Orgenesis Second Quarter 2020 Revenue Increases 55% Reflecting Progress of POCare Platform – GlobeNewswire

Provides update on COVID-19 therapeutic programs

Reports cash and cash equivalents of $97.5 million as of June 30, 2020

GERMANTOWN, Md., Aug. 07, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Orgenesis Inc. (NASDAQ: ORGS) (Orgenesis or the Company), a pioneering, global biotech company committed to accelerating commercialization and transforming the delivery of cell and gene therapies (CGTs), today provided a business update for the second quarter ended June 30, 2020.

Vered Caplan, CEO of Orgenesis, stated, We continue to implement our Point of Care (POCare) cell and gene therapy strategy, including the expansion of our network, as evidenced by the expected revenue growth. Revenue for the second quarter of 2020 increased 55% to $1.7 million compared to $1.1 million for the second quarter of 2019. We have also maintained a solid balance sheet with over $97.5 million of cash and cash equivalents as of June 30, 2020. Our true progress can be seen in the advancement of our POCare Therapeutics pipeline, including immuno-oncology, metabolic, and anti-viral therapies. Our mission is to make these therapies available to large numbers of patients at reduced costs using the point-of-care model. Our POCare Network also continues to grow via new partnerships with leading hospitals and research institutes around the world.

We have made progress towards our goal of adapting our cell-based and antiviral technologies to address the COVID-19 pandemic. First, we are focused on advancing our cell-based vaccine platform in order to target COVID-19, as well as other potential existing and emerging viral diseases. Second, we recently launched our BioShield Program, which is designed to potentially accelerate discovery and set up a first line of defense against the spread of viral pathogens, such as COVID-19. And finally, we are engaging with industry partners for the development of Ranpirnase for the potential treatment of COVID-19, as well as other viruses.

The Company remained active through the second quarter and into the third quarter of 2020, reporting the following recent advances:

The Companys complete financial results are available in the Companys Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on August 6, 2020, which is available at http://www.sec.gov and on the Companys website.

About Orgenesis

Orgenesis is a pioneering global biotech company that is working to unlock the full potential of personalized therapies and closed processing systems through its Cell & Gene Therapy Biotech Platform, with the ultimate aim of providing life changing treatments at the Point of Care to a large number of patients at lower costs. The Platform consists of: (a) POCare Therapeutics, a pipeline of licensed cell and gene therapies (CGTs), and proprietary scientific knowhow; (b) POCare Technologies, a suite of proprietary and in-licensed technologies which are engineered to create customized processing systems for affordable point of care therapies; and (c) POCare Network, a collaborative, international ecosystem of leading research institutes and hospitals committed to clinical development and supply of CGTs at the point of care. By combining science, technologies and a collaborative network, Orgenesis is able to identify the most promising new therapies and provide a pathway for them to reach patients more quickly, more efficiently and at scale, thereby unlocking the power of cell and gene therapy for all. Additional information is available at: http://www.orgenesis.com.

Notice Regarding Forward-Looking Statements

This press release contains forward-looking statements which are made pursuant to the safe harbor provisions of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Section 21E of the Securities and Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. These forward-looking statements involve substantial uncertainties and risks and are based upon our current expectations, estimates and projections and reflect our beliefs and assumptions based upon information available to us at the date of this release. We caution readers that forward-looking statements are predictions based on our current expectations about future events. These forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance and are subject to risks, uncertainties and assumptions that are difficult to predict. Our actual results, performance or achievements could differ materially from those expressed or implied by the forward-looking statements as a result of a number of factors, including, but not limited to, the risk that the acquisition of Tamirs assets will not be successfully integrated with our technologies or that the potential benefits of the acquisition will not be realized; our ability to further develop ranpirnase; our reliance on, and our ability to grow, our point-of-care cell therapy platform; our ability to effectively use the net proceeds from the sale of Masthercell; our ability to achieve and maintain overall profitability; the development of our POCare strategy; the sufficiency of working capital to realize our business plans; the development of our transdifferentiation technology as therapeutic treatment for diabetes which could, if successful, be a cure for Type 1 Diabetes; our technology not functioning as expected; our ability to retain key employees; our ability to satisfy the rigorous regulatory requirements for new procedures; our competitors developing better or cheaper alternatives to our products and the risks and uncertainties discussed under the heading "RISK FACTORS" in Item 1A of our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2019, and in our other filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. We undertake no obligation to revise or update any forward-looking statement for any reason.

Contact for Orgenesis:David WaldmanCrescendo Communications, LLCTel: 212-671-1021ORGS@crescendo-ir.com

See more here:

Orgenesis Second Quarter 2020 Revenue Increases 55% Reflecting Progress of POCare Platform - GlobeNewswire

Regulatory Focus, July issue: Cell and gene therapy – Regulatory Focus

Feature articles during July focused on global regulatory strategy for cell and gene therapy, with articles on US and EU regulations and guidances and the development and manufacture of the therapies. Also included were articles on recasting the corrective and preventive action (CAPA) process as a continuous improvement process, a military-civilian perspective on real-world evidence (RWE) to support regulatory decision making, and regulatory reporting in multinational trials during COVID-19.Advanced therapy medicinal products (ATMPs), including cell therapies, gene therapies, and tissue-engineered products, are highly complex treatments that differ from traditional medicines, both in how they are made and administered and in the benefits they may provide. Regulations for these products were established relatively recently and are still evolving in many jurisdictions globally. The novelty of these products, the inherent complexities of cell and gene therapy products, and the lack of experience with such products pose many challenges for developers.In part one of this two-part series, this months expert authors address these challenges and offer hands-on, practical advice and guidance on regulation and production of ATMPs. If there is one clear, take-home message to developers, it is that early and frequent collaboration with regulatory agencies, during both the approval and development phases, is paramount. It saves time and money, and it reduces the risk of a negative impact on the trajectory of a clinical trial. Part 2 of the series will cover upstream manufacturing and process controls for biologics, the ATMP regulatory landscape in China, EU GMP requirements for autologous cell therapies and parenteral biologics, and regulatory challenges and opportunities in the US.Regulations and guidancesThe regenerative medicine advanced therapy (RMAT) field has the potential to provide profound benefits to patients with serious diseases and disorders, and the RMAT designation is helping drive these transformative technologies to market. In Update on RMAT designations, William K. Sietsema and Janet Lynch Lambert discuss the scope and purpose of the special designation for RMATs created by the passage of the 21st Century Cures Act and provide a tally of products that have received the special designation to date. However, while the promise of regenerative medicines to cure disease is propelling the field at a rapid pace, developing these therapies requires a rigorous, carefully planned approach to ensure a seamless progression to regulatory approval and commercial success.Siegfried Schmitt expands on that point about carefully navigating the complex and nuanced regulatory environment in two articles on US and EU regulations for RMATs and ATMPs, respectively. In US regulations for regenerative medicine advanced therapies, he provides a user-friendly, quick-access list of RMAT-related regulations and guidances. The article includes a useful introduction to the application process and descriptions of the features and criteria for various expedited program options, including breakthrough therapy, fast track, advanced approval, and priority review.In Regulation of advanced therapy medicinal products in the EU, Schmitt explains some of the terminology relating to ATMPs before documenting the key EU regulations and guidances for each therapy type. He concludes with discussions on marketing authorization, accelerated regulatory pathways, and market access. Again, he urges companies and developers to engage with the regulatory agencies early and often throughout the approval process and to seek external regulatory support, especially if the developer has limited in-house regulatory resources.Development pathways and manufacturingTwo articles shift the focus from the regulatory landscape to development and manufacturing pathways. The drug manufacturing facility environment presents one of the major sources of potential contaminants in the final biologic drug product, so it is critical to design facilities with cleanroom environmental controls and monitoring that adhere to the highest standards of current good manufacturing practice (cGMP) quality guidelines, write Mo Heidaran and colleagues. In Designing a biologics manufacturing facility: Early planning for success, the authors lay out the planning steps for compliance with cGMP to readiness for chemistry, manufacturing, and controls (CMC). The authors warn that the pressure to reduce time to market put considerable stress on all aspects of commercial operations and commercial-scale manufacturing development, so yet again, early tactical and strategic planning essential.In Advanced therapies: Trip hazards along the development pathway, Kirsten Messmer and Richard Dennett focus on the challenges and complexities of ferrying advanced therapies along the developmental pathway, which they call the trip. They examine the importance of some of the fundamental building blocks for the development program and highlight some commonly encountered challenges, or trip hazards, for cell and gene therapies. The suggest developers establish sound technical and regulatory strategies to better anticipate and avoid the trip hazards, which could prove costly, both in time and money, and have a negative impact the overall clinical study program.CAPA, RWE, and COVID-19Todays CAPA process has become highly focused on compliance, which has manufacturers struggling to determine which issues require a structured CAPA process and which can be resolved in alternative ways, writes Kathryn Merrill in Recasting CAPA as a continuous improvement process. Merrill summarizes a white paper developed by the Medical Device Innovation Consortium, in which the CAPA process is recast as a continuous improvement process for driving higher product quality and improved patient safety. It is intended to enable organizations make a greater number of improvements more quickly, and over time, which will have a favorable impact on product quality in the field.During the Afghanistan and Iraq wars, the US Military Health System used an approach known as focused empiricism to develop new approaches for casualty care. In doing so, it implemented real-world data (RWD) and RWE into a system of performance improvement and product development to achieve historic rates of survival, write Todd E. Rasmussen, a colonel in the US Air force, and Brian J. Young. In A military-civilian perspective on real-world evidence to support regulatory decision making, the authors summarize the framework promoting the collection and analysis of RWD in the healthcare system and describe a new era of collaboration between the US Department of Defense and the FDA, within the context of a new Public Law 115-92, to coordinate on the delivery of military-relevant medical products. The article reviews the FDA evidentiary standards for medical product approval and gives examples of how RWE can help meet those standards.COVID-19 continues to disrupt and redefine the regulatory process and activity. In Managing uncertainty: Regulatory reporting in multinational trials during COVID-19, Ioana Ionita discusses regulatory reporting challenges for multinational clinical trials during the pandemic, as well as the challenge of assessing what is reportable and how to submit COVID-19 risk mitigation measures. She offers real-world experience on how she and her colleagues stopped and restarted recruitment in ongoing multinational clinical trials, and how those actions were reported globally. Ionita concludes that close collaboration between sponsors, CROs, local affiliates, investigational sites, and health authorities is important in choosing strategies under challenging circumstances and when no precedent applies.Whats coming in August?Articles during August will focus on global clinical trials and clinical trial applications. Despite ICH efforts to produce guidelines for the development of drugs and biologics and to standardize the format of marketing applications, there remain considerable differences among countries in the format of clinical trial applications and health authority review processes. This collection of articles will address these divergent formats and processes and provide options for navigating the regulatory aspects of clinical trials. Look for these topics and more throughout August at http://www.raps.org.October call for articlesFor October, Regulatory Focus will look at the regulatory toolboxthe tools regulatory professionals need and where to find them, with an emphasis on websites, guidances, meeting minutes and FDA correspondence, including warning letters, enforcement actions, 483s, and notices. Articles will discuss how to interpret the meaning behind regulatory agency actions and available options for documentation. The submission deadline for articles is 1 September 2020. To contribute to the October issue or suggest a topic, contact Rene Matthews at rmatthews@raps.org.Citation Matthews R. Regulatory Focus, July issue: Cell and gene therapy. Regulatory Focus. July 2020. Regulatory Affairs Professionals Society.

More here:

Regulatory Focus, July issue: Cell and gene therapy - Regulatory Focus

G-CON PODs Selected for Expression Therapeutics’ Gene Therapy Manufacturing Facility – PR Web

Photo courtesy of Expression Therapeutics

COLLEGE STATION, Texas (PRWEB) August 05, 2020

G-CON Manufacturing, the leader in prefabricated, flexible cleanroom solutions, announced today that it has been selected by Expression Therapeutics to support its cleanroom build-out at its new clinical manufacturing facility in Cincinnati, Ohio. The PODs will provide the cleanroom infrastructure for the production of Expression Therapeutics cell and gene therapies.

For this project, time was a critical factor for Expression Therapeutics. Offsite manufacturing of the cleanroom infrastructure allowed for concurrent preparation of their new host facility, significantly reducing the projects overall timeline. Future expandability was also key, as their POD system is being designed to accommodate Expression Therapeutics cleanroom needs for its next phase. Removable panels incorporated into the POD walls will easily allow integration of additional POD clean space. Since PODs are autonomous and completely assembled offsite, this expansion will result in minimal downtime and disruption to the functioning first phase POD cleanrooms.

Its great to work in an industry where innovation moves so fast and helps people live better lives, said Tim Rasmussen, Sales Engineer at G-CON Manufacturing. Companies like Expression Therapeutics need infrastructure to develop breakthrough therapies, and they need them fast. We are proud to play a part in making patients lives better by delivering state of the art cleanroom solutions more quickly than any other solution on the market.

