Nichols Timothy C, Dillow Aaron M, Franck Helen W G, Merricks Elizabeth P, Raymer Robin A, Bellinger Dwight A, Arruda Valder R, High Katherine A
Department of Pathology, Francis Owen Blood Research Laboratory, Laboratory Medicine at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, NC 27516-3114, USA.
ILAR J. 2009;50(2):144-67. doi: 10.1093/ilar.50.2.144.
Dogs with hemophilia A, hemophilia B, von Willebrand disease (VWD), and factor VII deficiency faithfully recapitulate the severe bleeding phenotype that occurs in humans with these disorders. The first rational approach to diagnosing these bleeding disorders became possible with the development of reliable assays in the 1940s through research that used these dogs. For the next 60 years, treatment consisted of replacement of the associated missing or dysfunctional protein, first with plasma-derived products and subsequently with recombinant products. Research has consistently shown that replacement products that are safe and efficacious in these dogs prove to be safe and efficacious in humans. But these highly effective products require repeated administration and are limited in supply and expensive; in addition, plasma-derived products have transmitted bloodborne pathogens. Recombinant proteins have all but eliminated inadvertent transmission of bloodborne pathogens, but the other limitations persist. Thus, gene therapy is an attractive alternative strategy in these monogenic disorders and has been actively pursued since the early 1990s. To date, several modalities of gene transfer in canine hemophilia have proven to be safe, produced easily detectable levels of transgene products in plasma that have persisted for years in association with reduced bleeding, and correctly predicted the vector dose required in a human hemophilia B liver-based trial. Very recently, however, researchers have identified an immune response to adeno-associated viral gene transfer vector capsid proteins in a human liver-based trial that was not present in preclinical testing in rodents, dogs, or nonhuman primates. This article provides a review of the strengths and limitations of canine hemophilia, VWD, and factor VII deficiency models and of their historical and current role in the development of improved therapy for humans with these inherited bleeding disorders.
患有甲型血友病、乙型血友病、血管性血友病(VWD)和凝血因子VII缺乏症的犬类忠实地再现了患有这些疾病的人类所出现的严重出血表型。随着20世纪40年代通过对这些犬类的研究开发出可靠的检测方法,首次有了诊断这些出血性疾病的合理方法。在接下来的60年里,治疗方法是补充相关缺失或功能失调的蛋白质,最初使用血浆衍生产品,随后使用重组产品。研究一直表明,在这些犬类中安全有效的替代产品在人类中也被证明是安全有效的。但这些高效产品需要反复给药,而且供应有限且价格昂贵;此外,血浆衍生产品还传播了血源性病原体。重组蛋白几乎消除了血源性病原体的意外传播,但其他局限性仍然存在。因此,基因治疗在这些单基因疾病中是一种有吸引力的替代策略,自20世纪90年代初以来一直在积极探索。迄今为止,犬类血友病的几种基因转移方式已被证明是安全的,在血浆中产生了易于检测到的转基因产物水平,这些产物与出血减少相关并持续了数年,并且正确预测了基于人乙型血友病肝脏试验所需的载体剂量。然而,最近研究人员在一项基于人肝脏的试验中发现了对腺相关病毒基因转移载体衣壳蛋白的免疫反应,而在啮齿动物、犬类或非人类灵长类动物的临床前测试中并未出现这种情况。本文综述了犬类血友病、VWD和凝血因子VII缺乏症模型的优势和局限性,以及它们在为患有这些遗传性出血性疾病的人类开发改进治疗方法中的历史和当前作用。