From the Neuromuscular and Neurogenetic Disorders of Childhood Section (D.X.B.-G., J.J.T., D.S., A.R.F., P.M., C.G.B), National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (G.N., T.L., J.D.H.), the Rehabilitation Medicine Department, Clinical Center (M.J., M.W.), National Eye Institute (W.M.Z., L.A.H.), and the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, Division of Intramural Research (E.M.K.), National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, and the Departments of Neurology (C.J.S., A.H., T.O.C.), Neuroscience (C.J.S., A.H.), and Pediatrics (T.O.C.), Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore - all in Maryland; Children's National Hospital, Washington, DC (D.X.B.-G.); the University of Iowa, Iowa City (D.S.); the Department of Pediatrics and Center for Alzheimer's and Neurodegenerative Diseases, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center (R.M.B, S.J.G.), and Taysha Gene Therapies (E.T.) - both in Dallas; the Gene Therapy Program, University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine, Philadelphia (J.A.C.), Cencora PharmaLex, Conshohocken (B.P.C.), and Atorus Research, Newtown Square (B.S.) - all in Pennsylvania; Affinia Therapeutics, Waltham (R.C.), and the Rare Disease Research Unit, Pfizer, Cambridge (L.C., D.R.) - both in Massachusetts; the Departments of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine (D.A., T.W.B.) and Radiology (D.A.), University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Medicine, Chapel Hill; and the Department of Pathology, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA (J.E.H.).
N Engl J Med. 2024 Mar 21;390(12):1092-1104. doi: 10.1056/NEJMoa2307952.
Giant axonal neuropathy is a rare, autosomal recessive, pediatric, polysymptomatic, neurodegenerative disorder caused by biallelic loss-of-function variants in , the gene encoding gigaxonin.
We conducted an intrathecal dose-escalation study of scAAV9/JeT-GAN (a self-complementary adeno-associated virus-based gene therapy containing the transgene) in children with giant axonal neuropathy. Safety was the primary end point. The key secondary clinical end point was at least a 95% posterior probability of slowing the rate of change (i.e., slope) in the 32-item Motor Function Measure total percent score at 1 year after treatment, as compared with the pretreatment slope.
One of four intrathecal doses of scAAV9/JeT-GAN was administered to 14 participants - 3.5×10 total vector genomes (vg) (in 2 participants), 1.2×10 vg (in 4), 1.8×10 vg (in 5), and 3.5×10 vg (in 3). During a median observation period of 68.7 months (range, 8.6 to 90.5), of 48 serious adverse events that had occurred, 1 (fever) was possibly related to treatment; 129 of 682 adverse events were possibly related to treatment. The mean pretreatment slope in the total cohort was -7.17 percentage points per year (95% credible interval, -8.36 to -5.97). At 1 year after treatment, posterior mean changes in slope were -0.54 percentage points (95% credible interval, -7.48 to 6.28) with the 3.5×10-vg dose, 3.23 percentage points (95% credible interval, -1.27 to 7.65) with the 1.2×10-vg dose, 5.32 percentage points (95% credible interval, 1.07 to 9.57) with the 1.8×10-vg dose, and 3.43 percentage points (95% credible interval, -1.89 to 8.82) with the 3.5×10-vg dose. The corresponding posterior probabilities for slowing the slope were 44% (95% credible interval, 43 to 44); 92% (95% credible interval, 92 to 93); 99% (95% credible interval, 99 to 99), which was above the efficacy threshold; and 90% (95% credible interval, 89 to 90). Between 6 and 24 months after gene transfer, sensory-nerve action potential amplitudes increased, stopped declining, or became recordable after being absent in 6 participants but remained absent in 8.
Intrathecal gene transfer with scAAV9/JeT-GAN for giant axonal neuropathy was associated with adverse events and resulted in a possible benefit in motor function scores and other measures at some vector doses over a year. Further studies are warranted to determine the safety and efficacy of intrathecal AAV-mediated gene therapy in this disorder. (Funded by the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke and others; ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT02362438.).
巨大轴索神经病是一种罕见的常染色体隐性遗传儿科多系统神经退行性疾病,由编码 gigaxonin 的 基因的双等位基因失活变异引起。
我们对患有巨大轴索神经病的儿童进行了 scAAV9/JeT-GAN(一种包含 转基因的自互补腺相关病毒为基础的基因治疗)鞘内递增剂量研究。安全性是主要终点。关键次要临床终点是与预处理斜率相比,治疗后 1 年 32 项运动功能测量总百分比评分的变化率(即斜率)至少有 95%的后验概率减慢,与预处理斜率相比。
在 14 名参与者中,给予了四种鞘内剂量的 scAAV9/JeT-GAN 之一 - 3.5×10 总载体基因组(vg)(在 2 名参与者中),1.2×10 vg(在 4 名参与者中),1.8×10 vg(在 5 名参与者中)和 3.5×10 vg(在 3 名参与者中)。在中位观察期 68.7 个月(范围 8.6 至 90.5)期间,48 例严重不良事件中有 1 例(发热)可能与治疗有关;682 例不良事件中有 129 例可能与治疗有关。总队列的平均预处理斜率为每年-7.17 个百分点(95%置信区间-8.36 至-5.97)。治疗后 1 年,斜率的后验平均变化为-0.54 个百分点(95%置信区间-7.48 至 6.28),3.5×10-vg 剂量为 3.23 个百分点(95%置信区间-1.27 至 7.65),1.2×10-vg 剂量为 5.32 个百分点(95%置信区间 1.07 至 9.57),1.8×10-vg 剂量为 3.43 个百分点(95%置信区间-1.89 至 8.82)。斜率减慢的相应后验概率为 44%(95%置信区间 43 至 44);92%(95%置信区间 92 至 93);99%(95%置信区间 99 至 99),高于疗效阈值;90%(95%置信区间 89 至 90)。在基因转移后 6 至 24 个月,感觉神经动作电位幅度增加,停止下降,或在 6 名参与者中消失后可记录,但在 8 名参与者中仍未消失。
鞘内基因转移 scAAV9/JeT-GAN 治疗巨大轴索神经病与不良事件相关,并在一些载体剂量下导致运动功能评分和其他指标在一年以上可能有获益。需要进一步的研究来确定鞘内 AAV 介导的基因治疗在这种疾病中的安全性和疗效。(由国立神经病学与中风研究所和其他机构资助;临床试验.gov 编号,NCT02362438。)