PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

New gene therapy success in a rare disease of the immune system

2015-04-21
(Press-News.org) French teams from CIC Biothérapie (AP-HP/Inserm), from pediatric hematology department of Necker Hospital for Children (AP-HP), led by Marina Cavazzana, Salima Hacein Bey Albina and Alain Fischer and from Genethon led by Anne Galy (Genethon/Inserm UMR-S951), and English teams from UCL Institute of Child Health and Great Ormond Street Hospital in London led by Adrian Thrasher and Bobby Gaspar demonstrated the efficacy of gene therapy treatment for Wiskott-Aldrich Syndrome (WAS). Six children that were treated and followed for at least 9 months had their immune system restored and clinical condition improved. This work, which was published today in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA), was carried out with support from the AFM-Telethon.

Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome is a rare congenital immune and platelet deficiency which is X-linked and has an estimated prevalence of 1/250 000. It is caused by mutations in the gene encoding the WAS protein (WASp) expressed in hematopoietic cells. This disease, which primarily affects boys, causes bleeding, severe and recurrent infections, severe eczema and in some patients autoimmune reactions and the development of cancer. The only treatment available today is bone marrow transplantation, which requires a compatible donor and can itself cause serious complications. The Phase I / II study, with Genethon as the promoter, was launched in December 2010 and conducted in Paris and London to treat severely ill patients without a compatible donor. This study, which is ongoing, assesses the feasibility and efficacy of gene therapy in this indication. The article published in JAMA reports the results for the first six patients, aged 8 months to 16 years, where the monitoring period allowed assessment of the initial effects of the treatment. The treatment involves collected blood stem cells carrying the genetic anomaly of patients and corrected them in the laboratory by introducing a healthy WAS gene using a lentiviral vector developed and produced by Genethon. The corrected cells were reinjected into patients who in parallel were treated with chemotherapy to suppress their defective stem cells and autoimmune cells to make room for new corrected cells. After reinjection, these cells were then differentiated into the various cell lines that make up the blood (red and white cells, platelets). To date treated patients showed significant clinical improvement. Severe eczema and severe infection disappeared in all cases. Arthritis was eliminated in one patient and another saw major improvement in vasculitis of the lower limbs and was able to return to normal physical activity without a wheelchair. However, the rate of corrected platelets varies from one patient to another. Fulvio Mavilio, Chief Scientific Officer Genethon: "We are all very happy and encouraged by the results of this study. It is the first time that a gene therapy based on genetically modified stem cells is tested in a multicenter, international clinical trial that shows a reproducible and robust therapeutic effect in different centers and different countries. For very rare diseases such as WAS, multicenter clinical trials are the only effective way of proving the safety and efficacy of gene therapy and having it rapidly approuved and made available to all patients. We are following the same approach for other rare and less rare blood diseases." Frédéric Revah, CEO of Genethon, the laboratory of the AFM-Telethon and the trial sponsor, said "These first results of our clinical trial for the treatment of Wiskott Aldrich syndrome are very encouraging. They illustrate not only the ability of Genethon to carry out the upstream research to develop treatments for these rare and complex diseases, but also to construct and conduct international clinical trials, to produce these advanced therapy products, to work with international teams and to manage the regulatory aspects of the trials in France and abroad. These are skills that we implement for other international trials of gene therapy for rare genetic diseases of the immune system, blood, muscle, vision or liver... We will continue the current study with the objective of providing treatment for patients." Marina Cavazzana: "The results obtained in this multicenter clinical trial constitute an important therapeutic advance (overhang) because they concern a complex pathology which affects almost all of blood cells with dramatic clinical consequences. After transfer of gene, the patients showed a significant clinical improvement due to the reexpression of the protein WASp in the cells of the immune system. The efficiency of the treatment of such a deficit for which a high level of correction of hematopoietic stem cells is required, indicates that it is from now on justifiable to hope to treat other complex genetic diseases as those affecting red blood cells." Professor Thrasher says: "This is a very powerful example of how gene therapy can offer highly effective treatment for patients with complex and serious genetic disease. It also excitingly demonstrates the potential for treatment of a large number of other diseases for which existing therapies are either unsatisfactory or unavailable."