We decided to utilize advanced pre-built modular cleanrooms from G-CON to accelerate our buildout and commence vector manufacturing this year. With vector GMP manufacturing backlogs today typically exceeding 18 months, we wanted to bring on additional capacity as soon as possible to serve clients said Bill Swaney, Vice President of Manufacturing for Expression Therapeutics.

About G-CON ManufacturingG-CON Manufacturing designs, builds and installs prefabricated G-CON POD cleanrooms. G-CONs POD portfolio provides cleanrooms in a number of dimensions for a variety of uses, from laboratory environments to personalized medicine and production process platforms. G-CON POD cleanroom units surpass traditional cleanroom structures in scalability, mobility and the possibility of repurposing the PODs once the production process reaches its lifecycle end. For more information, please visit G-CONs website at http://www.gconbio.com.

G-CON Manufacturing... BUILDING FOR LIFE

About Expression TherapeuticsExpression Therapeutics is a biotechnology company based in Atlanta and Cincinnati. The current therapeutic pipeline includes advanced gene therapies for hemophilia, neuroblastoma, T-cell leukemia/lymphoma, acute myeloid leukemia (AML), and primary immunodeficiencies such as hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (HLH).

Share article on social media or email:

See the rest here:

G-CON PODs Selected for Expression Therapeutics' Gene Therapy Manufacturing Facility - PR Web

CRISPR co-discoverer on the gene editor’s pandemic push – Axios

The coronavirus pandemic is accelerating the development of CRISPR-based tests for detecting disease and highlighting how gene-editing tools might one day fight pandemics, one of its discoverers, Jennifer Doudna, tells Axios.

Why it matters: Testing shortages and backlogs underscore a need for improved mass testing for COVID-19. Diagnostic tests based on CRISPR which Doudna and colleagues identified in 2012, ushering in the "CRISPR revolution" in genome editing are being developed for dengue, Zika and other diseases, but a global pandemic is a proving ground for these tools that hold promise for speed and lower costs.

Driving the news: Last week, the NIH awarded $250 million for the development of COVID-19 diagnostic tests to a handful of companies, including Mammoth Biosciences, which is working on a CRISPR-based test that CEO Trevor Martin says will deliver 200 tests per hour per machine.

The challenge now is "getting it into a format where it can be used easily either in a laboratory or at the point-of-care," like the doctor's office or home, she says.

How it works: Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats, or CRISPR, are sequences of genetic code that bacteria naturally use to find and destroy viruses.

That editing ability is viewed as having vast potential for treating disease, a nascent use of CRISPR.

But there's a persistent problem: Getting the sizable CRISPR system through the membranes and to the DNA of the cells that need editing.

And, there are other concerns about off-target editing with currently available enzymes and unknown long-term effects of gene editing directly in the body.

The intrigue: CRISPR could one day be wielded in future pandemics.

Yes, but: That would require sophisticated understanding of how a virus changes and the immune system's complex response to it.

The big picture: Such "genetic vaccination" is a long way off, but it could eliminate having to wait until a virus shows up, make a vaccine to that virus and then vaccinate people, she says.

See the original post:

CRISPR co-discoverer on the gene editor's pandemic push - Axios

Voyager Therapeutics Provides Update on AbbVie Vectorized Antibody Collaborations – GlobeNewswire

CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Aug. 03, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Voyager Therapeutics, Inc. (NASDAQ: VYGR), a clinical-stage gene therapy company focused on developing life-changing treatments for severe neurological diseases, today announced the termination of its tau and alpha-synuclein vectorized antibody collaborations with AbbVie. Voyager retains full rights to the vectorization technology and certain novel vectorized antibodies developed as part of the collaborations.

Our efforts to harness AAV-based gene therapy to produce antibodies directly in the brain and overcome major limitations with delivery of current biologics across the blood-brain barrier have been highly productive, said Omar Khwaja, M.D., Ph.D., Chief Medical Officer and Head of R&D at Voyager. Through the tau and alpha-synuclein collaborations, we believe we have made considerable progress against targets for neurodegenerative diseases with this novel approach, reinforcing our enthusiasm for its potential to deliver therapeutically efficacious levels of biologics to the brain and central nervous system. We believe our continued work on discovery and design of novel AAV capsids with substantially improved blood-brain barrier penetrance will also considerably broaden the potential of AAV-based gene therapy, including vectorized antibodies or other biologics, for the treatment of severe neurological diseases.

The tau and alpha-synuclein research collaborations were formed in 2018 and 2019, respectively. Under the terms of the collaboration agreements, Voyager received upfront payments to perform research and preclinical development of vectorized antibodies directed against tau and alpha-synuclein. With the conclusion of the collaborations, Voyager has regained full clinical development and commercialization rights to certain product candidates developed within the context of the collaboration for the tau program. Voyager is free to pursue vectorized antibody programs for tau and alpha-synuclein alone or in collaboration with another partner.

Voyager does not anticipate any changes to its cash runway guidance due to the termination of the agreements. As of March 31, 2020, the Company had cash, cash equivalents and marketable debt securities of $250.9 million, which, along with amounts expected to be received for reimbursement of development costs from Neurocrine Biosciences, is expected to be sufficient to meet Voyagers projected operating expenses and capital expenditure requirements into mid-2022.

About Voyager Therapeutics

Voyager Therapeutics is a clinical-stage gene therapy company focused on developing life-changing treatments for severe neurological diseases. Voyager is committed to advancing the field of AAV gene therapy through innovation and investment in vector engineering and optimization, manufacturing, and dosing and delivery techniques. Voyagers wholly owned and partnered pipeline focuses on severe neurological diseases for which effective new therapies are needed, including Parkinsons disease, Huntingtons disease, Friedreichs ataxia, and other severe neurological diseases. For more information, please visit http://www.voyagertherapeutics.com or follow @VoyagerTx on Twitter and LinkedIn.

Forward-Looking Statements

This press release contains forward-looking statements for the purposes of the safe harbor provisions under The Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 and other federal securities laws. The use of words such as may, might, will, would, should, expect, plan, anticipate, believe, estimate, undoubtedly, project, intend, future, potential, or continue, and other similar expressions are intended to identify forward-looking statements. For example, all statements Voyager makes regarding the ability of Voyager to maintain research and development activities currently included within the collaboration agreements with AbbVie; Voyagers ability to advance its AAV-based gene therapies and its ability to continue to develop its gene therapy platform; the scope of the intellectual property rights and other rights that will be available to Voyager following the termination of the AbbVie collaboration agreements; the anticipated effects of the termination of the AbbVie collaboration agreements on Voyagers anticipated financial results, including Voyagers available cash, cash equivalents and marketable debt securities; and Voyagers ability to fund its operating expenses with its current cash, cash equivalents and marketable debt securities through a stated time period are forward looking. All forward-looking statements are based on estimates and assumptions by Voyagers management that, although Voyager believes such forward-looking statements to be reasonable, are inherently uncertain. All forward-looking statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results to differ materially from those that Voyager expected. Such risks and uncertainties include, among others, the continued cooperation of AbbVie in activities arising from the termination of the AbbVie collaboration agreements, the development of the gene therapy platform; Voyagers scientific approach and general development progress; Voyagers ability to create and protect its intellectual property; and the sufficiency of Voyagers cash resources. These statements are also subject to a number of material risks and uncertainties that are described in Voyagers most recent Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission, as updated by its subsequent filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. All information in the press release is as of the date of this press release, and any forward-looking statement speaks only as of the date on which it was made. Voyager undertakes no obligation to publicly update or revise this information or any forward-looking statement, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise, except as required by law.

Investors:Paul CoxVP, Investor Relations857-201-3463pcox@vygr.com

Media:Sheryl SeapyW2Opure949-903-4750sseapy@purecommunications.com

See more here:

Voyager Therapeutics Provides Update on AbbVie Vectorized Antibody Collaborations - GlobeNewswire

Gene therapy – Wikipedia

Medical field

Gene therapy (also called human gene transfer) is a medical field which focuses on the utilization of the therapeutic delivery of nucleic acids into a patient's cells as a drug to treat disease.[1][2] The first attempt at modifying human DNA was performed in 1980 by Martin Cline, but the first successful nuclear gene transfer in humans, approved by the National Institutes of Health, was performed in May 1989.[3] The first therapeutic use of gene transfer as well as the first direct insertion of human DNA into the nuclear genome was performed by French Anderson in a trial starting in September 1990. It is thought to be able to cure many genetic disorders or treat them over time.

Between 1989 and December 2018, over 2,900 clinical trials were conducted, with more than half of them in phase I.[4] As of 2017, Spark Therapeutics' Luxturna (RPE65 mutation-induced blindness) and Novartis' Kymriah (Chimeric antigen receptor T cell therapy) are the FDA's first approved gene therapies to enter the market. Since that time, drugs such as Novartis' Zolgensma and Alnylam's Patisiran have also received FDA approval, in addition to other companies' gene therapy drugs. Most of these approaches utilize adeno-associated viruses (AAVs) and lentiviruses for performing gene insertions, in vivo and ex vivo, respectively. ASO / siRNA approaches such as those conducted by Alnylam and Ionis Pharmaceuticals require non-viral delivery systems, and utilize alternative mechanisms for trafficking to liver cells by way of GalNAc transporters.

The concept of gene therapy is to fix a genetic problem at its source. If, for instance, in an (usually recessively) inherited disease a mutation in a certain gene results in the production of a dysfunctional protein, gene therapy could be used to deliver a copy of this gene that does not contain the deleterious mutation, and thereby produces a functional protein. This strategy is referred to as gene replacement therapy and is employed to treat inherited retinal diseases. [5][6]

While the concept of gene replacement therapy is mostly suitable for recessive diseases, novel strategies have been suggested that are capable of also treating conditions with a dominant pattern of inheritance.

Not all medical procedures that introduce alterations to a patient's genetic makeup can be considered gene therapy. Bone marrow transplantation and organ transplants in general have been found to introduce foreign DNA into patients.[14] Gene therapy is defined by the precision of the procedure and the intention of direct therapeutic effect.

Gene therapy was conceptualized in 1972, by authors who urged caution before commencing human gene therapy studies.

The first attempt, an unsuccessful one, at gene therapy (as well as the first case of medical transfer of foreign genes into humans not counting organ transplantation) was performed by Martin Cline on 10 July 1980.[15][16] Cline claimed that one of the genes in his patients was active six months later, though he never published this data or had it verified[17] and even if he is correct, it's unlikely it produced any significant beneficial effects treating beta-thalassemia.[medical citation needed]

After extensive research on animals throughout the 1980s and a 1989 bacterial gene tagging trial on humans, the first gene therapy widely accepted as a success was demonstrated in a trial that started on 14 September 1990, when Ashi DeSilva was treated for ADA-SCID.[18]

The first somatic treatment that produced a permanent genetic change was initiated in 1993. The goal was to cure malignant brain tumors by using recombinant DNA to transfer a gene making the tumor cells sensitive to a drug that in turn would cause the tumor cells to die.[19]

The polymers are either translated into proteins, interfere with target gene expression, or possibly correct genetic mutations. The most common form uses DNA that encodes a functional, therapeutic gene to replace a mutated gene. The polymer molecule is packaged within a "vector", which carries the molecule inside cells.[medical citation needed]

Early clinical failures led to dismissals of gene therapy. Clinical successes since 2006 regained researchers' attention, although as of 2014[update], it was still largely an experimental technique.[20] These include treatment of retinal diseases Leber's congenital amaurosis[5][21][22][23] and choroideremia,[24] X-linked SCID,[25] ADA-SCID,[26][27] adrenoleukodystrophy,[28] chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL),[29] acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL),[30] multiple myeloma,[31] haemophilia,[27] and Parkinson's disease.[32] Between 2013 and April 2014, US companies invested over $600 million in the field.[33]

The first commercial gene therapy, Gendicine, was approved in China in 2003 for the treatment of certain cancers.[34] In 2011 Neovasculgen was registered in Russia as the first-in-class gene-therapy drug for treatment of peripheral artery disease, including critical limb ischemia.[35]In 2012 Glybera, a treatment for a rare inherited disorder, lipoprotein lipase deficiency became the first treatment to be approved for clinical use in either Europe or the United States after its endorsement by the European Commission.[20][36]

Following early advances in genetic engineering of bacteria, cells, and small animals, scientists started considering how to apply it to medicine. Two main approaches were considered replacing or disrupting defective genes.[37] Scientists focused on diseases caused by single-gene defects, such as cystic fibrosis, haemophilia, muscular dystrophy, thalassemia, and sickle cell anemia. Glybera treats one such disease, caused by a defect in lipoprotein lipase.[36]

DNA must be administered, reach the damaged cells, enter the cell and either express or disrupt a protein.[38] Multiple delivery techniques have been explored. The initial approach incorporated DNA into an engineered virus to deliver the DNA into a chromosome.[39][40] Naked DNA approaches have also been explored, especially in the context of vaccine development.[41]

Generally, efforts focused on administering a gene that causes a needed protein to be expressed. More recently, increased understanding of nuclease function has led to more direct DNA editing, using techniques such as zinc finger nucleases and CRISPR. The vector incorporates genes into chromosomes. The expressed nucleases then knock out and replace genes in the chromosome. As of 2014[update] these approaches involve removing cells from patients, editing a chromosome and returning the transformed cells to patients.[42]

