(Press-News.org) Contact information: Mark Derewicz
mark.derewicz@unch.unc.edu
919-923-0959
University of North Carolina Health Care
New gene therapy proves promising as hemophilia treatment
UNC researchers package specialized blood platelets with genes that express clotting factor, leading to fewer bleeding events
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. – Researchers at the UNC School of Medicine and the Medical College of Wisconsin found that a new kind of gene therapy led to a dramatic decline in bleeding events in dogs with naturally occurring hemophilia A, a serious and costly bleeding condition that affects about 50,000 people in the United States and millions more around the world.
Before the gene treatment, the animals experienced about five serious bleeding events a year. After receiving the novel gene therapy, though, they experienced substantially fewer bleeding events over three years, as reported in the journal Nature Communications.
"The promise and the hope for gene therapy is that people with hemophilia would be given a single therapeutic injection and then would express the protein they are missing for an extended period of time, ideally for years or even their entire lifetimes," said Tim Nichols, director of the Francis Owen Blood Research Laboratory at UNC and co-author of the paper. The hope is that after successful gene therapy, people with hemophilia would experience far fewer bleeding events because their blood would clot better.
People with hemophilia A lack the coagulation factor VIII in their blood plasma – the liquid in which red, white, and platelet cells are suspended.
"Bleeding events in hemophilia are severe, and without prompt factor VIII replacement, the disease can be crippling or fatal," said Nichols, a professor of medicine and pathology. "The random and spontaneous nature of the bleeding is a major challenge for people with hemophilia and their families."
In underdeveloped countries, people with hemophilia and many undiagnosed people typically die from bleeding in their late teens or early 20s. In developed countries, patients usually live fairly normal lives, as long as they receive preventive injections of recombinant protein therapy a few times a week. The disease requires life-long management that is not without health risks. The annual cost of medications alone is about $200,000 a year.
However, about 35 percent of people with hemophilia A develop an antibody response that blocks the factor VIII therapy. They require continuous infusions of various protein factors and they face a higher mortality rate. Also, the cost of treatment can easily rise to $2 million or more a year per patient.
Nichols and David Wilcox from the Medical College of Wisconsin figured out a potential way around the antibody response in dogs with naturally occurring hemophilia A.
Using a plasmapheresis machine and a blood-enrichment technique, the research team isolated specific platelet precursor cells from three dogs that have hemophilia A. The team then engineered those platelet precursor cells to incorporate a gene therapy vector that expresses factor VIII. The researchers put those engineered platelet precursors back into the dogs. As the cells proliferated and produced new platelets, more and more were found to express factor VIII.
Then, nature took over. Platelets naturally discharge their contents at sites of vascular injury and bleeding. In this experiment, the contents included factor VIII.
In the 2 1/2 years since the dogs received the gene therapy, researchers found that factor VIII was still being expressed in platelets that were coursing throughout the vascular systems of all three dogs. All three experienced much less bleeding. In the dog that expressed the most factor VIII in platelets, the bleeding was limited to just one serious event each year over the course of three years. And such bleeding events were easily treatable with current standard therapies.
"This has been very successful," Nichols said. "And now we want to explore the possibility of moving it into human clinical trials for people with hemophilia A, similar to what Paul Monahan and Jude Samulski at UNC are currently doing for people with hemophilia B, which is a deficiency of factor IX."
If approved, the platelet-targeted therapy would likely be restricted to patients who develop the antibody that stifles factor VIII therapy through normal injections. But as the gene therapy is refined, it could become a viable option for people with blood disorders who don't have inhibitory antibodies.
INFORMATION:
This research was funded by the National Institutes of Health, the American Heart Association, the National Gene Vector Biorepository, and through gifts from the Children's Hospital Foundation, the MACC Fund, and John B. and Judith Gardetto. The research team included scientists from the UNC School of Medicine, the Medical College of Wisconsin, the Blood Center of Wisconsin, Indiana University School of Medicine, the MACC Fund Research Center, and Hospital Xavier Arnozan in France.
New gene therapy proves promising as hemophilia treatment
UNC researchers package specialized blood platelets with genes that express clotting factor, leading to fewer bleeding events
2013-12-11
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Pregnant job applicants can act to dispel discriminatory stereotypes
2013-12-11
Pregnant job applicants can act to dispel discriminatory stereotypes
HOUSTON – (Dec. 11, 2013) – Pregnant women are more likely to experience discrimination in the job search process than nonpregnant women, but they can minimize bias by addressing negative pregnancy stereotypes ...
Alpine glacier, unchanged for thousands of years, now melting
2013-12-11
Alpine glacier, unchanged for thousands of years, now melting
New ice cores suggest Alps have been strongly warming since 1980s
SAN FRANCISCO—Less than 20 miles from the site where melting ice exposed the 5,000-year-old body of Ötzi the Iceman, scientists have ...
