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AAV gene therapy for Tay-Sachs disease.

Terence R FlotteOguz CataltepeAjit PuriAna Rita BatistaRichard MoserDiane McKenna-YasekCatherine DouthwrightGwladys GernouxMeghan BlackwoodChristian MuellerPhillip W L TaiXuntian JiangScot BatemanSpiro G SpanakisJulia ParzychAllison M KeelerAly AbayazeedSaurabh RohatgiLaura GibsonRobert FinbergBruce A BartonZeynep VardarMohammed Salman ShazeebMatthew J GounisCynthia J TifftFlorian S EichlerRobert H BrownDouglas R MartinHeather L Gray-EdwardsMiguel Sena-Esteves
Published in: Nature medicine (2022)
Tay-Sachs disease (TSD) is an inherited neurological disorder caused by deficiency of hexosaminidase A (HexA). Here, we describe an adeno-associated virus (AAV) gene therapy expanded-access trial in two patients with infantile TSD (IND 18225) with safety as the primary endpoint and no secondary endpoints. Patient TSD-001 was treated at 30 months with an equimolar mix of AAVrh8-HEXA and AAVrh8-HEXB administered intrathecally (i.t.), with 75% of the total dose (1 × 10 14 vector genomes (vg)) in the cisterna magna and 25% at the thoracolumbar junction. Patient TSD-002 was treated at 7 months by combined bilateral thalamic (1.5 × 10 12 vg per thalamus) and i.t. infusion (3.9 × 10 13 vg). Both patients were immunosuppressed. Injection procedures were well tolerated, with no vector-related adverse events (AEs) to date. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) HexA activity increased from baseline and remained stable in both patients. TSD-002 showed disease stabilization by 3 months after injection with ongoing myelination, a temporary deviation from the natural history of infantile TSD, but disease progression was evident at 6 months after treatment. TSD-001 remains seizure-free at 5 years of age on the same anticonvulsant therapy as before therapy. TSD-002 developed anticonvulsant-responsive seizures at 2 years of age. This study provides early safety and proof-of-concept data in humans for treatment of patients with TSD by AAV gene therapy.
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