Jensen Thomas Leth, Gøtzsche Casper René, Woldbye David P D
Department of Neurology, Rigshospitalet University Hospital, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Department of Neuroscience, University of Copenhagen,Copenhagen, Denmark.
Front Mol Neurosci. 2021 Oct 6;14:695937. doi: 10.3389/fnmol.2021.695937. eCollection 2021.
In recent years, gene therapy has been raising hopes toward viable treatment strategies for rare genetic diseases for which there has been almost exclusively supportive treatment. We here review this progress at the pre-clinical and clinical trial levels as well as market approvals within diseases that specifically affect the brain and spinal cord, including degenerative, developmental, lysosomal storage, and metabolic disorders. The field reached an unprecedented milestone when Zolgensma® (onasemnogene abeparvovec) was approved by the FDA and EMA for adeno-associated virus-mediated gene replacement therapy for spinal muscular atrophy. Shortly after EMA approved Libmeldy®, an gene therapy with lentivirus vector-transduced autologous CD34-positive stem cells, for treatment of metachromatic leukodystrophy. These successes could be the first of many more new gene therapies in development that mostly target loss-of-function mutation diseases with gene replacement (e.g., Batten disease, mucopolysaccharidoses, gangliosidoses) or, less frequently, gain-of-toxic-function mutation diseases by gene therapeutic silencing of pathologic genes (e.g., amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, Huntington's disease). In addition, the use of genome editing as a gene therapy is being explored for some diseases, but this has so far only reached clinical testing in the treatment of mucopolysaccharidoses. Based on the large number of planned, ongoing, and completed clinical trials for rare genetic central nervous system diseases, it can be expected that several novel gene therapies will be approved and become available within the near future. Essential for this to happen is the in depth characterization of short- and long-term effects, safety aspects, and pharmacodynamics of the applied gene therapy platforms.
近年来,基因治疗为罕见遗传病带来了可行的治疗策略,此前这些疾病几乎只有支持性治疗。在此,我们回顾基因治疗在临床前和临床试验阶段的进展,以及在特定影响脑和脊髓的疾病(包括退行性疾病、发育性疾病、溶酶体贮积症和代谢紊乱)方面的市场批准情况。当Zolgensma®(onasemnogene abeparvovec)被美国食品药品监督管理局(FDA)和欧洲药品管理局(EMA)批准用于腺相关病毒介导的脊髓性肌萎缩症基因替代治疗时,该领域达到了一个前所未有的里程碑。EMA批准Libmeldy®(一种用慢病毒载体转导自体CD34阳性干细胞的基因疗法)用于治疗异染性脑白质营养不良后不久,又取得了另一项成功。这些成功可能只是众多正在研发的新基因疗法中的首批成果,这些疗法大多针对功能丧失性突变疾病进行基因替代治疗(如巴滕病、黏多糖贮积症、神经节苷脂贮积症),或较少针对通过对病理基因进行基因治疗性沉默来治疗功能获得性毒性突变疾病(如肌萎缩侧索硬化症、亨廷顿舞蹈症)。此外,基因组编辑作为一种基因治疗方法正在针对某些疾病进行探索,但迄今为止仅在黏多糖贮积症的治疗中进入了临床试验阶段。基于针对罕见遗传性中枢神经系统疾病的大量计划中、进行中和已完成的临床试验,可以预计在不久的将来会有几种新型基因疗法获得批准并上市。要实现这一点,深入了解所应用的基因治疗平台的短期和长期效果、安全性和药效学至关重要。