Gene editing is a potential approach to alter the human genome to treat genetic diseases,[7] viral diseases,[43] and cancer.[citation needed] As of 2016[update] these approaches were still years from being medicine.[44][45]

Gene therapy may be classified into two types:

In somatic cell gene therapy (SCGT), the therapeutic genes are transferred into any cell other than a gamete, germ cell, gametocyte, or undifferentiated stem cell. Any such modifications affect the individual patient only, and are not inherited by offspring. Somatic gene therapy represents mainstream basic and clinical research, in which therapeutic DNA (either integrated in the genome or as an external episome or plasmid) is used to treat disease.[medical citation needed]

Over 600 clinical trials utilizing SCGT are underway[when?] in the US. Most focus on severe genetic disorders, including immunodeficiencies, haemophilia, thalassaemia, and cystic fibrosis. Such single gene disorders are good candidates for somatic cell therapy. The complete correction of a genetic disorder or the replacement of multiple genes is not yet possible. Only a few of the trials are in the advanced stages.[46] [needs update]

In germline gene therapy (GGT), germ cells (sperm or egg cells) are modified by the introduction of functional genes into their genomes. Modifying a germ cell causes all the organism's cells to contain the modified gene. The change is therefore heritable and passed on to later generations. Australia, Canada, Germany, Israel, Switzerland, and the Netherlands[47] prohibit GGT for application in human beings, for technical and ethical reasons, including insufficient knowledge about possible risks to future generations[47] and higher risks versus SCGT.[48] The US has no federal controls specifically addressing human genetic modification (beyond FDA regulations for therapies in general).[47][49][50][51]

The delivery of DNA into cells can be accomplished by multiple methods. The two major classes are recombinant viruses (sometimes called biological nanoparticles or viral vectors) and naked DNA or DNA complexes (non-viral methods).[medical citation needed]

In order to replicate, viruses introduce their genetic material into the host cell, tricking the host's cellular machinery into using it as blueprints for viral proteins. Retroviruses go a stage further by having their genetic material copied into the genome of the host cell. Scientists exploit this by substituting a virus's genetic material with therapeutic DNA. (The term 'DNA' may be an oversimplification, as some viruses contain RNA, and gene therapy could take this form as well.) A number of viruses have been used for human gene therapy, including retroviruses, adenoviruses, herpes simplex, vaccinia, and adeno-associated virus.[4] Like the genetic material (DNA or RNA) in viruses, therapeutic DNA can be designed to simply serve as a temporary blueprint that is degraded naturally or (at least theoretically) to enter the host's genome, becoming a permanent part of the host's DNA in infected cells.

Non-viral methods present certain advantages over viral methods, such as large scale production and low host immunogenicity. However, non-viral methods initially produced lower levels of transfection and gene expression, and thus lower therapeutic efficacy. Newer technologies offer promise of solving these problems, with the advent of increased cell-specific targeting and subcellular trafficking control.

Methods for non-viral gene therapy include the injection of naked DNA, electroporation, the gene gun, sonoporation, magnetofection, the use of oligonucleotides, lipoplexes, dendrimers, and inorganic nanoparticles.

More recent approaches, such as those performed by companies such as Ligandal, offer the possibility of creating cell-specific targeting technologies for a variety of gene therapy modalities, including RNA, DNA and gene editing tools such as CRISPR. Other companies, such as Arbutus Biopharma and Arcturus Therapeutics, offer non-viral, non-cell-targeted approaches that mainly exhibit liver trophism. In more recent years, startups such as Sixfold Bio, GenEdit, and Spotlight Therapeutics have begun to solve the non-viral gene delivery problem. Non-viral techniques offer the possibility of repeat dosing and greater tailorability of genetic payloads, which in the future will be more likely to take over viral-based delivery systems.

Companies such as Editas Medicine, Intellia Therapeutics, CRISPR Therapeutics, Casebia, Cellectis, Precision Biosciences, bluebird bio, and Sangamo have developed non-viral gene editing techniques, however frequently still use viruses for delivering gene insertion material following genomic cleavage by guided nucleases. These companies focus on gene editing, and still face major delivery hurdles.

BioNTech, Moderna Therapeutics and CureVac focus on delivery of mRNA payloads, which are necessarily non-viral delivery problems.

Alnylam, Dicerna Pharmaceuticals, and Ionis Pharmaceuticals focus on delivery of siRNA (antisense oligonucleotides) for gene suppression, which also necessitate non-viral delivery systems.

In academic contexts, a number of laboratories are working on delivery of PEGylated particles, which form serum protein coronas and chiefly exhibit LDL receptor mediated uptake in cells in vivo.[52]

Some of the unsolved problems include:

Three patients' deaths have been reported in gene therapy trials, putting the field under close scrutiny. The first was that of Jesse Gelsinger, who died in 1999 because of immune rejection response.[60][61] One X-SCID patient died of leukemia in 2003.[18] In 2007, a rheumatoid arthritis patient died from an infection; the subsequent investigation concluded that the death was not related to gene therapy.[62]

In 1972 Friedmann and Roblin authored a paper in Science titled "Gene therapy for human genetic disease?"[63] Rogers (1970) was cited for proposing that exogenous good DNA be used to replace the defective DNA in those who suffer from genetic defects.[64]

In 1984 a retrovirus vector system was designed that could efficiently insert foreign genes into mammalian chromosomes.[65]

The first approved gene therapy clinical research in the US took place on 14 September 1990, at the National Institutes of Health (NIH), under the direction of William French Anderson.[66] Four-year-old Ashanti DeSilva received treatment for a genetic defect that left her with ADA-SCID, a severe immune system deficiency. The defective gene of the patient's blood cells was replaced by the functional variant. Ashanti's immune system was partially restored by the therapy. Production of the missing enzyme was temporarily stimulated, but the new cells with functional genes were not generated. She led a normal life only with the regular injections performed every two months. The effects were successful, but temporary.[67]

Cancer gene therapy was introduced in 1992/93 (Trojan et al. 1993).[68] The treatment of glioblastoma multiforme, the malignant brain tumor whose outcome is always fatal, was done using a vector expressing antisense IGF-I RNA (clinical trial approved by NIH protocol no.1602 24 November 1993,[69] and by the FDA in 1994). This therapy also represents the beginning of cancer immunogene therapy, a treatment which proves to be effective due to the anti-tumor mechanism of IGF-I antisense, which is related to strong immune and apoptotic phenomena.

In 1992 Claudio Bordignon, working at the Vita-Salute San Raffaele University, performed the first gene therapy procedure using hematopoietic stem cells as vectors to deliver genes intended to correct hereditary diseases.[70] In 2002 this work led to the publication of the first successful gene therapy treatment for adenosine deaminase deficiency (ADA-SCID). The success of a multi-center trial for treating children with SCID (severe combined immune deficiency or "bubble boy" disease) from 2000 and 2002, was questioned when two of the ten children treated at the trial's Paris center developed a leukemia-like condition. Clinical trials were halted temporarily in 2002, but resumed after regulatory review of the protocol in the US, the United Kingdom, France, Italy, and Germany.[71]

In 1993 Andrew Gobea was born with SCID following prenatal genetic screening. Blood was removed from his mother's placenta and umbilical cord immediately after birth, to acquire stem cells. The allele that codes for adenosine deaminase (ADA) was obtained and inserted into a retrovirus. Retroviruses and stem cells were mixed, after which the viruses inserted the gene into the stem cell chromosomes. Stem cells containing the working ADA gene were injected into Andrew's blood. Injections of the ADA enzyme were also given weekly. For four years T cells (white blood cells), produced by stem cells, made ADA enzymes using the ADA gene. After four years more treatment was needed.[72]

Jesse Gelsinger's death in 1999 impeded gene therapy research in the US.[73][74] As a result, the FDA suspended several clinical trials pending the reevaluation of ethical and procedural practices.[75]

The modified cancer gene therapy strategy of antisense IGF-I RNA (NIH n 1602)[69] using antisense / triple helix anti-IGF-I approach was registered in 2002 by Wiley gene therapy clinical trial - n 635 and 636. The approach has shown promising results in the treatment of six different malignant tumors: glioblastoma, cancers of liver, colon, prostate, uterus, and ovary (Collaborative NATO Science Programme on Gene Therapy USA, France, Poland n LST 980517 conducted by J. Trojan) (Trojan et al., 2012). This anti-gene antisense/triple helix therapy has proven to be efficient, due to the mechanism stopping simultaneously IGF-I expression on translation and transcription levels, strengthening anti-tumor immune and apoptotic phenomena.

Sickle-cell disease can be treated in mice.[76] The mice which have essentially the same defect that causes human cases used a viral vector to induce production of fetal hemoglobin (HbF), which normally ceases to be produced shortly after birth. In humans, the use of hydroxyurea to stimulate the production of HbF temporarily alleviates sickle cell symptoms. The researchers demonstrated this treatment to be a more permanent means to increase therapeutic HbF production.[77]

A new gene therapy approach repaired errors in messenger RNA derived from defective genes. This technique has the potential to treat thalassaemia, cystic fibrosis and some cancers.[78]

Researchers created liposomes 25 nanometers across that can carry therapeutic DNA through pores in the nuclear membrane.[79]

In 2003 a research team inserted genes into the brain for the first time. They used liposomes coated in a polymer called polyethylene glycol, which unlike viral vectors, are small enough to cross the bloodbrain barrier.[80]

Short pieces of double-stranded RNA (short, interfering RNAs or siRNAs) are used by cells to degrade RNA of a particular sequence. If a siRNA is designed to match the RNA copied from a faulty gene, then the abnormal protein product of that gene will not be produced.[81]

Gendicine is a cancer gene therapy that delivers the tumor suppressor gene p53 using an engineered adenovirus. In 2003, it was approved in China for the treatment of head and neck squamous cell carcinoma.[34]

In March researchers announced the successful use of gene therapy to treat two adult patients for X-linked chronic granulomatous disease, a disease which affects myeloid cells and damages the immune system. The study is the first to show that gene therapy can treat the myeloid system.[82]

In May a team reported a way to prevent the immune system from rejecting a newly delivered gene.[83] Similar to organ transplantation, gene therapy has been plagued by this problem. The immune system normally recognizes the new gene as foreign and rejects the cells carrying it. The research utilized a newly uncovered network of genes regulated by molecules known as microRNAs. This natural function selectively obscured their therapeutic gene in immune system cells and protected it from discovery. Mice infected with the gene containing an immune-cell microRNA target sequence did not reject the gene.

In August scientists successfully treated metastatic melanoma in two patients using killer T cells genetically retargeted to attack the cancer cells.[84]

In November researchers reported on the use of VRX496, a gene-based immunotherapy for the treatment of HIV that uses a lentiviral vector to deliver an antisense gene against the HIV envelope. In a phase I clinical trial, five subjects with chronic HIV infection who had failed to respond to at least two antiretroviral regimens were treated. A single intravenous infusion of autologous CD4 T cells genetically modified with VRX496 was well tolerated. All patients had stable or decreased viral load; four of the five patients had stable or increased CD4 T cell counts. All five patients had stable or increased immune response to HIV antigens and other pathogens. This was the first evaluation of a lentiviral vector administered in a US human clinical trial.[85][86]

In May researchers announced the first gene therapy trial for inherited retinal disease. The first operation was carried out on a 23-year-old British male, Robert Johnson, in early 2007.[87]

Leber's congenital amaurosis is an inherited blinding disease caused by mutations in the RPE65 gene. The results of a small clinical trial in children were published in April.[5] Delivery of recombinant adeno-associated virus (AAV) carrying RPE65 yielded positive results. In May two more groups reported positive results in independent clinical trials using gene therapy to treat the condition. In all three clinical trials, patients recovered functional vision without apparent side-effects.[5][21][22][23]

In September researchers were able to give trichromatic vision to squirrel monkeys.[88] In November 2009, researchers halted a fatal genetic disorder called adrenoleukodystrophy in two children using a lentivirus vector to deliver a functioning version of ABCD1, the gene that is mutated in the disorder.[89]

An April paper reported that gene therapy addressed achromatopsia (color blindness) in dogs by targeting cone photoreceptors. Cone function and day vision were restored for at least 33 months in two young specimens. The therapy was less efficient for older dogs.[90]

In September it was announced that an 18-year-old male patient in France with beta-thalassemia major had been successfully treated.[91] Beta-thalassemia major is an inherited blood disease in which beta haemoglobin is missing and patients are dependent on regular lifelong blood transfusions.[92] The technique used a lentiviral vector to transduce the human -globin gene into purified blood and marrow cells obtained from the patient in June 2007.[93] The patient's haemoglobin levels were stable at 9 to 10 g/dL. About a third of the hemoglobin contained the form introduced by the viral vector and blood transfusions were not needed.[93][94] Further clinical trials were planned.[95] Bone marrow transplants are the only cure for thalassemia, but 75% of patients do not find a matching donor.[94]

Cancer immunogene therapy using modified antigene, antisense/triple helix approach was introduced in South America in 2010/11 in La Sabana University, Bogota (Ethical Committee 14 December 2010, no P-004-10). Considering the ethical aspect of gene diagnostic and gene therapy targeting IGF-I, the IGF-I expressing tumors i.e. lung and epidermis cancers were treated (Trojan et al. 2016).[96][97]

In 2007 and 2008, a man (Timothy Ray Brown) was cured of HIV by repeated hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (see also allogeneic stem cell transplantation, allogeneic bone marrow transplantation, allotransplantation) with double-delta-32 mutation which disables the CCR5 receptor. This cure was accepted by the medical community in 2011.[98] It required complete ablation of existing bone marrow, which is very debilitating.