INFORMATION:

Publication: Outcome following Gene Therapy in Patients with Severe Wiskott-Aldrich Syndrome

Salima Hacein-Bey Abina, PharmD, PhD†1,2,3,4, H. Bobby Gaspar, MRCP, PhD†5,6, Johanna Blondeau, MS1,2, Laure Caccavelli, PhD1,2, Sabine Charrier, PhD7,8, Karen Buckland, PhD5,6, Capucine Picard, MD, PhD9,10,11, Emmanuelle Six, PhD10,12 Nourredine Himoudi, PhD5,6, Kimberly Gilmour, PhD5,6, Anne-Marie McNicol, PhD5,6, Havinder Hara MS5,6, Jinhua Xu-Bayford, DipHE6, Christine Rivat, PhD5,6, Fabien Touzot, MD, PhD1,2,10,11, Fulvio Mavilio, PhD8, Annick Lim, MS13, Jean-Marc Treluyer, MD, PhD14,Sébastien Héritier, MD10,11, Francois Lefrere, MD1, Jeremy Magalon, PharmD 1,2, Isabelle Pengue-Koyi, PharmD, PhD 1,2,10, Géraldine Honnet, MD8, Stéphane Blanche, MD10,11, Eric A. Sherman, BA15, Frances Male, BA15, Charles Berry, PhD15, Nirav Malani, MS15, Frederic D. Bushman, PhD15 , Alain Fischer, MD, PhD10,11, 12,16, ‡, Adrian J. Thrasher, MB, BS, PhD5,6,‡, Anne Galy, PhD7,8, ‡ and Marina Cavazzana, MD, PhD*1,2,10, 12,‡

Affiliations: 1 Biotherapy Department, Necker Children's Hospital, Assistance Publique-Hôpitaux de Paris, Paris, France.
2 Biotherapy Clinical Investigation Center, Groupe Hospitalier Universitaire Ouest, Assistance Publique-Hôpitaux de Paris, INSERM, Paris, France.
3 UTCBS CNRS 8258- INSERM U1022, Faculté des Sciences Pharmaceutiques et Biologiques, Université Paris Descartes, Paris, France.
4 Immunology Laboratory, Groupe Hospitalier Universitaire Paris-Sud, AP-HP, 78, rue du Général-Leclerc, 94270 Le-Kremlin-Bicêtre, France.
5 Section of Molecular and Cellular Immunology, University College London Institute of Child Health, London, UK.
6 Dept of Clinical Immunology, Great Ormond Street Hospital NHS Trust, London, UK.
7 INSERM, U951; University of Evry, UMR_S951; Molecular Immunology and Innovative Biotherapies, Genethon, Evry, F-91002 France.
8 Genethon, Evry, F-91002 France.
9 Centre d'Étude des Déficits Immunitaires, Hôpital Necker-Enfants Malades, AP-HP, Paris, France.
10 Paris Descartes - Sorbonne Paris Cité University, Imagine Institute, Paris, France.
11 Immunology and Pediatric Hematology Department, Assistance Publique-Hôpitaux de Paris, Paris, France.
12 INSERM UMR 1163, Laboratory of human lymphohematopoiesis, Paris, France.
13 Groupe Immunoscope, Immunology Department, Institut Pasteur, Paris, France.
14 Clinical research Center Necker-Enfants Malades and Cochin Hospital Assistance Publique, Hôpitaux de Paris, Paris Descartes University.
15 Department of Microbiology, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
16 Collège de France, Paris, France.

About AFM-Téléthon - http://www.afm-telethon.fr The French Muscular Dystrophy Association (AFM) federates patients with neuromuscular diseases and their parents. Thanks in great part to donations from France's annual Telethon (€89,3 million in 2013), the AFM-Telethon has become a major player in biomedical research for rare diseases in France and worldwide. It currently funds about 30 clinical trials in different genetic diseases affecting the eye, blood, brain, immune system, and muscles... Thanks to its Genethon research lab, the AFM-Telethon stands out through its unique ability to produce and test its own gene-based medicines.

About Généthon - http://www.genethon.fr Created by the AFM-Telethon, Généthon's mission is to make available to patients innovative gene therapy treatments. Having played a pioneering role in deciphering the human genome, Généthon is today, with more than 200 scientists, physicians, engineers and regulatory affairs specialists, an international research and development center for preclinical and clinical gene therapy treatments for rare diseases. Généthon has the largest site in the world for GMP production of gene therapy products, Généthon Bioprod. In 2012, Généthon was the first associative laboratory to receive the 2012 Prix Galien for Pharmaceutical Research (France). As part of a therapeutic program on genetic diseases of the blood and immune system, Genethon working for over 10 years on gene therapy of Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome. The laboratory is currently conducting clinical trials for this disease in Europe, Paris and London, and the United States with the Children's Hospital Boston.

