Ledley F D, Woo S L, Ferry G D, Whisennand H H, Brandt M L, Darlington G J, Demmler G J, Finegold M J, Pokorny W J, Rosenblatt H
Baylor College of Medicine, Department of Cell Biology, Houston, TX.
Hum Gene Ther. 1991 Winter;2(4):331-58. doi: 10.1089/hum.1991.2.4-331.
Orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT) represents the only therapeutic option for many patients with end-stage liver disease as well as many inborn genetic errors of hepatic metabolism. Despite dramatic progress in methods for OLT, the utilization of this procedure is limited by its considerable morbidity and mortality, by a chronic shortage of organs for transplant, and by difficulty arranging funding for many patients. Many children with fulminant hepatic failure do not receive OLT because this technology is unavailable or unaffordable. Hepatocellular transplantation (HCT), in which isolated, heterologous hepatocytes from a donor liver would be infused into the diseased organ in order to provide essential hepatic functions, could provide a much needed therapeutic alternative to OLT in the treatment of some causes of hepatic insufficiency. Experiments in animals have demonstrated that several genetic deficiencies of hepatic metabolism as well as experimental induced hepatic failure in animals can be reversed by HCT. Despite this experience, HCT has never been attempted in human subjects. This protocol represents the first proposed clinical trial of HCT. We are proposing a clinical trial in which HCT would be attempted as a therapeutic intervention in children with acute hepatic failure who have no other medical or surgical options. This proposal is intended to establish surgical methods for HCT and to evaluate the feasibility of this procedure for treating hepatic disease in humans. It is our expectation that HCT may provide short-term support for patients awaiting organ availability, a "bridge to recovery" allowing patients with fulminant hepatic failure to recover, or a long-term repopulation of the patient's liver with healthy donor cells. One of the major limitations of many animal studies in HCT is that, since the donor hepatocytes are often indistinguishable from those of the host, it has often been difficult to demonstrate a clear correlation between engraftment and the therapeutic effect. In order to verify engraftment independent of the therapeutic response, we propose to "mark" the donor hepatocytes by transducing these cells with a recombinant retroviral vector (LNL6) carrying a marker gene (NEO-R, neomycin phosphoribosyl transferase). The presence of this marker will enhance the ability to identify transplanted cells in the host using assays for the NEO-R gene or transcribed NEO-R mRNA. The LNL6 vector has been approved for human use and has been used as a marker gene for transplanted cells in human subjects without any reported adverse effects. We would like to emphasize that this is a proposal with therapeutic intent.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
原位肝移植(OLT)是许多终末期肝病患者以及许多先天性肝脏代谢遗传缺陷患者的唯一治疗选择。尽管OLT技术取得了巨大进展,但该手术的应用受到其较高的发病率和死亡率、慢性器官移植短缺以及许多患者难以筹集资金的限制。许多暴发性肝衰竭儿童无法接受OLT,因为这项技术无法获得或负担不起。肝细胞移植(HCT)是将来自供体肝脏的分离的异源肝细胞注入患病器官,以提供基本肝功能,在治疗某些肝衰竭病因方面,HCT可能为OLT提供急需的治疗替代方案。动物实验表明,几种肝脏代谢的遗传缺陷以及动物实验性诱导的肝衰竭可通过HCT得到逆转。尽管有这些经验,但HCT从未在人体上进行过尝试。本方案是首次提出的HCT临床试验。我们提议进行一项临床试验,尝试将HCT作为对没有其他医疗或手术选择的急性肝衰竭儿童的治疗干预措施。该提议旨在建立HCT的手术方法,并评估该手术治疗人类肝病的可行性。我们期望HCT可为等待器官可用的患者提供短期支持,成为让暴发性肝衰竭患者康复的“康复桥梁”,或使患者肝脏长期被健康供体细胞重新填充。HCT许多动物研究的主要局限性之一是,由于供体肝细胞通常与宿主肝细胞难以区分,因此往往难以证明植入与治疗效果之间存在明确关联。为了独立于治疗反应来验证植入情况,我们提议用携带标记基因(NEO-R,新霉素磷酸核糖转移酶)的重组逆转录病毒载体(LNL6)转导供体肝细胞,从而“标记”这些细胞。该标记的存在将增强使用NEO-R基因或转录的NEO-R mRNA检测方法在宿主中识别移植细胞的能力。LNL6载体已获批准用于人体,并已用作人体移植细胞的标记基因,且无任何不良反应报告。我们想强调的是,这是一项具有治疗意图的提议。(摘要截选至400词)