In August two of three subjects of a pilot study were confirmed to have been cured from chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). The therapy used genetically modified T cells to attack cells that expressed the CD19 protein to fight the disease.[29] In 2013, the researchers announced that 26 of 59 patients had achieved complete remission and the original patient had remained tumor-free.[99]

Human HGF plasmid DNA therapy of cardiomyocytes is being examined as a potential treatment for coronary artery disease as well as treatment for the damage that occurs to the heart after myocardial infarction.[100][101]

In 2011 Neovasculgen was registered in Russia as the first-in-class gene-therapy drug for treatment of peripheral artery disease, including critical limb ischemia; it delivers the gene encoding for VEGF.[102][35] Neovasculogen is a plasmid encoding the CMV promoter and the 165 amino acid form of VEGF.[103][104]

The FDA approved Phase 1 clinical trials on thalassemia major patients in the US for 10 participants in July.[105] The study was expected to continue until 2015.[95]

In July 2012, the European Medicines Agency recommended approval of a gene therapy treatment for the first time in either Europe or the United States. The treatment used Alipogene tiparvovec (Glybera) to compensate for lipoprotein lipase deficiency, which can cause severe pancreatitis.[106] The recommendation was endorsed by the European Commission in November 2012[20][36][107][108] and commercial rollout began in late 2014.[109] Alipogene tiparvovec was expected to cost around $1.6 million per treatment in 2012,[110] revised to $1 million in 2015,[111] making it the most expensive medicine in the world at the time.[112] As of 2016[update], only the patients treated in clinical trials and a patient who paid the full price for treatment have received the drug.[113]

In December 2012, it was reported that 10 of 13 patients with multiple myeloma were in remission "or very close to it" three months after being injected with a treatment involving genetically engineered T cells to target proteins NY-ESO-1 and LAGE-1, which exist only on cancerous myeloma cells.[31]

In March researchers reported that three of five adult subjects who had acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL) had been in remission for five months to two years after being treated with genetically modified T cells which attacked cells with CD19 genes on their surface, i.e. all B-cells, cancerous or not. The researchers believed that the patients' immune systems would make normal T-cells and B-cells after a couple of months. They were also given bone marrow. One patient relapsed and died and one died of a blood clot unrelated to the disease.[30]

Following encouraging Phase 1 trials, in April, researchers announced they were starting Phase 2 clinical trials (called CUPID2 and SERCA-LVAD) on 250 patients[114] at several hospitals to combat heart disease. The therapy was designed to increase the levels of SERCA2, a protein in heart muscles, improving muscle function.[115] The FDA granted this a Breakthrough Therapy Designation to accelerate the trial and approval process.[116] In 2016 it was reported that no improvement was found from the CUPID 2 trial.[117]

In July researchers reported promising results for six children with two severe hereditary diseases had been treated with a partially deactivated lentivirus to replace a faulty gene and after 732 months. Three of the children had metachromatic leukodystrophy, which causes children to lose cognitive and motor skills.[118] The other children had WiskottAldrich syndrome, which leaves them to open to infection, autoimmune diseases, and cancer.[119] Follow up trials with gene therapy on another six children with WiskottAldrich syndrome were also reported as promising.[120][121]

In October researchers reported that two children born with adenosine deaminase severe combined immunodeficiency disease (ADA-SCID) had been treated with genetically engineered stem cells 18 months previously and that their immune systems were showing signs of full recovery. Another three children were making progress.[27] In 2014 a further 18 children with ADA-SCID were cured by gene therapy.[122] ADA-SCID children have no functioning immune system and are sometimes known as "bubble children."[27]

Also in October researchers reported that they had treated six hemophilia sufferers in early 2011 using an adeno-associated virus. Over two years later all six were producing clotting factor.[27][123]

In January researchers reported that six choroideremia patients had been treated with adeno-associated virus with a copy of REP1. Over a six-month to two-year period all had improved their sight.[6][124] By 2016, 32 patients had been treated with positive results and researchers were hopeful the treatment would be long-lasting.[24] Choroideremia is an inherited genetic eye disease with no approved treatment, leading to loss of sight.

In March researchers reported that 12 HIV patients had been treated since 2009 in a trial with a genetically engineered virus with a rare mutation (CCR5 deficiency) known to protect against HIV with promising results.[125][126]

Clinical trials of gene therapy for sickle cell disease were started in 2014.[127][128]

In February LentiGlobin BB305, a gene therapy treatment undergoing clinical trials for treatment of beta thalassemia gained FDA "breakthrough" status after several patients were able to forgo the frequent blood transfusions usually required to treat the disease.[129]

In March researchers delivered a recombinant gene encoding a broadly neutralizing antibody into monkeys infected with simian HIV; the monkeys' cells produced the antibody, which cleared them of HIV. The technique is named immunoprophylaxis by gene transfer (IGT). Animal tests for antibodies to ebola, malaria, influenza, and hepatitis were underway.[130][131]

In March, scientists, including an inventor of CRISPR, Jennifer Doudna, urged a worldwide moratorium on germline gene therapy, writing "scientists should avoid even attempting, in lax jurisdictions, germline genome modification for clinical application in humans" until the full implications "are discussed among scientific and governmental organizations".[132][133][134][135]

In October, researchers announced that they had treated a baby girl, Layla Richards, with an experimental treatment using donor T-cells genetically engineered using TALEN to attack cancer cells. One year after the treatment she was still free of her cancer (a highly aggressive form of acute lymphoblastic leukaemia [ALL]).[136] Children with highly aggressive ALL normally have a very poor prognosis and Layla's disease had been regarded as terminal before the treatment.[137]

In December, scientists of major world academies called for a moratorium on inheritable human genome edits, including those related to CRISPR-Cas9 technologies[138] but that basic research including embryo gene editing should continue.[139]

In April the Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use of the European Medicines Agency endorsed a gene therapy treatment called Strimvelis[140][141] and the European Commission approved it in June.[142] This treats children born with adenosine deaminase deficiency and who have no functioning immune system. This was the second gene therapy treatment to be approved in Europe.[143]

In October, Chinese scientists reported they had started a trial to genetically modify T-cells from 10 adult patients with lung cancer and reinject the modified T-cells back into their bodies to attack the cancer cells. The T-cells had the PD-1 protein (which stops or slows the immune response) removed using CRISPR-Cas9.[144][145]

A 2016 Cochrane systematic review looking at data from four trials on topical cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) gene therapy does not support its clinical use as a mist inhaled into the lungs to treat cystic fibrosis patients with lung infections. One of the four trials did find weak evidence that liposome-based CFTR gene transfer therapy may lead to a small respiratory improvement for people with CF. This weak evidence is not enough to make a clinical recommendation for routine CFTR gene therapy.[146]

In February Kite Pharma announced results from a clinical trial of CAR-T cells in around a hundred people with advanced Non-Hodgkin lymphoma.[147]

In March, French scientists reported on clinical research of gene therapy to treat sickle-cell disease.[148]

In August, the FDA approved tisagenlecleucel for acute lymphoblastic leukemia.[149] Tisagenlecleucel is an adoptive cell transfer therapy for B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia; T cells from a person with cancer are removed, genetically engineered to make a specific T-cell receptor (a chimeric T cell receptor, or "CAR-T") that reacts to the cancer, and are administered back to the person. The T cells are engineered to target a protein called CD19 that is common on B cells. This is the first form of gene therapy to be approved in the United States. In October, a similar therapy called axicabtagene ciloleucel was approved for non-Hodgkin lymphoma.[150]

In December the results of using an adeno-associated virus with blood clotting factor VIII to treat nine haemophilia A patients were published. Six of the seven patients on the high dose regime increased the level of the blood clotting VIII to normal levels. The low and medium dose regimes had no effect on the patient's blood clotting levels.[151][152]

In December, the FDA approved Luxturna, the first in vivo gene therapy, for the treatment of blindness due to Leber's congenital amaurosis.[153] The price of this treatment was 850,000 US dollars for both eyes.[154][155]

A need was identified for high quality randomised controlled trials assessing the risks and benefits involved with gene therapy for people with sickle cell disease.[156]

In February, medical scientists working with Sangamo Therapeutics, headquartered in Richmond, California, announced the first ever "in body" human gene editing therapy to permanently alter DNA - in a patient with Hunter syndrome.[157] Clinical trials by Sangamo involving gene editing using Zinc Finger Nuclease (ZFN) are ongoing.[158]

In May, the FDA approved onasemnogene abeparvovec (Zolgensma) for treating spinal muscular atrophy in children under two years of age. The list price of Zolgensma was set at US$2.125 million per dose, making it the most expensive drug ever.[159]

In May, the EMA approved betibeglogene autotemcel (Zynteglo) for treating beta thalassemia for people twelve years of age and older.[160][161]

In July, Allergan and Editas Medicine announced phase 1/2 clinical trial of AGN-151587 for the treatment of Leber congenital amaurosis 10.[162] It will be the world's first in vivo study of a CRISPR-based human gene editing therapy, where the editing takes place inside the human body.[163] The first injection of the CRISPR-Cas System was confirmed in March of 2020.[164] This marks the first instance of genome editing within an adult human in the context of a scientific study. The very first in-vivo human genome editing however likely took place outside of academia in the context of a self-administered therapy by Biophysicist Josiah Zayner, PhD.[165][166]

Speculated uses for gene therapy include:

Athletes might adopt gene therapy technologies to improve their performance.[167] Gene doping is not known to occur, but multiple gene therapies may have such effects. Kayser et al. argue that gene doping could level the playing field if all athletes receive equal access. Critics claim that any therapeutic intervention for non-therapeutic/enhancement purposes compromises the ethical foundations of medicine and sports.[168]

Genetic engineering could be used to cure diseases, but also to change physical appearance, metabolism, and even improve physical capabilities and mental faculties such as memory and intelligence. Ethical claims about germline engineering include beliefs that every fetus has a right to remain genetically unmodified, that parents hold the right to genetically modify their offspring, and that every child has the right to be born free of preventable diseases.[169][170][171] For parents, genetic engineering could be seen as another child enhancement technique to add to diet, exercise, education, training, cosmetics, and plastic surgery.[172][173] Another theorist claims that moral concerns limit but do not prohibit germline engineering.[174]

A recent issue of the journal Bioethics was devoted to moral issues surrounding germline genetic engineering in people.[175]

Possible regulatory schemes include a complete ban, provision to everyone, or professional self-regulation. The American Medical Associations Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs stated that "genetic interventions to enhance traits should be considered permissible only in severely restricted situations: (1) clear and meaningful benefits to the fetus or child; (2) no trade-off with other characteristics or traits; and (3) equal access to the genetic technology, irrespective of income or other socioeconomic characteristics."[176]

As early in the history of biotechnology as 1990, there have been scientists opposed to attempts to modify the human germline using these new tools,[177] and such concerns have continued as technology progressed.[178][179] With the advent of new techniques like CRISPR, in March 2015 a group of scientists urged a worldwide moratorium on clinical use of gene editing technologies to edit the human genome in a way that can be inherited.[132][133][134][135] In April 2015, researchers sparked controversy when they reported results of basic research to edit the DNA of non-viable human embryos using CRISPR.[180][181] A committee of the American National Academy of Sciences and National Academy of Medicine gave qualified support to human genome editing in 2017[182][183] once answers have been found to safety and efficiency problems "but only for serious conditions under stringent oversight."[184]

Regulations covering genetic modification are part of general guidelines about human-involved biomedical research. There are no international treaties which are legally binding in this area, but there are recommendations for national laws from various bodies.

The Helsinki Declaration (Ethical Principles for Medical Research Involving Human Subjects) was amended by the World Medical Association's General Assembly in 2008. This document provides principles physicians and researchers must consider when involving humans as research subjects. The Statement on Gene Therapy Research initiated by the Human Genome Organization (HUGO) in 2001 provides a legal baseline for all countries. HUGO's document emphasizes human freedom and adherence to human rights, and offers recommendations for somatic gene therapy, including the importance of recognizing public concerns about such research.[185]

No federal legislation lays out protocols or restrictions about human genetic engineering. This subject is governed by overlapping regulations from local and federal agencies, including the Department of Health and Human Services, the FDA and NIH's Recombinant DNA Advisory Committee. Researchers seeking federal funds for an investigational new drug application, (commonly the case for somatic human genetic engineering,) must obey international and federal guidelines for the protection of human subjects.[186]

NIH serves as the main gene therapy regulator for federally funded research. Privately funded research is advised to follow these regulations. NIH provides funding for research that develops or enhances genetic engineering techniques and to evaluate the ethics and quality in current research. The NIH maintains a mandatory registry of human genetic engineering research protocols that includes all federally funded projects.

