迟,诊断时的平均年龄为29岁。3,4在未经治疗的成年人中,由于鞘糖脂在多个器官系统的各种细胞中逐渐积累,导致心、脑血管和肾脏损伤,缩短寿命,疾病会恶化。女性表现出疾病严重程度的差异,可能无症状或像受影响的男性一样出现并发症。直到2001年,当酶替代疗法(ERT)在欧洲被批准用于治疗法布里病(Fabry disease),并于2003年在美国获得批准时,还没有可用的治疗方法来阻止疾病进展。尽管如此,ERT非常昂贵,需要每两周输注一次,并且如果患者产生抗体反应,其疗效可能会降低。Migalastat是一种药理学伴侣疗法,自2016年以来被批准用于成人法布里病(Fabry disease),仅适用于30%-50%的GLA突变患者,这些突变可以通过药物增加缺陷酶的活性;此外,体外测定的适应性不能转化为体内药物功效。medin等人在二十多年前就开始了他们的基因治疗工作,他们的愿景是开发一种一次性治疗法布里病的方法。在该杂志的一篇文章中,Medin的团队描述了加拿大法布里病临床研究和治疗(FACTs)试验的5年研究结束结果,这是第一个基因治疗试验-单组,非随机I期临床试验(NCT02800070) -介导的体外重组慢病毒诱导的自体造血干细胞和前体细胞(HSPC)-将完成法布里病。8,9在这种疗法中,病毒诱导的具有功能性GLA的骨髓源性HSPCs分化为循环髓系细胞,其分泌α-半乳糖苷酶A,通过代谢协同作用或交叉校正起作用,如图1.6所示,8酶以甘露糖-6-磷酸受体依赖的方式进入各种组织中未校正的细胞,使其能够降解非造血细胞中积累的鞘糖脂底物。此前,该疗法的临床前小鼠模型显示,与正常CD34+ HSPCs相比,慢病毒诱导的CD34+富集HSPCs具有更高水平的α-半乳糖苷酶活性,同时底物积累减少FACTs试验于2016年启动,旨在评估作者在至少过去25年中开发的治疗法布里病的慢病毒基因疗法的安全性。5名经基因分型证实具有4种不同的经典法布里病突变的成年男性均接受ERT治疗。所有患者都收集了他们的骨髓造血干细胞,并接受了低强度的melphalan的非清髓调节。更强的骨髓消融被认为是不必要的,因为对于代谢性疾病,即使酶水平的部分改善也足以停止ERT。用诱导α-半乳糖苷酶a表达的重组慢病毒转导CD34+富集的HSPCs,患者接受转染的CD34+富集的HSPCs输注作为基因治疗。循环α-半乳糖苷酶活性在输注后6-8天内开始出现,并且这种活性在所有患者中持续5年。白细胞α-半乳糖苷酶特异性活性与血浆酶活性相当。 载体拷贝数(估计每个细胞整合位点的平均数量)在所有治疗患者的白细胞中进行了分析,该数字在整个研究期间保持稳定。脱乙酰化Gb3 (lyso-Gb3)被认为是一种比血浆Gb3更易溶解的代谢物,与法布里病的预后相关;α-半乳糖苷酶A的表达降低了5例患者中4例的血浆Gb3水平,并稳定了所有患者的肾脏症状在3例患者血浆中抗α-半乳糖苷酶A抗体滴度最初短暂上升后,在试验早期反应性下降,抗体滴度在18个月后保持在或接近基线。所有5名患者都有资格停止ERT: 5人中有3人选择停止ERT。这种疗法耐受性良好。在治疗阶段只发生了两起严重不良事件9,此后又记录了两起不良事件8该试验被设计为一项安全性研究,并没有足够的能力来调查基因治疗与特定临床参数之间的相关性在另一种疾病的基因治疗试验中,患者出现血液病恶性肿瘤后,研究人员进行了额外的实验来研究基因治疗后的病毒整合位点这些研究提供了持续多克隆造血的证据,没有证据表明在任何患者中存在克隆优势。10 .值得注意的是,仅三名患者的ERT终止就为加拿大卫生系统节省了480万美元;这些节余将在15年后续期间增加。在他们精心策划的工作中,除了展示了安全性,Medin的团队还展示了设计和提供基因治疗的多位点模型的可行性,并在学术大学环境中进行了试验。他们未来的努力将包括更多的患者,包括更年轻的患者和女性,这无疑将被全世界的法布里病社区热切期待,以实现一次性治愈这种疾病的长期目标。作者全权负责起草和撰写本文。作者声明她没有利益冲突。这项工作没有得到任何来源的资助。不适用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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