Smogorzewska Elzbieta Monika, Weinberg Kenneth I, Kohn Donald B
Research Immunology, Children Hospital LA, Los Angeles, CA 90027, USA.
Med Wieku Rozwoj. 2003 Jan-Mar;7(1):27-34.
Children with severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) die within 2 years of age if untreated. The only effective treatment for SCID since 1968 is a hematopoetic stem cells (HSC) transplantation. Only 25% of patients have an HLA matched related donor, while the rest have to be transplanted with T cells depleted haploidentical parental bone marrow, unrelated bone marrow or unrelated umbilical cord blood. In many cases, however, despite a positive outcome, children are not achieving B cell reconstitution and require regular IV Ig infusion. Gene therapy with genetically modified autologous cells offers a cure with no immunological complications such as graft rejection, graft versus host disease (GVHD) or post-transplantation immunosuppressive therapy. The first gene therapy trials were introduced in 1990 for adenosine deaminase (ADA) deficient patients who had failed to respond to PEG-ADA. Since then, three clinical trials have evaluated the transplantation of ex-vivo transduced autologous haematopoietic stem cells (HSC) to treat ADA deficiency. One trial used only bone marrow HSC, a second used bone marrow plus peripheral blood T lymphocytes, and a third used umbilical cord blood HSC. These trials give promise but also define the present limitations of gene therapy. Future protocols might be adjusted according to the new observations that ADA-expressing T cells have a strong selective advantage over ADA-deficient T cells. PEG-ADA enzyme therapy might be therefore contraindicated. Another new strategy might involve moderate conditioning prior to the reinfusion of genetically modified CD34+ cells, "making space" for transplanted HSC. The first successful gene therapy was reported for treatment of X-linked severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID-X1) in Science 2000. Since then, the group at the Hopital Necker in Paris has treated 11 patients with ex-vivo gene therapy for the deficiency of the common g chain. All eleven boys are alive, however, one of them recently developed a leukaemia-like disease. This case is being investigated to determine whether the genetic manipulations of the patient's HSC could be the reason for mutagenesis and how other factors could have contributed to this unfortunate event.
重症联合免疫缺陷(SCID)患儿若不治疗,会在2岁前死亡。自1968年以来,SCID唯一有效的治疗方法是造血干细胞(HSC)移植。只有25%的患者有HLA匹配的相关供体,其余患者则必须接受去除T细胞的单倍体相合亲代骨髓、无关供体骨髓或无关脐血移植。然而,在许多情况下,尽管治疗结果良好,但患儿的B细胞仍未重建,需要定期静脉注射免疫球蛋白。用基因改造的自体细胞进行基因治疗可实现治愈,且无免疫并发症,如移植物排斥、移植物抗宿主病(GVHD)或移植后免疫抑制治疗。1990年首次对聚乙二醇化腺苷脱氨酶(PEG-ADA)治疗无效的腺苷脱氨酶(ADA)缺陷患者进行了基因治疗试验。从那时起,三项临床试验评估了体外转导的自体造血干细胞(HSC)移植治疗ADA缺陷的效果。一项试验仅使用骨髓HSC,第二项试验使用骨髓加外周血T淋巴细胞,第三项试验使用脐血HSC。这些试验带来了希望,但也明确了基因治疗目前的局限性。未来的方案可能会根据新的观察结果进行调整,即表达ADA的T细胞比ADA缺陷的T细胞具有很强的选择性优势。因此,PEG-ADA酶疗法可能是禁忌的。另一种新策略可能涉及在回输基因改造的CD34+细胞之前进行适度预处理,为移植的HSC“腾出空间”。2000年《科学》杂志报道了首例成功治疗X连锁重症联合免疫缺陷(SCID-X1)的基因治疗案例。从那时起,巴黎内克尔医院的团队对11名常见γ链缺陷患者进行了体外基因治疗。所有11名男孩都还活着,然而,其中一名最近患上了类似白血病的疾病。正在对该病例进行调查,以确定患者HSC的基因操作是否可能是诱变的原因,以及其他因素可能如何导致了这一不幸事件。