An NIH advisory committee published a set of guidelines on gene manipulation.[187] The guidelines discuss lab safety as well as human test subjects and various experimental types that involve genetic changes. Several sections specifically pertain to human genetic engineering, including Section III-C-1. This section describes required review processes and other aspects when seeking approval to begin clinical research involving genetic transfer into a human patient.[188] The protocol for a gene therapy clinical trial must be approved by the NIH's Recombinant DNA Advisory Committee prior to any clinical trial beginning; this is different from any other kind of clinical trial.[187]

Read more:

Gene therapy - Wikipedia

What Is Gene Therapy? How Does It Work? | FDA

Espaol

The genes in your bodys cells play an important role in your health indeed, a defective gene or genes can make you sick.

Recognizing this, scientists have been working for decades on ways to modify genes or replace faulty genes with healthy ones to treat, cure or prevent a disease or medical condition.

Now this research on gene therapy is finally paying off. Since August 2017, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has approved three gene therapy products, the first of their kind.

Two of them reprogram a patients own cells to attack a deadly cancer, and the most recent approved product targets a disease caused by mutations in a specific gene.

What is the relationship between cells and genes?f

Cells are the basic building blocks of all living things; the human body is composed of trillions of them. Within our cells there are thousands of genes that provide the information for the production of specific proteins and enzymes that make muscles, bones, and blood, which in turn support most of our bodys functions, such as digestion, making energy, and growing.

Sometimes the whole or part of a gene is defective or missing from birth, or a gene can change or mutate during adult life. Any of these variations can disrupt how proteins are made, which can contribute to health problems or diseases.

In gene therapy, scientists can do one of several things depending on the problem that is present. They can replace a gene that causes a medical problem with one that doesnt, add genes to help the body to fight or treat disease, or turn off genes that are causing problems.

In order to insert new genes directly into cells, scientists use a vehicle called a vector which is genetically engineered to deliver the gene.

Viruses, for example, have a natural ability to deliver genetic material into cells, and therefore, can be used as vectors. Before a virus can be used to carry therapeutic genes into human cells, however, it is modified to remove its ability to cause an infectious disease.

Gene therapy can be used to modify cells inside or outside the body. When its done inside the body, a doctor will inject the vector carrying the gene directly into the part of the body that has defective cells.

In gene therapy that is used to modify cells outside of the body, blood, bone marrow, or another tissue can be taken from a patient, and specific types of cells can be separated out in the lab. The vector containing the desired gene is introduced into these cells. The cells are left, to multiply in the laboratory, and are then injected back into the patient, where they continue to multiply and eventually produce the desired effect.

Before a company can market a gene therapy product for use in humans, the gene therapy product has to be tested for safety and effectiveness so that FDA scientists can consider whether the risks of the therapy are acceptable in light of the benefits.

Gene therapy holds the promise to transform medicine and create options for patients who are living with difficult, and even incurable, diseases. As scientists continue to make great strides in this therapy, FDA is committed to helping speed up development by prompt review of groundbreaking treatments that have the potential to save lives.

back to top

Original post:

What Is Gene Therapy? How Does It Work? | FDA

gene therapy | Description, Uses, Examples, & Safety …

Discover how gene therapy can treat diseases caused by genetic mutations such as cystic fibrosisGene therapy seeks to repair genetic mutations through the introduction of healthy, working genes.Encyclopdia Britannica, Inc.See all videos for this article

Gene therapy, also called gene transfer therapy, introduction of a normal gene into an individuals genome in order to repair a mutation that causes a genetic disease. When a normal gene is inserted into the nucleus of a mutant cell, the gene most likely will integrate into a chromosomal site different from the defective allele; although that may repair the mutation, a new mutation may result if the normal gene integrates into another functional gene. If the normal gene replaces the mutant allele, there is a chance that the transformed cells will proliferate and produce enough normal gene product for the entire body to be restored to the undiseased phenotype.

Read More on This Topic

cancer: Gene therapy

Knowledge about the genetic defects that lead to cancer suggests that cancer can be treated by fixing those altered genes. One strategy...

Human gene therapy has been attempted on somatic (body) cells for diseases such as cystic fibrosis, adenosine deaminase deficiency, familial hypercholesterolemia, cancer, and severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) syndrome. Somatic cells cured by gene therapy may reverse the symptoms of disease in the treated individual, but the modification is not passed on to the next generation. Germline gene therapy aims to place corrected cells inside the germ line (e.g., cells of the ovary or testis). If that is achieved, those cells will undergo meiosis and provide a normal gametic contribution to the next generation. Germline gene therapy has been achieved experimentally in animals but not in humans.

Scientists have also explored the possibility of combining gene therapy with stem cell therapy. In a preliminary test of that approach, scientists collected skin cells from a patient with alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency (an inherited disorder associated with certain types of lung and liver disease), reprogrammed the cells into stem cells, corrected the causative gene mutation, and then stimulated the cells to mature into liver cells. The reprogrammed, genetically corrected cells functioned normally.

Prerequisites for gene therapy include finding the best delivery system (often a virus, typically referred to as a viral vector) for the gene, demonstrating that the transferred gene can express itself in the host cell, and establishing that the procedure is safe. Few clinical trials of gene therapy in humans have satisfied all those conditions, often because the delivery system fails to reach cells or the genes are not expressed by cells. Improved gene therapy systems are being developed by using nanotechnology. A promising application of that research involves packaging genes into nanoparticles that are targeted to cancer cells, thereby killing cancer cells specifically and leaving healthy cells unharmed.

Some aspects of gene therapy, including genetic manipulation and selection, research on embryonic tissue, and experimentation on human subjects, have aroused ethical controversy and safety concerns. Some objections to gene therapy are based on the view that humans should not play God and interfere in the natural order. On the other hand, others have argued that genetic engineering may be justified where it is consistent with the purposes of God as creator. Some critics are particularly concerned about the safety of germline gene therapy, because any harm caused by such treatment could be passed to successive generations. Benefits, however, would also be passed on indefinitely. There also has been concern that the use of somatic gene therapy may affect germ cells.

Although the successful use of somatic gene therapy has been reported, clinical trials have revealed risks. In 1999 American teenager Jesse Gelsinger died after having taken part in a gene therapy trial. In 2000 researchers in France announced that they had successfully used gene therapy to treat infants who suffered from X-linked SCID (XSCID; an inherited disorder that affects males). The researchers treated 11 patients, two of whom later developed a leukemia-like illness. Those outcomes highlight the difficulties foreseen in the use of viral vectors in somatic gene therapy. Although the viruses that are used as vectors are disabled so that they cannot replicate, patients may suffer an immune response.

Another concern associated with gene therapy is that it represents a form of eugenics, which aims to improve future generations through the selection of desired traits. While some have argued that gene therapy is eugenic, others claim that it is a treatment that can be adopted to avoid disability. To others, such a view of gene therapy legitimates the so-called medical model of disability (in which disability is seen as an individual problem to be fixed with medicine) and raises peoples hopes for new treatments that may never materialize.

Read more from the original source:

gene therapy | Description, Uses, Examples, & Safety ...

112M Fund Launched to Commercialize UCLs Gene Therapy… – Labiotech.eu

The leading UK institution University College London and the firm AlbionVC have made the first closing of a 112M (100M) fund with the aim of investing in UCL research and spinouts with a focus on gene and cell therapy.

This is the second so-called UCL Technology Fund and could double the size of the first, which raised around 56M (50M) in 2016. The fund is managed by AlbionVC in collaboration with UCLs commercialization company UCL Business (UCLB). Investors in the second fund include the firm British Patient Capital and UCL itself.

While the value of the first closing was not disclosed, Anne Lane, CEO of UCLB, told me that investments from this fund have already begun, and the second close is expected within the next 12 months. The larger size of the fund than the first could also give the team more flexibility on how many investments it makes and how big they are.

We have a focus in terms of UCLs cell & gene therapy research and that is reflected in the portfolio of the fund, but no specific disease areas as such, Lane said.

Examples of investments in the pipeline for this fund include a gene therapy for an undisclosed neurometabolic disorder, a gene therapy for epilepsy, and a cell therapy for glaucoma.

One of the biggest success stories from the first fund is the gene therapy company Orchard Therapeutics, whose Nasdaq IPO raised around 290M in 2018. Another UCL gene therapy spinout, Freeline Therapeutics, is also geared to launch a Nasdaq IPO in the coming weeks.

UCL has a strong entrepreneurial scene comparable to the biotech hubs in Oxford and Cambridge. For example, UCL spinouts reportedly raised 644M (579M) in external investment between 2018 and 2019, the largest amount of any university in the country.

The European startup scene has been shaken by the Covid-19 pandemic this year, with the eurozone economy going into a deep recession. Furthermore, gene therapy developers have experienced disruption with their programs due to clinical trial delays and changes in strategy.

Regarding the effect of Covid-19 on their fundraising, Lane said that the pandemic definitely made it more challenging and took more time than expected. But UCLs research continues and we look to its research base in overcoming the challenges posed by the global pandemic.

Image from Shutterstock

See the article here:

112M Fund Launched to Commercialize UCLs Gene Therapy... - Labiotech.eu

UK gene therapy pioneer tilts at $125m NASDAQ IPO – Business Weekly

Freeline Therapeutics in Stevenage, which is developing gene therapies for rare diseases, is bidding to raise $125 million through an IPO on the US technology market NASDAQ.

The company plans to offer 7.4 million American Depositary Shares at $16-$18 apiece.

Even hitting halfway up the range Freeline could clinch a market value of around $574m.The company's lead candidate, FLT180a, is an investigational gene therapy medicinal product candidate for the treatment of haemophilia B and is currently in a Phase 1/2 trial.

Freeline closed a $120 million extended Series C financing in June 2020.The companys stated aim is to transform the lives of patients suffering from inherited systemic debilitating diseases. Data gleaned from trials involving the first cohort of 10 patients was promising, the company says.

CEO Theresa Heggie said: The feedback builds on previously reported data which suggest that FLT180a has the potential, using relatively low doses, to create durable FIX activity levels in the normal range in patients with severe Haemophilia B and provide a functional cure.

Freeline is headquartered at Stevenage Bioscience Catalyst and has operations in Germany and the US. It has plans to grow rapidly across all territories.

Targeting the liver with its novel gene therapy platform enables Freeline to treat a wide range of chronic diseases. Its proprietary split packaging technology and high performing capsid allows the company to target monogenic diseases and, in the future, potentially treat complex disease areas not currently targeted by gene therapy.

Heggie said: We plan to commercialise our next-generation AAV gene therapy platform for haemophilia B while we continue to deploy the capsid and manufacturing platform across our pipeline of novel indications.

The rest is here:

UK gene therapy pioneer tilts at $125m NASDAQ IPO - Business Weekly

Of mice and memories: Gene therapy study returns function in Alzheimer’s mice – ABC News

Norman Swan: Alzheimer's disease is the commonest form of dementia, and the results of billions of dollars of research investment have been bitterly disappointing in terms of finding an effective treatment. However, experiments on mice by a group from the Dementia Research Centre at Macquarie University have come up with some promising findings. Professor Lars Ittner is the director of the centre. Welcome to the Health Report Lars.

Lars Ittner: Hello, how are you?

Norman Swan: Now, essentially you are targeting an enzyme which protects nerve cells in the brain from the toxic effects of amyloid beta and that's one of the two main substances which accumulate in Alzheimer's disease. What did you actually do in this study?

Lars Ittner: So in this we found prior to this study that this enzyme activity that protects the brain from Alzheimer's disease is actually lost in Alzheimer's disease. And we devised a gene therapy to replace the enzyme activity and bring the enzyme back into the brain cells.

Norman Swan: And these are mice which replicate Alzheimer's disease in some shape or form.

Lars Ittner: Yes, they are, so we genetically engineered them to develop Alzheimer's disease.

Norman Swan: And they were showing signs of memory and thinking problems?

Lars Ittner: Yes, so their ability to form memory and then store the memory over longer terms is compromised.

Norman Swan: And this was the gene for this enzyme?

Lars Ittner: So we brought backit's called the P38 gamma gene, which we brought back into the brains of these mice and that restored their ability to form memory.

Norman Swan: So you actually got healing?

Lars Ittner: So we were quite surprised because when you set out with these type of studies you expect at most that you stop the progression. But yes, we got far more than we set out for.

Norman Swan: People have tried gene therapy before from Parkinson's disease and other things, and it's quite hard to get the gene therapy into the brain. And of course Alzheimer's disease is quite widespread as opposed to Parkinson's disease. How do you get the gene therapy in reliably?

Lars Ittner: So from the early days of gene therapy done in Parkinson's disease, the vehicles that are used to bring the genes into organisms or in the brain in particular have improved, so these days we use modified viruses that we take advantage of their ability to infect brain cells, and they then deliver the genes for us.

Norman Swan: In the right place. Were there any side effects?

