Forster Rachel, Liew Aaron, Bhattacharya Vish, Shaw James, Stansby Gerard
Usher Institute of Population Health Sciences and Informatics, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK, EH8 9AG.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2018 Oct 31;10(10):CD012058. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD012058.pub2.
Peripheral arterial disease (PAD), caused by narrowing of the arteries in the limbs, is increasing in incidence and prevalence as our population is ageing and as diabetes is becoming more prevalent. PAD can cause pain in the limbs while walking, known as intermittent claudication, or can be more severe and cause pain while at rest, ulceration, and ultimately gangrene and limb loss. This more severe stage of PAD is known as 'critical limb ischaemia'. Treatments for PAD include medications that help to reduce the increased risk of cardiovascular events and help improve blood flow, as well as endovascular or surgical repair or bypass of the blocked arteries. However, many people are unresponsive to medications and are not suited to surgical or endovascular treatment, leaving amputation as the last option. Gene therapy is a novel approach in which genetic material encoding for proteins that may help increase revascularisation is injected into the affected limbs of patients. This type of treatment has been shown to be safe, but its efficacy, especially regarding ulcer healing, effects on quality of life, and other symptomatic outcomes remain unknown.
To assess the effects of gene therapy for symptomatic peripheral arterial disease.
The Cochrane Vascular Information Specialist searched Cochrane CENTRAL, the Cochrane Vascular Specialised Register, MEDLINE Ovid, Embase Ovid, CINAHL, and AMED, along with trials registries (all searched 27 November 2017). We also checked reference lists of included studies and systematic reviews for further studies.
We included randomised and quasi-randomised studies that evaluated gene therapy versus no gene therapy in people with PAD. We excluded studies that evaluated direct growth hormone treatment or cell-based treatments.
Two review authors independently selected studies, performed quality assessment, and extracted data from the included studies. We collected pertinent information on each study, as well as data for the outcomes of amputation-free survival, ulcer healing, quality of life, amputation, all-cause mortality, ankle brachial index, symptom scores, and claudication distance.
We included in this review a total of 17 studies with 1988 participants (evidence current until November 2017). Three studies limited their inclusion to people with intermittent claudication, 12 limited inclusion to people with varying levels of critical limb ischaemia, and two included people with either condition. Study investigators evaluated many different types of gene therapies, using different protocols. Most studies evaluated growth factor-encoding gene therapy, with six studies using vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF)-encoding genes, four using hepatocyte growth factor (HGF)-encoding genes, and three using fibroblast growth factor (FGF)-encoded genes. Two studies evaluated hypoxia-inducible factor 1-alpha (HIF-1α) gene therapy, one study used a developmental endothelial locus-1 gene therapy, and the final study evaluated a stromal cell-derived factor-1 (SDF-1) gene therapy. Most studies reported outcomes after 12 months of follow-up, but follow-up ranged from three months to two years.Overall risk of bias varied between studies, with many studies not providing sufficient detail for adequate determination of low risk of bias for many domains. Two studies did not utilise a placebo control, leading to risk of performance bias. Several studies reported in previous protocols or in their Methods sections that they would report on certain outcomes for which no data were then reported, increasing risk of reporting bias. All included studies reported sponsorships from corporate entities that led to unclear risk of other bias. The overall quality of evidence ranged from moderate to very low, generally as the result of heterogeneity and imprecision, with few or no studies reporting on outcomes.Evidence suggests no clear differences for the outcomes of amputation-free survival, major amputation, and all-cause mortality between those treated with gene therapy and those not receiving this treatment (all moderate-quality evidence). Low-quality evidence suggests improvement in complete ulcer healing with gene therapy (odds ratio (OR) 2.16, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.02 to 4.59; P = 0.04). We could not combine data on quality of life and can draw no conclusions at this time regarding this outcome (very low-quality evidence). We included one study in the meta-analysis for ankle brachial index, which showed no clear differences between treatments, but we can draw no overall association (low-quality evidence). We combined in a meta-analysis pain symptom scores as assessed by visual analogue scales from two studies and found no clear differences between treatment groups (very low-quality evidence). We carried out extensive subgroup analyses by PAD classification, dosage schedule, vector type, and gene used but identified no substantial differences.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Moderate-quality evidence shows no clear differences in amputation-free survival, major amputation, and all-cause mortality between those treated with gene therapy and those not receiving gene therapy. Some evidence suggests that gene therapy may lead to improved complete ulcer healing, but this outcome needs to be explored with improved reporting of the measure, such as decreased ulcer area in cm², and better description of ulcer types and healing. Further standardised data that are amenable to meta-analysis are needed to evaluate other outcomes such as quality of life, ankle brachial index, symptom scores, and claudication distance.