About Inserm - http://presse-inserm.fr/en/ Founded in 1964, the french national institute of health and medical research (Inserm) is a public science and technology institute, jointly supervised by the French ministry of education, higher Education and Research and the ministry of social affairs, health and women's rights. The mission of its scientists is to study all diseases, from the most common to the most rare, through their work in biological, medical and public health research.

About Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children - http://www.gosh.nhs.uk Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children NHS Foundation Trust is the UK's leading centre for treating sick children, with the widest range of specialists under one roof. With the UCL Institute of Child Health, we are the largest centre for paediatric research outside the US and play a key role in training children's health specialists for the future.

About AP-HP - http://www.aphp.fr AP-HP is a university hospital with European dimension all over the world recognized. Her 38 hospitals welcome every year 7 million sick people: in consultation, as a matter of urgency, during programmed hospitalizations or in home medical care. She assures a public service of health for all, 24 hours a day, and it is for her at the same time a duty and a pride. AP-HP is the first employer of Ile-de-France: 95 000 people - doctors, researchers, paramedical, administrative and labor personnels - work on it.

Press contacts : AFM - Généthon
Stéphanie Bardon, Gaëlle Monfort - 01 69 47 28 28 - presse@afm.genethon.fr

Inserm
Priscille Rivière - 01 44 23 60 97 - presse@inserm.fr

AP-HP
Olivier Bordy, Anne-Cécile Bard, Clémence Rémy - 01 40 27 37 22 - service.presse@sap.aphp.fr

Great Ormond Street Hospital NHS Trust and UCL Institute of Child Health
Rachel Twinn - +44 20 7239 3029 Rachel.twinn@gosh.org



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Getting better all the time: JILA strontium atomic clock sets new records

Getting better all the time: JILA strontium atomic clock sets new records
2015-04-21
BOULDER, Colo. -- In another advance at the far frontiers of timekeeping by National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) researchers, the latest modification of a record-setting strontium atomic clock has achieved precision and stability levels that now mean the clock would neither gain nor lose one second in some 15 billion years*--roughly the age of the universe. Precision timekeeping has broad potential impacts on advanced communications, positioning technologies (such as GPS) and many other technologies. Besides keeping future technologies on schedule, ...

Type 1 diabetes: First hurdle taken on the way to an insulin vaccine

2015-04-21
Scientists from the DFG Center for Regenerative Therapies Dresden, TU Dresden and the Institut für Diabetesforschung, Helmholtz Zentrum München, together with researchers from Vienna, Bristol and Denver (USA) have successfully completed the first step in development of an insulin vaccine to prevent type 1 diabetes. As reported by these diabetes researchers in the current edition of the renowned scientific journal JAMA, evaluations of the international Pre-POINT study point to a positive immune response in persons at risk for the disease who were given oral doses ...

Incidence of serious diabetes complication increases in Colorado youth

2015-04-21
AURORA, Colo. (April 21, 2015) - The incidence of a potentially life-threatening complication of diabetes, called diabetic ketoacidosis, increased by 55 percent between 1998 and 2012 in youth in Colorado, according to a study by researchers from the Barbara Davis Center for Childhood Diabetes and the University of Colorado School of Medicine on the Anschutz Medical Campus. The finding is published in the April 21 issue of JAMA. Diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) at the time of type 1 diabetes diagnosis has detrimental long-term effects and is characterized by dangerously high ...

Children at risk for type 1 diabetes show immune response when given oral insulin

2015-04-21
AURORA, Colo. (April 21, 2015) - Children at risk for type 1 diabetes, who were given daily doses of oral insulin, developed a protective immune response to the disease that researchers with the Barbara Davis Center for Childhood Diabetes at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus say could possibly lay the groundwork for a vaccine against the chronic illness. The pilot study, published Tuesday, April 21, in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA), was carried out in the U.S., Germany, Austria and the United Kingdom. "This is the first time ...

Sweet potato naturally 'genetically modified'

2015-04-21
Sweet potatoes from all over the world naturally contain genes from the bacterium Agrobacterium. Researchers from UGent and the International Potato Institute publish this discovery in PNAS. Sweet potato is one of the most important food crops for human consumption in the world. Because of the presence of this 'foreign' DNA, sweet potato can be seen as a 'natural GMO.' The researchers discovered the foreign DNA sequences of Agrobacterium while searching the genome - this is the entire DNA-code - of sweet potato for viral diseases. Instead of contributing this peculiar ...

Sex matters ... even for liver cells

2015-04-21
Female liver cells, and in particular those in menopaused women, are more susceptible to adverse effects of drugs than their male counterparts, according to new research carried out by the JRC. It is well known that women are more vulnerable when it comes to drug-induced liver effects, but it's the first time it has been shown that there are differences at cellular level. The findings are striking and clinically relevant, and emphasise the importance of considering sex-based differences in human health risk assessment. In this study, five prevalently used drugs (diclofenac, ...