Lars Ittner: So we did toxicity studies as part of our study, and then you use incredibly high amounts of the virus, and we did not see long-term side-effects.

Norman Swan: How do you getthere's something called the bloodbrain barrier, the brain is a protected organ and it's quite hard for things to get into the brain because of this barrier, how did you get beyond that with these gene therapies?

Lars Ittner: So with the mice we can take advantage of a modified virus which has been selected to actually passage this naturally, but in humans you would do a single injection, it's like a lumbar puncture, it's at the base of your neck, and it's directly into the liquid around the brain, so you basically mechanically bypass the bloodbrain barrier.

Norman Swan: There have been very disappointing results. I mean, what happens in mice particularly in Alzheimer's disease does not necessarily happen in humans, and there's not a single amyloid beta therapy that has had much effect on the brains of the people with Alzheimer's disease. Why do you think this one might work in humans when others haven't?

Lars Ittner: So the problem with the amyloid beta is that it is now understood that this is a disease inducing pathology but is not required for the progression of the disease, and we are targeting here actually the tau protein specifically which is

Norman Swan: It's the other thing that

Lars Ittner: Exactly, and that is responsible for the progression of the disease, so it's actually moving away from the amyloid beta as a drug target which has failed in the past.

Norman Swan: Now, with COVID-19 around we are getting used to the language of clinical trials and accelerating trials. When are you ready to go to phase 1 which would be a safety trial in humans?

Lars Ittner: So preclinical experiments have actually been completed for this particular study, and the next step are in fact phase 1 clinical trials, and we are currently working with Macquarie University and their commercialisation arm to find the right partner to move forward into clinical trials.

Norman Swan: Fascinating. Well, we'll follow that up when you do. Thanks for joining us.

Lars Ittner: It was my pleasure.

Norman Swan: Professor Lars Ittner is director of the Dementia Research Centre at Macquarie University.

You've been listening to the Health Report, I'm Norman Swan, and I'd really enjoy your company next week.

View original post here:

Of mice and memories: Gene therapy study returns function in Alzheimer's mice - ABC News

Tessa Therapeutics Announces Results from Two Independent Phase 1/2 Trials of Autologous CD30 CAR-T Cell Therapy in Patients with Relapsed or…

DetailsCategory: DNA RNA and CellsPublished on Thursday, 06 August 2020 16:44Hits: 272

SINGAPORE I August 6, 2020 I Tessa Therapeutics (Tessa), a clinical-stage cell therapy company developing next-generation cancer treatments, today announced the publication of results in the Journal of Clinical Oncology from two investigator-sponsored Phase 1/2 trials led by Baylor College of Medicine and the University of North Carolina Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center.

Results of the trials, which evaluated the safety and efficacy of CD30 CAR-T cell therapy in patients with relapsed/refractory ("R/R") Hodgkin lymphoma, showed a high rate of durable complete responses and very favorable safety profile using autologous CD30 CAR-T cell therapy.

"These data are significant, as they demonstrate that CAR-T cell therapy may be a safe and effective treatment option for patients with Hodgkin lymphoma and potentially other lymphomas expressing the CD30 antigen," said Dr. Natalie Grover, study co-first author, assistant professor in the UNC Department of Medicine and a UNC Lineberger member. "The highest dose treatment led to the complete disappearance of tumors in the majority of patients, and almost all subjects had clinical benefit. As such, we believe further study of this treatment approach is warranted," said Dr. Carlos Ramos, study co-first author, professor at the Center for Cell and Gene Therapy at Baylor College of Medicine, Houston Methodist Hospital and Texas Children's Hospital.

The trials enrolled 41 adult patients with relapsed/refractory Hodgkin Lymphoma who received CD30 CAR-T cell therapy following lymphodepletion with chemotherapy. Overall, 94 percent of the treated patients were still alive a year after treatment. Of the patients who had a complete response, 61 percent still had no evidence of recurrence a year later. None of the patients experienced the serious, life-threatening complications that have been seen with several CD19 CAR-T cell trials. The overall response rate in the 32 patients with active disease who received fludarabine-based lymphodepletion was 72%, including 19 patients (59%) with complete response.

"We have been working with Baylor and the University of North Carolina to confirm these impressiveresults further in a Tessa-sponsored regulatory Phase 2 trial, which we aim to initiate this year," said Ivan D. Horak, M.D., President of Research and Development at Tessa Therapeutics. "Longer term, we seek to explore the potential of this therapy beyond Hodgkin's lymphoma to CD30+ expressing Non-Hodgkin lymphomas, where there is a demonstrated unmet need."

University of North Carolina has granted Tessa an exclusive license to its patents, data and know-how, and Baylor College of Medicine has granted Tessa the rights to use its data and know-how, for the further development and commercialization of this therapy. "We are excited to collaborate with Tessa. Their ability to run multi-center cell therapy clinical trials will be invaluable for the further development of this therapy," said Helen Heslop, director of the Center for Cell and Gene Therapy and Dan L Duncan Chair at Baylor.

About Tessa Therapeutics

Tessa Therapeutics is a clinical-stage biotechnology company focused on the development of cell therapies for a broad range of cancers.

Tessa's clinical pipeline derives from two innovative cell therapy platforms: CD30 Chimeric Antigen Receptors (CD30-CARs) and Virus-Specific T cells (VSTs). Our lead candidate comprises autologous CD30 CAR-T cell therapy targeting classical Hodgkin lymphoma (cHL) and CD30+ non-Hodgkin lymphomas.

Tessa, in collaboration with Baylor College of Medicine, is also developing a novel, allogeneic platform technology, as a new approach to traditional cell therapy. By combining the unique properties CD30-CARs and VSTs, the platform holds potential for the creation of next-generation off-the-shelf cell therapies against a variety of hematologic malignancies and solid tumors.

Tessa's state-of-the-art GMP cell therapy manufacturing facility will open in early 2021 and will substantially enhance in-house production capabilities. Tessa is focused on rapidly and reliably providing safe, effective treatment options for patients.

For more information on Tessa, please visit http://www.tessatherapeutics.com.

SOURCE: Tessa Therapeutics

More:

Tessa Therapeutics Announces Results from Two Independent Phase 1/2 Trials of Autologous CD30 CAR-T Cell Therapy in Patients with Relapsed or...

Cancer Gene Therapy Market Latest Treatment Methodology 2020 to 2025 – Owned

The report gives a complete investigation of the Cancer Gene Therapy Market and key improvements. The exploration record comprises of past and figure showcase data, prerequisite, territories of use, value strategies, and friends portions of the main organizations by topographical district. The Cancer Gene Therapy report separates the market size, by volume and worth, depending upon the kind of utilization and area.

Request sample copy of this report at:-

https://www.precisionbusinessinsights.com/request-sample?product_id=16156&utm_source=primefeed_medium=24

With everything taken into account, the Cancer Gene Therapy report offers inside and out profile and information data life structures of driving Cancer Gene Therapy organizations.

Top Companies Name: Urigen Pharmaceuticals Inc. (U.S), GenVec.Inc (U.S), Oxford BioMedica (U.K), Vical (U.S), ANI Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (U.S), and Genzyme Corporation (U.S). Novartis AG and Others.

Global Cancer Gene Therapy Market by Geography: Latin America, North America, Asia Pacific, the Middle East and Africa and Europe.

Types:-

Retroviral Therapy

Adenoviral Therapy

Others

Applications:-

Hospitals

Oncology institutes

Biotechnological companies

Others

Request Customization at:-

https://www.precisionbusinessinsights.com/request-customisation?product_id=16156&utm_source=primefeed_medium=24

The Cancer Gene Therapy report presents a point by point estimation of the market through complete appraisal, fantastic experiences, and bona fide expectations managing the Cancer Gene Therapy market size. It depends on attempted and tried methodologies alongside convictions in the event of the estimate made accessible. In this manner the nitty gritty investigation of Cancer Gene Therapy market fills in as a repository of examination and information for each part of the market, especially concerning nearby markets, innovation, classifications, and use.

The report involves the estimation of the Global Cancer Gene Therapy Market. The accompanying Industry is appeared to advance with a critical ascent in the Compound Annual Growth Rate (CAGR) during the conjecture time frame attributable to different elements driving the market.

The key points of the report:

The extent of the report stretches out from market situations to similar valuing between significant players, cost and benefit of the predetermined market areas. The numerical information is upheld up by factual apparatuses, for example, SWOT investigation, Porters Five Analysis, PESTLE examination, etc.

About Us:

Precision Business Insights is one of the leading market research and management consulting firm, run by a group of seasoned and highly dynamic market research professionals with a strong zeal to offer high-quality insights. We at Precision Business Insights are passionate about market research and love to do the things in an innovative way. Our team is a big asset for us and great differentiating factor. Our company motto is to address client requirements in the best possible way and want to be a part of our client success. We have a large pool of industry experts and consultants served a wide array of clients across different verticals. Relentless quest and continuous endeavour enable us to make new strides in market research and business consulting arena.

Contact Us:

[emailprotected]

PH +1-866-598-1553

Link:

Cancer Gene Therapy Market Latest Treatment Methodology 2020 to 2025 - Owned

Kriya Therapeutics announces the establishment of its internal manufacturing facility for process development and scalable cGMP production of gene…

PALO ALTO, Calif. and RESEARCH TRIANGLE PARK, N.C., Aug. 4, 2020 /PRNewswire/ --Kriya Therapeutics announced today that it has secured a 51,350 square foot operational manufacturing facility in Research Triangle Park (RTP), North Carolina to support the scalable production of its pipeline of AAV-based gene therapies for highly prevalent serious diseases. The facility is designed to have its own fully integrated process development lab, quality control and analytical development capability, pilot production suite, and current good manufacturing practice (cGMP) production infrastructure. Kriya will manufacture gene therapies at the facility using its scalable suspension cell culture manufacturing process at up to 2,000-liter bioreactor scale. The facility's pilot production suite and full cGMP manufacturing infrastructure are expected to be online in the first and second half of 2021, respectively.

"Manufacturing continues to be a critical bottleneck to the advancement of gene therapies for prevalent diseases," said Britt Petty, Chief Manufacturing Officer at Kriya Therapeutics. "With the establishment of our cGMP manufacturing facility in North Carolina, we are preparing to have the capacity to support our pipeline of programs addressing large patient populations, from initial INDs through late-phase clinical studies. Moreover, we are investing in process innovation and scalable infrastructure with the goal of reducing the cost of goods of our therapies by orders of magnitude."

"As we develop our platform technologies and advance our pipeline of gene therapies, we are committed to securing the capacity to support the manufacturing of our products at scale," said Shankar Ramaswamy, M.D., Co-Founder, Chairman, and CEO of Kriya Therapeutics. "Our investment in our RTP facility helps establish this capability in a region with tremendous talent in gene therapy manufacturing, while also enabling our team to focus on innovations to bring down the cost of goods of our gene therapies."

About Kriya Therapeutics

Kriya Therapeutics is a next-generation gene therapy company focused on developing transformative treatments for highly prevalent serious diseases. With core operations in California and North Carolina, Kriya's technology-enabled platform is directed to the rational design and clinical translation of gene therapies for large patient populations. For more information, please visit http://www.kriyatx.com.

Cautionary Note on Forward-Looking Statements

This press release includes forward-looking statements pertaining to the usage and capabilities of our manufacturing facility, our costs, and the potential of our platform. Such forward-looking statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed or implied in such statements. The forward-looking statements contained in this press release reflect Kriya's current views with respect to future events, and Kriya does not undertake and specifically disclaims any obligation to update any forward-looking statements.

Contact Daniel Chen Chief Financial Officer [emailprotected]

SOURCE Kriya Therapeutics

https://www.kriyatx.com/

View original post here:

Kriya Therapeutics announces the establishment of its internal manufacturing facility for process development and scalable cGMP production of gene...

Regenxbio announces positive one-year data on wet AMD gene therapy – Seeking Alpha

REGENXBIO (NASDAQ:RGNX) announces positive one-year data from cohorts 4 & 5 of its Phase 1/2a clinical trial evaluating gene therapy RGX-314 in patients with wet age-related macular degeneration (wet AMD).

The treatment effect was stable with a mean +4 letter change in best corrected visual acuity (BCVA) and -2 letters from baseline. Mean changes in retinal thickness of-61 m and -79 m, respectively,were observed.

Anti-VEGF treatment burden dropped by 61% and 85%, respectively.

On the safety front, 18 serious adverse events were reported, one considered possibly related to RGX-314 (decrease in vision at month 11).

A pivotal study in wet AMD should launch by year-end.

Another Phase 2 assessing suprachoroidal delivery of RGX-314 in wet AMD patients will commence this quarter with interim data from the first cohort expected by year-end.

Management will host a conference call this morning at 8:30 am ET to discuss the results.

Excerpt from:

Regenxbio announces positive one-year data on wet AMD gene therapy - Seeking Alpha

Covid-19 Forces Gene Therapy Companies to Shift… – Labiotech.eu

Amid the Covid-19 pandemic, gene therapy companies are suffering, with clinical trials delayed and investors remaining cautious in an increasingly volatile market. Yet many have set their sights on what could potentially turn into a gold mine: applying their technology to contain the spread of the novel coronavirus.