East Antarctica is sliding sideways
2013-12-11
East Antarctica is sliding sideways
Ice loss on West Antarctica affecting mantle flow below
SAN FRANCISCO--It's official: East Antarctica is pushing West Antarctica around.
Now that West Antarctica is losing weight--that is, billions of tons of ice per year--its ...
Police activities in Thailand may lead to riskier behaviors in people who inject drugs
2013-12-11
Police activities in Thailand may lead to riskier behaviors in people who inject drugs
Recent increasing police activities focused on people who inject drugs in Thailand have involved reported injustices that may lead to riskier behaviors in people who inject drugs ...
Long-term use of common heartburn and ulcer medications linked to vitamin B12 deficiency
2013-12-11
Long-term use of common heartburn and ulcer medications linked to vitamin B12 deficiency
OAKLAND, Calif. — Long-term use of commonly prescribed heartburn and ulcer medications is linked to a higher risk of vitamin B12 deficiency, according to a new study published ...
Acid-suppressing medications associated with vitamin B12 deficiency
2013-12-11
Acid-suppressing medications associated with vitamin B12 deficiency
Use for 2 or more years of proton pump inhibitors and histamine 2 receptor antagonists (two types of acid-inhibiting medications) was associated with a subsequent new diagnosis of vitamin B12 ...
Use of CPAP for sleep apnea reduces blood pressure for patients with difficult to treat hypertension
2013-12-11
Use of CPAP for sleep apnea reduces blood pressure for patients with difficult to treat hypertension
Among patients with obstructive sleep apnea and hypertension that requires 3 or more medications to control, continuous positive airway ...
Evolution of 'third party punishment'
2013-12-11
Evolution of 'third party punishment'
UMD psychologist, computer scientists use game theory to explain complex human behavior
COLLEGE PARK, MD—You're shopping for holiday gifts when you spot someone pocketing a nice pair of leather gloves. What do you do?
A new ...
New way to finance health in world's less developed nations
2013-12-11
New way to finance health in world's less developed nations
Results-Based Financing can get 20 percent more health care with same funds
Countries and major donors are changing the way they finance maternal and child, malaria, tuberculosis and HIV/AIDS health programs ...
Harvard study shows sprawl threatens water quality, climate protection, and land conservation gains
2013-12-11
Harvard study shows sprawl threatens water quality, climate protection, and land conservation gains
Important new findings reveal promise and peril of land-use decisions
A groundbreaking study by Harvard University's Harvard Forest and the Smithsonian Institution reveals ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Ion accumulation in liquid–liquid phase separation regulates biomolecule localization
Hemispheric asymmetry in the genetic overlap between schizophrenia and white matter microstructure
Research Article | Evaluation of ten satellite-based and reanalysis precipitation datasets on a daily basis for Czechia (2001–2021)
Nano-immunotherapy synergizing ferroptosis and STING activation in metastatic bladder cancer
Insilico Medicine receives IND approval from FDA for ISM8969, an AI-empowered potential best-in-class NLRP3 inhibitor
Combined aerobic-resistance exercise: Dual efficacy and efficiency for hepatic steatosis
Expert consensus outlines a standardized framework to evaluate clinical large language models
Bioengineered tissue as a revolutionary treatment for secondary lymphedema
Forty years of tracking trees reveals how global change is impacting Amazon and Andean Forest diversity
Breathing disruptions during sleep widespread in newborns with severe spina bifida
Whales may divide resources to co-exist under pressures from climate change
Why wetland restoration needs citizens on the ground
Sharktober: Study links October shark bite spike to tiger shark reproduction
PPPL launches STELLAR-AI platform to accelerate fusion energy research
Breakthrough in development of reliable satellite-based positioning for dense urban areas
DNA-templated method opens new frontiers in synthesizing amorphous silver nanostructures
Stress-testing AI vision systems: Rethinking how adversarial images are generated
Why a crowded office can be the loneliest place on earth
Choosing the right biochar can lock toxic cadmium in soil, study finds
Desperate race to resurrect newly-named zombie tree
New study links combination of hormone therapy and tirzepatide to greater weight loss after menopause
How molecules move in extreme water environments depends on their shape
Early-life exposure to a common pollutant harms fish development across generations
How is your corn growing? Aerial surveillance provides answers
Center for BrainHealth launches Fourth Annual BrainHealth Week in 2026
Why some messages are more convincing than others
National Foundation for Cancer Research CEO Sujuan Ba Named One of OncoDaily’s 100 Most Influential Oncology CEOs of 2025
New analysis disputes historic earthquake, tsunami and death toll on Greek island
Drexel study finds early intervention helps most autistic children acquire spoken language
Study finds Alzheimer's disease can be evaluated with brain stimulation
[Press-News.org] New gene therapy proves promising as hemophilia treatmentUNC researchers package specialized blood platelets with genes that express clotting factor, leading to fewer bleeding events