Sidney Kimmel Cancer Center at Johns Hopkins, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD; and.
Vanderbilt-Meharry Sickle Cell Disease Center of Excellence, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, TN.
Blood. 2021 Sep 16;138(11):942-947. doi: 10.1182/blood.2021011488.
Recently, encouraging data provided long-awaited hope for gene therapy as a cure for sickle cell disease (SCD). Nevertheless, the transient suspension of the bluebird bio gene therapy trial (clinicaltrials.gov: NCT02140554) after participants developed acute myeloid leukemia/myelodysplastic syndrome (AML/MDS) raised concerns. Potential possibilities for these cases include busulfan, insertional mutagenesis, both, or neither. Busulfan was considered the cause in the first reported case because the transgene was not present in the AML/MDS. However, busulfan is unlikely to have contributed to the most recent case. The transgene was present in the patient's malignant cells, indicating they were infused after busulfan treatment. Several lines of evidence suggest an alternative explanation for events in the bluebird bio trial, including that SCD population studies show an increased relative, but a low absolute, risk of AML/MDS. We propose a new hypothesis: after gene therapy for SCD, the stress of switching from homeostatic to regenerative hematopoiesis by transplanted cells drives clonal expansion and leukemogenic transformation of preexisting premalignant clones, eventually resulting in AML/MDS. Evidence validating our hypothesis will support prescreening individuals with SCD for preleukemic progenitors before gene therapy. While presumed viable, safe strategy has been implemented to resume gene therapy in adults with severe SCD, reasonable alternative curative therapy should be considered for children and adults with severe SCD. Currently, open multicenter clinical trials are incorporating nonmyeloablative conditioning, related haploidentical donors, and posttransplantation cyclophosphamide. Preliminary results from these trials appear promising, and National Institutes of Health-sponsored trials are ongoing in individuals with SCD using this platform.
最近,令人鼓舞的数据为镰状细胞病(SCD)的基因治疗带来了治愈的希望。然而,在参与者出现急性髓系白血病/骨髓增生异常综合征(AML/MDS)后,蓝鸟生物基因治疗试验(clinicaltrials.gov:NCT02140554)暂时中止,这引起了人们的关注。这些病例的潜在可能性包括白消安、插入突变、两者兼有或两者都没有。在首例报告的病例中,白消安被认为是导致这种情况的原因,因为 AML/MDS 中不存在转基因。然而,白消安不太可能导致最近的病例。转基因存在于患者的恶性细胞中,表明它们是在白消安治疗后输注的。有几条证据表明,蓝鸟生物试验中的事件有另一种解释,包括 SCD 人群研究表明 AML/MDS 的相对风险增加,但绝对风险较低。我们提出了一个新的假设:在 SCD 的基因治疗后,移植细胞从稳态向再生造血的转变所带来的压力,驱动了预先存在的癌前克隆的克隆扩张和白血病转化,最终导致 AML/MDS。验证我们假设的证据将支持在基因治疗前对 SCD 个体进行前白血病祖细胞的预筛选。虽然认为可行且安全的策略已被实施,以恢复严重 SCD 成人的基因治疗,但对于儿童和严重 SCD 的成人,应考虑合理的替代治疗方法。目前,正在进行的多中心临床试验包括非清髓性预处理、相关半相合供体和移植后环磷酰胺。这些试验的初步结果似乎很有希望,美国国立卫生研究院(NIH)赞助的试验正在使用这一平台对 SCD 个体进行。