The UKs Cell and Gene Therapy Catapult is the latest example of these uncertainty dynamics last week, it received a 100M investment from the UK government to boost its manufacturing capacity in order to scale up the countrys ability to make Covid-19 vaccines, once a vaccine is approved. With this investment, the center will be able to produce millions of doses of vaccine a month.

Gene therapy companies are particularly well-positioned to research and manufacture Covid-19 vaccines, since they often employ viral vectors to get genes into cells. These same vectors could also be used to carry genetic material from the coronavirus in order to elicit an immune response.

The Covid-19 pandemic has prompted many companies to highlight the potential of their programs for treating this disease. Gene therapy is no exception, and indeed several vaccine programs are employing gene therapy, said Stephan Christgau, co-founder and Managing Partner of EiR Ventures, who pointed out at companies such as Moderna, BioNTech and the CGT Catapult.

Data will show whether this approach works for the coronavirus, and, as an investor, ultimately data is king.

Many gene therapy companies may see the opportunity to join the struggle against Covid-19 as life support. When it comes to traditional gene therapies such as those targeting cancer or rare genetic diseases recent data paints a bleak picture.

According to analytics firm GlobalData, 59 gene therapy clinical trials involving 80 drugs and 63 companies have been delayed to date due to the pandemic. The main reasons being that hospitals are overwhelmed and lockdown measures have limited patient access to clinical trials.

It certainly has gone quiet in cell and gene therapeutic products, a representative of Voisin Consulting, a Paris-based life sciences consultancy, told me. Delayed clinical trials, reduced patient enrollment, and possible regulatory delays alongside wavering investor confidence likely contribute to that situation, she added.

These statistics mirror widespread delays of other non-emergency treatments and interventions. The problem is so significant that many experts fear a flood of undiagnosed cancers and other life-threatening diseases down the road.

On top of that comes the roaring economic crisis that lockdowns are triggering around the globe, which may force gene therapy developers to radically rethink their business model. The therapies they provide, even those that are still experimental, are often hugely expensive, often running into the hundreds of thousands or even millions of dollars for a single course of treatment.

Due to the economic recession in most of the countries worldwide, governments will discuss more carefully with pharma companies and payers how to price these high-cost therapies, as the healthcare system is already under pressure, Alessio Brunello, Senior Pharma Analyst at GlobalData, told me. The important factor in addressing this issue could be lowering production costs.

There is a clear mid to long-term impact resulting from Covid-19 pandemic such as clinical trials slowing down, therefore impacting the amount of data available for companies to secure more funding; or prioritization of facilities for COVID-19 work to delay commitment of companies coming to the UK, said a representative from the CGT Catapult.

This however may present opportunities for the cell and gene therapy industry in the UK and its ecosystem in the long run. For instance, the distance between manufacturing facilities may be reduced as companies realize that in such circumstances they would want to ensure easy access to them. This may well result in increased clustering of facilities. The UK already has the largest cluster of cell and gene therapy companies outside of the US and this will remain a key asset to ensure business continuity, similarly international companies already setup int eh UK may be more likely to centralise operations here.

Cover image via Shutterstock, figures courtesy of GlobalData

See the article here:

Covid-19 Forces Gene Therapy Companies to Shift... - Labiotech.eu

Cell and gene therapies: For biotechs, collaboration is key to successful innovation – BioPharma Dive

Cell and gene therapies are expected to represent one of the biggest advances in medical treatments since the introduction of monoclonal antibodies. Cell therapies are having a major impact on hematological malignancies, while gene therapy programs for rare and non-rare diseases could potentially benefit some 2.4 billion patients worldwide. A number of different technologies are enabling gene therapy for patients using different vectors and platforms. We anticipate an increase of gene therapy products that can address monogenic inherited diseases, such as those that involve metabolic disorder and neurological conditions.

Cell therapy products include bispecific T-cell engager antibodies, chimeric antigen receptor T-cell therapy (better known as CAR T), stem cell therapy, T-cell receptor therapy, and tumor-infiltrating lymphocyte therapy. Gene therapy may be used in conjunction with these cell products. Gene therapy is not just a type of medicine, but a platform that will enable many different medicines to treat diseases across multiple therapeutic areas, for patient populations of all sizes. Note that CAR T products are classified as both cell and gene therapy.

The FDA is taking a collaborative stance in encouraging innovative product development and clinical trial design and has approved nine cell and gene therapy products.The FDA anticipates approving 10 or more products per year by 2025. As of June 2019, the EMA has approved 14 advanced therapy medicinal products (ATMP), including gene, cell and tissue products.Oncology is currently the leading therapeutic area, and trials are also underway for therapies in cardiovascular, ophthalmology, Parkinson's disease, osteoarthritis, Alzheimer's disease and diabetes. Because of the great promise of these advances, companies focusing on cell and gene therapy products in these areas are well positioned to raise funds to support their research and development initiatives.

Without doubt, this is an exciting environment for those devoting their careers to bringing innovative treatments to people who need them. And needless to say, there is enormous opportunity in this field for biotech companies. In fact, many critical and innovative new therapies for rare and untreated diseases occur in the biotech pipeline.

However, the path to developing and commercializing a cell and gene therapy product is complex and there are many hurdles to overcome. This is especially true for biotechs which typically do not have full internal logistical or operational expertise, long-term relationships with manufacturers, or deep financial resources. For example, a biotech developing an autologouscell product might not easily be able to partner with local or central GMP manufacturers. Each detail has the potential to significantly slow down the clinical trial process and put biotechs at a disadvantage. Logistical challenges pose considerable obstacles, for example:

Collection, transportation and GMP manufacturing for allogeneic products

Short half-life of cell products, typically 24 to 96 hours

Storage capacities requiring very low temperatures for frozen products

Limited manufacturing capacity in many regions

Complex country-specific environmental safety regulations

Operational delivery can be equally problematic:

Selection of appropriate sites with accreditation for cell and gene therapy products

Limited on-site training and inconsistency among sites

Rare patient indications requiring intense patient recruitment strategies

The small number of patients participating in these trials

Unique toxicities that require early identification and management for patient safety

Coordination of multiple sites during trial enrollment to manage limited product availability

That said, biotechs might be in the best position to find new avenues to push innovation forward by virtue of their agility and flexibility, compared to their larger counterparts. In this fast-changing environment, the key to overcoming logistical and manufacturing concerns is to establish a partnership with a CRO one with a global team with direct experience in cell and gene therapy trials.

Most importantly, the CRO partner should be knowledgeable in cell products tracking, coordination and delivery in the tight timelines necessary for these compounds. Local knowledge from regulatory experts can help minimize time to trial opening and increase the chance of success. For example, a gene therapy clinical trial process in the United States is very different compared to such a process in Japan.

Further, biotechs need to choose clinical sites very carefully. Targeted locations should include accredited locations with teams in place to handle the complex requirements for these studies. The CRO partner should provide constant updates about clinical sites supporting cell and gene therapies, as an increasing number of sites establish capabilities in this field. Access to data that will help identify locations and patient volumes for rare-disease indications is also crucial.

Due to the unique potential side effects and safety concerns for cell and gene therapy trials, clinical research teams need to be well trained for operational success. Other important considerations include:

Prior indication experience

Specific training modules for team members

Clear communication standards

Strong pharmacovigilance expertise

As part of one of the world's leading CROs, Parexel Biotech offers essential services ideally suited to supporting biotech companies in these initiatives, with comprehensive expertise covering every critical area. Our lean operational structure and flexible processes enable biotechs to take advantage of regulatory, commercialization and operational expertise developed over years of experience with leading biopharma companies. The objective of our team is to bring together best practices to help our clients succeed with their important new therapies.

Follow this link:

Cell and gene therapies: For biotechs, collaboration is key to successful innovation - BioPharma Dive

The Time for DMD Gene Therapy is Now: A Chat with the MDA – BioSpace

After almost 15 years since the first gene therapy trial for Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) began, the dream of a DMD gene therapy drug is getting closer to a reality.

BioSpace sat down with Sharon Hesterlee, Ph.D., chief research officer at the Muscular Dystrophy Association (MDA), to talk about the history and challenges of developing gene therapy for DMD and the DMD gene therapy field as a whole, including Pfizers and Sarepta Therapeutics latest clinical data.

Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD)

DMD is a progressive muscle wasting disease caused by a genetic mutation. The mutated gene is on the X chromosome, making DMD an X-linked disease. This explains why it largely affects boys as they dont have a backup copy of the gene (they only have one X chromosome).

The first signs of DMD appear as the young boys begin to walk and get more mobile, typically between the ages of 2 to 5. They have trouble walking, arent walking as well as their peers, and cant jump, Hesterlee commented. Most boys stop walking and need a wheelchair between 9 and 14 years old.

But the disease doesnt just affect their legs it affects muscles all over their body. The most troublesome symptoms are breathing difficulties. Eventually, they will need ventilation to help them breathe.

The life span of boys with DMD has been growing steadily (from in their teens to early 30s) due to improvements in heart and respiratory care. Despite this progress, most DMD patients pass away in their 20s to 30s due to respiratory failure, infection, or cardiomyopathy (dilation of the heart due to overwork).

Discovering DMDs cause

Although we now know DMD is a genetic disease, it wasnt that long ago that researchers didnt know why or how the disease came about.

Back in the mid-1980s, the cause of DMD was still unknown all we knew was that it ran in families, there were no genes associated with the disease yet, Hesterlee explained. MDA gave research grants to four labs tasked with finding the cause. One of those labs, Louis Kunkels lab, identified the dystrophin gene first in 1986.

Dystrophin, the largest gene in the human body, encodes a muscle protein responsible for keeping muscle cells from pulling themselves apart when the muscle is working, like a shock absorber for the cell, as Hesterlee described. Without dystrophin, the muscle cells suffer from microtears, leading to their demise and progressive muscle wasting.

Once we identified the culprit gene, we thought Oh great! We know whats wrong, well fix it! Hesterlee added. But it took another 30 years to be able to apply this knowledge to develop effective drugs.

Although corticosteroids can slow the progression of DMD to some extent, they dont address the underlying issue the lack of functional dystrophin. Corticosteroids help dampen down inflammation, said Hesterlee. They can help slow down disease progression, but tackling inflammation only addresses one downstream effect.

Fixing the mutated gene (through gene editing) or providing cells with a new healthy copy of the gene (through gene therapy) would provide the best benefit, possibly even leading to a lifelong cure.

Gene therapy for DMD

As the name suggests, gene therapy involves delivering a healthy copy of a mutated gene (in DMDs case dystrophin) into cells. The tricky part is getting the gene inside the cell. This is accomplished using a vector, usually a virus or nanoparticle, as a trojan horse to sneak the healthy gene into the cell.

Viruses are very well evolved to get into cells, commented Hesterlee. Take out the viral genes required to make copies of itself and put in the healthy copy of dystrophin, then the virus can get inside cells but not replicate.

Adeno-associated viruses (AAVs) are commonly used because they dont naturally cause disease or many immune system side effects in humans. But there is a limit to how much cargo you can stuff inside these tiny viruses, about 5 kb for AAV. The whole 2.2 Mb dystrophin gene over 440 times as big is too large to fit inside any AAV.

Throughout the late 1990s and early 2000s, researchers tinkered with the dystrophin gene, figuring out what parts were needed and how much they could trim out to still have a functional protein. They finally found the perfect balance, naming the shortened genes microdystrophins.

Sometimes called minidystrophins, there are slight variations between different versions of these shortened genes, but the key is they are all small enough to fit into AAV, explained Hesterlee.

Other hurdles of developing a DMD gene therapy

Now that the dystrophy gene was brought down to a useful size, the next challenge researchers faced was getting the gene therapy from the blood stream into the muscle.

Could we use histamine? What about a tourniquet and pressure? Or higher doses to drive the virus into the muscles? Hesterlee added. But we were cautious after the high profile death of Jesse Gelsinger in 1999.

Thats why the first DMD gene therapy trial in the US, which began in 2006, involved injecting the gene therapy directly into the biceps of the children who participated. That allowed researchers to test the gene therapy proof-of-concept in DMD patients without worrying about systemic administration right off the bat. Subsequent gene therapy trials have moved to intravenous (IV) administration typically only requiring one fairly quick dose.

The trick was using higher doses and the right serotypes of AAV to move the vector out of the bloodstream and into muscle, Hesterlee added.

Now, researchers had to find the best time during the course of the childrens disease to test the therapy.

The earlier you treat, the better, but its hard to measure benefit if the children are not yet manifesting a lot of symptoms, so you want to test the children at a stage when theyre progressing, said Hesterlee. Also, if you were to treat infants, its important to remember that they will be making new muscle cells without the modified gene in them, so there is a balance of when to treat.

Children with DMD tend to get stronger between 3 to 7 years old, then start to decline, Hesterlee explained. This is why many Duchenne drug studies traditionally havent involved children younger than 7 years old.

Testing the children when they are starting to lose the ability to walk can avoid the natural history noise, Hesterlee added. You can compare outcomes to natural disease due to a rich natural history of DMD. In recent years, weve gotten much better at detecting benefits in the boys even when they are in the early stages and improving, so trials have started to skew younger, including children as young as 4 years old.