Scientists identify brain circuitry responsible for anxiety in smoking cessation

2015-04-21
WORCESTER, MA -- In a promising breakthrough for smokers who are trying to quit, neuroscientists at the University of Massachusetts Medical School and The Scripps Research Institute have identified circuitry in the brain responsible for the increased anxiety commonly experienced during withdrawal from nicotine addiction. "We identified a novel circuit in the brain that becomes active during nicotine withdrawal, specifically increasing anxiety," said principal investigator Andrew Tapper, PhD , associate professor of psychiatry. "Increased anxiety is a prominent nicotine ...

Certain interactive tools click with web users

2015-04-21
Before web developers add the newest bells and the latest whistles to their website designs, a team of researchers suggests they zoom in on the tools that click with the right users and for the right tasks. "When designers create sites, they have to make decisions on what tools and features they use and where they put them, which takes a lot of planning," said S. Shyam Sundar, Distinguished Professor of Communications and co-director of the Media Effects Research Laboratory. "You not only have to plan where the feature will be, you also have to design what will go underneath ...

New tabletop detector 'sees' single electrons

2015-04-21
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. -- MIT physicists have developed a new tabletop particle detector that is able to identify single electrons in a radioactive gas. As the gas decays and gives off electrons, the detector uses a magnet to trap them in a magnetic bottle. A radio antenna then picks up very weak signals emitted by the electrons, which can be used to map the electrons' precise activity over several milliseconds. The team worked with researchers at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, the University of Washington, the University of California at Santa Barbara (UCSB), and ...

Global warming progressing at moderate rate, empirical data suggest

2015-04-21
DURHAM, N.C. - A new study based on 1,000 years of temperature records suggests global warming is not progressing as fast as it would under the most severe emissions scenarios outlined by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). "Based on our analysis, a middle-of-the-road warming scenario is more likely, at least for now," said Patrick T. Brown, a doctoral student in climatology at Duke University's Nicholas School of the Environment. "But this could change." The Duke-led study shows that natural variability in surface temperatures -- caused by interactions ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Acquired immune thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP) associated with inactivated COVID-19 vaccine CoronaVac

CIDEC as a novel player in abdominal aortic aneurysm formation

Artificial intelligence: a double-edged sword for the environment?

Current test accommodations for students with blindness do not fully address their needs

Wide-incident-angle wideband radio-wave absorbers boost 5G and beyond 5G applications

A graph transformer with boundary-aware attention for semantic segmentation

C-Path announces key leadership appointments in neurodegenerative disease research

First-of-its-kind analysis of U.S. national data reveals significant disparities in individual well-being as measured by lifespan, education, and income

Exercise programs help cut new mums’ ‘baby blues’ severity and major depression risk

Gut microbiome changes linked to onset of clinically evident rheumatoid arthritis

Signals from the gut could transform rheumatoid arthritis treatment

Pioneering research reveals some of the world’s least polluting populations are at much greater risk of flooding fuelled by climate change

UK’s health data should be recognized as critical national infrastructure, says independent review

A 36-gene predictive score of anti-cancer drug resistance anticipates cancer therapy outcomes

Someone flirts with your spouse. Does that make your partner appear more attractive?

Hourglass-shaped stent could ease severe chest pain from microvascular disease

United Nations ratifies framework to protect people on cash app

Oklahoma State basketball team joins the Nation of Lifesavers

Power of aesthetic species on social media boosts wildlife conservation efforts, say experts

Researchers develop robotic sensory cilia that monitor internal biomarkers to detect and assess airway diseases

Could crowdsourcing hold the key to early wildfire detection?

Reconstruction of historical seasonal influenza patterns and individual lifetime infection histories in humans based on antibody profiles

New study traces impact of COVID-19 pandemic on global movement and evolution of seasonal flu

Presenting a Janus channel of membranes for complete oil-and-water separation

COVID-19 restrictions altered global dispersal of influenza viruses

Disconnecting hepatic vagus nerve restores balance to liver and brain circadian clocks, reducing overeating in mice

Mechanosensory origins of “wet dog shakes” – a tactic used by many hairy mammals – uncovered in mice

New study links liver-brain communication to daily eating patterns

Defense or growth – How plants allocate resources

Study identifies hip implant materials with the lowest risk of needing revision

[Press-News.org] New gene therapy success in a rare disease of the immune system