随着人口老龄化和糖尿病患病率上升,由四肢动脉狭窄引起的外周动脉疾病(PAD)的发病率和患病率正在增加。PAD可导致行走时肢体疼痛,即间歇性跛行,或病情更严重时导致静息痛、溃疡,最终导致坏疽和肢体丧失。PAD的这种更严重阶段被称为“严重肢体缺血”。PAD的治疗方法包括有助于降低心血管事件风险增加并改善血流的药物,以及对阻塞动脉进行血管内或手术修复或搭桥。然而,许多人对药物无反应且不适合手术或血管内治疗,截肢成为最后的选择。基因治疗是一种新方法,即将编码可能有助于增加血管再生的蛋白质的遗传物质注入患者的受影响肢体。这种治疗方法已被证明是安全的,但其疗效,尤其是关于溃疡愈合、对生活质量的影响以及其他症状性结果仍不明确。
评估基因治疗对有症状外周动脉疾病的影响。
Cochrane血管信息专家检索了Cochrane中心对照试验注册库、Cochrane血管专业注册库、MEDLINE(Ovid平台)、Embase(Ovid平台)、CINAHL和AMED,以及试验注册库(均检索至2017年11月27日)。我们还检查了纳入研究和系统评价的参考文献列表以寻找更多研究。
我们纳入了评估基因治疗与未进行基因治疗对比的随机和半随机研究,研究对象为患有PAD的人群。我们排除了评估直接生长激素治疗或基于细胞治疗的研究。
两位综述作者独立选择研究、进行质量评估并从纳入研究中提取数据。我们收集了每项研究的相关信息,以及无截肢生存、溃疡愈合、生活质量、截肢、全因死亡率、踝肱指数、症状评分和跛行距离等结局的数据。
本综述共纳入17项研究,1988名参与者(证据截至2017年11月)。3项研究仅纳入间歇性跛行患者,12项研究仅纳入不同程度严重肢体缺血患者,2项研究纳入了这两种情况的患者。研究调查人员评估了许多不同类型的基因治疗,采用了不同的方案。大多数研究评估了编码生长因子的基因治疗,6项研究使用编码血管内皮生长因子(VEGF)的基因,4项使用编码肝细胞生长因子(HGF)的基因,3项使用编码成纤维细胞生长因子(FGF)的基因。2项研究评估了缺氧诱导因子1-α(HIF-1α)基因治疗,1项研究使用发育性内皮位点-1基因治疗,最后1项研究评估了基质细胞衍生因子-1(SDF-1)基因治疗。大多数研究报告了12个月随访后的结局,但随访时间从3个月到2年不等。各研究之间的总体偏倚风险各不相同,许多研究未提供足够细节以充分确定许多领域的低偏倚风险。2项研究未使用安慰剂对照,导致存在实施偏倚风险。几项研究在之前的方案或方法部分报告称他们将报告某些结局,但之后未报告相关数据,增加了报告偏倚风险。所有纳入研究均报告接受了企业实体的资助,导致其他偏倚风险不明确。总体证据质量从中等到极低,通常是由于异质性和不精确性,很少或没有研究报告结局。证据表明,接受基因治疗和未接受基因治疗的患者在无截肢生存、大截肢和全因死亡率结局方面无明显差异(均为中等质量证据)。低质量证据表明基因治疗可改善溃疡完全愈合情况(比值比(OR)2.16,95%置信区间(CI)为1.02至4.59;P = 0.04)。我们无法合并生活质量数据,目前无法就此结局得出结论(极低质量证据)。我们在踝肱指数的荟萃分析中纳入了1项研究,结果显示治疗组之间无明显差异,但我们无法得出总体关联(低质量证据)。我们对两项研究通过视觉模拟量表评估的疼痛症状评分进行了荟萃分析,发现治疗组之间无明显差异(极低质量证据)。我们按PAD分类、给药方案、载体类型和使用的基因进行了广泛的亚组分析,但未发现实质性差异。
中等质量证据表明,接受基因治疗和未接受基因治疗的患者在无截肢生存、大截肢和全因死亡率方面无明显差异。一些证据表明基因治疗可能会改善溃疡完全愈合情况,但这一结局需要通过改进测量报告(如以平方厘米为单位减少溃疡面积)以及更好地描述溃疡类型和愈合情况来进一步探索。需要进一步标准化且适合进行荟萃分析的数据来评估其他结局,如生活质量、踝肱指数、症状评分和跛行距离。