Another challenge hinges on the fact that the gene is delivered using a virus, making the gene therapy an immunization in a way. The patients body will react to the viral vector just like it would any other virus, creating antibodies to hunt and destroy the gene therapy viruses. This not only quickly diminishes the amount of therapeutic virus in the body, but it could also mean the patient would only be able to get one dose of therapy - any subsequent doses would be destroyed too quickly by the body or, worse, potentially cause a severe immune reaction.

AAVs are also common viruses some people have already been exposed to AAVs naturally and would never know because they cause no symptoms.

Anywhere from 10 to 80 percent of DMD patients, depending on the serotype in question, have preexisting antibodies against AAVs, meaning they are not eligible for gene therapy, Hesterlee elaborated. Antibody status can be quite divisive in the DMD community.

DMD gene therapies in development

Despite all the challenges faced over the years, there are a handful of gene therapies being developed for DMD currently, with a few pivotal Phase III trials close on the horizon. There are currently three companies with competitive trials in the US: Solid Biosciences, Sarepta Therapeutics, and Pfizer (who bought the DMD platform in 2016 from AskBio, a company involved in early DMD gene therapy trials).

Top DMD Gene Therapies in Development

Solid Biosciences

Sarepta Therapeutics

Pfizer

Treatment name

SGT-001

SRP-9001

PF-06939926

Phase

I/II (clinical hold)

[NCT03368742]

I/II (active, not recruiting)

[NCT03375164]

II (active, not recruiting)

[NCT03769116]

Ib (active & enrolling)

[NCT03362502]

III (not yet recruiting)

[NCT04281485]

Ages enrolling

Boys 4-17 years

I/II: Boys 4-7 years

II: Boys 4-7 years

Ib: boys 4-12 years

III: boys 4-7 years

AAV type

AAV9

AAVrh74

AAV9

Dystrophin gene

Microdystrophin

Microdystrophin

Minidystrophin

Gene includes nitric oxide binding spot?

Yes

No

No

Solid Biosciences therapy, called SGT-001, involves a microdystrophin gene carried by an AAV9 viral vector. AAV9 is a type of AAV that is particularly good at getting into muscle cells.

The company recently presented a clinical update at the virtual American Society of Gene and Cell Therapy (ASGCT) meeting in May. Microdystrophin expression was seen via muscle biopsies 90 days after treatment (at a dose of 2E14 vg/kg), which stabilized dystrophin-associated proteins and restored activity of a key enzyme (called neuronal nitric oxide synthase, or nNOS) in the muscles. Unfortunately, their Phase I/II trial (IGNITE DMD) is still on hold by the FDA.

All three companies are using different versions of minidystrophin, explained Hesterlee. Solids is different because it contains the binding spot for an enzyme called nitric oxide synthase both Sarepta and Pfizer cut that portion out.

Sarepta Therapeutics has two DMD gene therapies, SRP-9001 Micro-dystrophin and GALGT2 (Nationwide Childrens), in clinical trials and one therapy, GNT0004 Micro-dystrophin (Genethon), in preclinical development. SRP-9001 includes a different serotype of AAV, called AAVrh74 (which also gets into muscle and heart cells well), and a microdystrophin gene.

SRP-9001 (2E14 vg/kg dose) is currently being investigated in open-label Phase I/II study (Study 101). In mid-June, Sarepta announced that preliminary results from four boys ages 4-7 years were published in JAMA Neurology. SRP-9001 was safe and well-tolerated up to one-year post-administration. At 12-weeks post-treatment, the mean percent of dystrophin expressed in muscles was a whopping 95.8 percent. All functional improvement the boys gained (measured by the NorthStar Ambulatory Assessment (NSAA) rating scale) was also maintained for at least one year post-treatment. Importantly, there were no serious adverse events (only mild to moderate events).

Sarepta had higher dystrophin gene expression and no serious adverse events, like Pfizer saw, Hesterlee added.

SRP-9001 is also being studied in a randomized, placebo-controlled Phase II trial (Study 102) in 41 boys ages 4-7 years with results expected in early 2021. In fact, the FDA recently granted SRP-9001 Fast Track designation.

Instead of delivering the dystrophin gene, GALGT2 delivers the GALGT2 gene, which is also important for muscle function. It is currently being investigated in a Phase I/II study in six boys ages 4 and up.

While they arent gene therapies, Sarepta also has two FDA-approved genetic medicines: Exondys51 (eteplirsen) and Vyondys53 (golodirsen). Both employ exon skipping, redirecting DNA processing inside the muscle cells to create minidystrophin right in the cells much like the researchers did in the lab, but directly in the children themselves. They also have 12 other exon skipping-based genetic medicines in their pipeline.

The problem is exon skipping, in its current form, is not very efficient and each therapy only works in a subset of children with certain gene mutations, Hesterlee commented. Gene therapy is more efficient and covers everyone, regardless of genetic mutations, but its still good to have options while new therapies are in development.

Pfizers gene therapy drug, called PF-06939926, is an AAV9 virus carrying a minidystrophin gene. The companys most recent Phase Ib results were released in May at the ASGCT meeting (abstract no. 617). Although the Phase I trial is not placebo controlled, they can compare treated children to the known natural history of DMD. According to the companys press release, preliminary data from nine boys with DMD (ages 6-12) showed the therapy was well-tolerated during intravenous infusion.

At 12 months post-injection, the boys had sustained, significant improvement in minidystrophin expression and improved muscle function (measured via the NSAA rating scale). The three patients receiving the low dose (1E14 vg/kg) had a mean percent dystrophin expression in muscles of 28.5 percent at two months and 21.2 percent at 12 months, compared to the six patients receiving the high dose (3E14 vg/kg) had 48.4 percent dystrophin expression at two months, three of whom had 50.6 percent at 12 months.

Three serious adverse events (SAEs) occurred, but they fully resolved within two weeks. Pfizer plans to begin a Phase III study with PF-06939926 by the end of 2020.

Both Sarepta and Pfizer have collected some promising functional data, commented Hesterlee. It is very likely that one or both of these gene therapies could be approved.

This opens up the door for combination therapies, such as gene therapies to stabilize the muscle and small molecule drugs to deal with downstream events like fibrosis and inflammation, Hesterlee concluded. It could convert this disease from a devastating diagnosis to a manageable disease in the next 10 years.

Check out the MDAs Facebook Live Q&A event MDA Frontline COVID-19 Response: Back-to-School in the Midst of COVID-19 Concerns for the Neuromuscular Disease Community with Dr. Christopher Rosa and Justin Moy. Tune in live this Friday, July 31 at 3pm ET to join the discussion.

Read more here:

The Time for DMD Gene Therapy is Now: A Chat with the MDA - BioSpace

Gene Therapy Beats the Blood-Brain Barrier To Cure Cat Disease – Technology Networks

A lone genetic mutation can cause a life-changing disorder with effects on multiple body systems. Lysosomal storage diseases, for example, of which there are dozens, arise due to single mutations that affect production of critical enzymes required to metabolize large molecules in cells. These disorders affect multiple organs including, notably, the brain, causing intellectual disability of varying degrees.Gene therapy holds promise to address these conditions, but the brains own protective mechanism the blood-brain barrier has been a formidable challenge for researchers working to develop one.

In a new study published in the journal Brain, a team led by John H. Wolfe, a researcher with Penns School of Veterinary Medicine and Perelman School of Medicine and the Childrens Hospital of Philadelphia, successfully applied a gene therapy platform to completely correct brain defects in a large animal model of a human genetic disease.

This is the first example of a large-brain mammal with a bona fide human genetic disease that has intellectual disability as part of the human syndrome where weve been able to correct the biochemistry and pathologic lesions in the whole brain, says Wolfe.

Wolfe has worked on models of human genetic diseases that impact the brain for many years. With gene therapy, a delivery vehicle typically a viral vector is used to provide the normal version of a mutated gene to correct a condition. Wolfe and other scientists working in this area have made steady progress to treat neurogenetic diseases in rodents. However, applying the same treatment to the much larger brain of higher mammals has only been able to produce partial corrections.

Theres been a lot of excitement for the last 10 years or so that specific vectors can be injected into the blood and enter the brain, says Wolfe. They do cross the blood-brain barrier. One such treatment with restricted distribution has been effective in treating a disease that primarily affects the spinal cord.

And while scientists have shown these therapies can reverse the pathology throughout the brains of mice, its been hard to judge what effect it would have in patients, as the rodent brains have a much smaller cerebral cortex than larger mammals, like humans.

In the current study, the team used an animal model with a brain more similar to humans, cats, to assess the effectiveness of a gene-correcting therapy for one type of lysosomal storage disease: a condition called alpha-mannosidosis, which naturally occurs in cats and results from a mutated copy of the alpha-mannosidase gene.

Having refined the gene delivery technique during many years of work, the researchers selected a specific vector that they showed, in mice, was capable of crossing the blood-brain barrier to reach sites throughout the brain.

They next delivered the vector, containing a reporter gene, to normal cats. Several weeks later, they were able to find evidence that the corrected gene had distributed to various parts of the brain, including the cerebral cortex, hippocampus, and mid-brain.

Finally the research team assessed the therapy in cats with alpha-mannosidosis, using either a low or high dose of the vector. They injected the therapy into the carotid artery, so that it would go directly to the brain before traveling to other parts of the body. Compared to untreated cats, treated animals had a significant delayed onset of certain neurological symptoms and a longer lifespan; those that received the higher dose of the vector delivered through the carotid artery lived the longest.

Its a big advance, says Wolfe. Nobody has been able to treat the whole brain of a large-brained animal before. Were hopeful that this will translate into clinical use in humans.

Wolfe cautions, however, the findings dont amount to a cure.

These were significant improvements, but they were only just improvements on a serious condition, Wolfe says. The cats werent cured, and we dont know what impact this has on mental ability. However, since the pathology is found throughout the brain, it is thought that complete correction will be necessary.

As alpha-mannosidosis is a childhood-onset disease with no cure, however, any improvements that lessen the severity of symptoms are welcome. The approach the researchers developed may potentially be employed to treat many other diseases that affect the whole central nervous system.

In future work, Wolfe and his collaborators hope to refine their methods to achieve the same outcomes with a lower dose, making an effective treatment safer as well as more affordable. And they will continue to work to understand the details of why their treatment works, including precisely how the vector travels through the brain, a line of investigation that could shed light on additional strategies to address these serious disorders.

This article has been republished from the following materials. Note: material may have been edited for length and content. For further information, please contact the cited source.

Link:

Gene Therapy Beats the Blood-Brain Barrier To Cure Cat Disease - Technology Networks

World-first gene therapy reverses Alzheimer’s memory loss in mice – New Atlas

Scientists in Australia have made an exciting breakthrough in Alzheimers research, demonstrating what they describe as the first gene-therapy-based approach for treating advanced forms of the disease. Through experiments in mice, the team was able to show how activating a key enzyme in the brain can prevent the kind of memory loss associated with advanced forms of Alzheimer's, and even reverse it.

The research was carried out at Macquarie University, where dementia researchers and brothers Lars and Arne Ittner were investigating the role of a key enzyme in the brain called p38gamma. Through previous research, the brothers had shown that by activating this enzyme in mice with advanced dementia, they could modify a protein that prevents the development of Alzheimers symptoms.

Seeking to build on this, the scientists conducted experiments on mice with advanced Alzheimers disease to see not just how cognitive decline could be slowed, but how the function of this protective enzyme might be restored to normal levels for even greater benefit.

The naturally protective enzymatic activity in the brain is unfortunately lost the further you progress down the Alzheimers disease track so the more memory you lose, the more you also lose this natural protective effect, says Lars Ittner.

The researchers found that by introducing genetic material, they could activate the p38gamma enzyme in a way that not only stopped memory decline in the mice, but actively improved their memory despite the advanced nature of their disease.

We were completely surprised, says Lars Ittner. They actually recovered their memory function and their ability to learn returned. So, two months after we treated the mice at very old ages, these mice suddenly behaved like their normal siblings. We were really stoked. There is no comparable therapy out there and no other gene therapy either.

Macquarie University

While exciting, there is a lot to play out before we see this kind of therapy enter clinical use. Work is underway on determining the best pathway toward clinical trials with the team eyeing commercialization thereafter, possibly five to 10 years down the track. And the technique's potential mightnt end with Alzheimers, with the team hopeful it could prove useful in treating other dementia-related diseases, such as fronto-temporal dementia, which typically affects younger people between the ages of 40 and 65.

The brain is a black box and some days we get lucky and get glimpses of how it functions and we learn we can interfere with the mechanism in this black box, says Arne Ittner. Now we have detailed understanding of the mechanisms involved down to the amino acids, which is just quite unprecedented.

A paper detailing the discovery will be published in the journal Acta Neuropathologica in September, while you can hear from the researchers in the video below.

New hope as dementia therapy reverses memory loss

Source: Macquarie University

Read the rest here:

World-first gene therapy reverses Alzheimer's memory loss in mice - New Atlas