Davies Jane C, Polineni Deepika, Boyd A Christopher, Donaldson Scott, Gill Deborah R, Griesenbach Uta, Hyde Stephen C, Jain Raksha, McLachlan Gerry, Mall Marcus A, Alton Eric W F W
National Heart and Lung Institute, Imperial College London, London, United Kingdom.
U.K. Respiratory Gene Therapy Consortium, Oxford, United Kingdom.
Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2024 Dec 15;210(12):1398-1408. doi: 10.1164/rccm.202402-0389CI.
Cystic fibrosis (CF) is a genetic disease caused by mutations in the (cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator) gene. Although CF is a multiorgan disease, the leading causes of morbidity and mortality are related to progressive lung disease. Current understanding of the effects of the broad spectrum of mutations on CFTR function has allowed for the development of CFTR modulator therapies. Despite the remarkable impact that these therapies have had, there remains a significant proportion of people with CF (estimated at 10-15% of the global CF population) who are genetically ineligible for, or intolerant of, current CFTR-targeting therapies and whose therapeutic needs remain unmet. Inhaled genetic therapies offer the prospect of addressing the unmet pulmonary treatment need in people with CF, with several approaches, including gene addition therapy (the focus of this review), RNA-based therapies, antisense oligonucleotides, and gene editing, being explored. Various nonviral and viral vectors have been investigated for CF gene addition therapy for mutation-agnostic restoration of CFTR function in the lungs. Lentiviral vectors offer the prospect of highly efficient and long-lasting gene expression, and the potential to be safely and, in contrast to other commonly used viral vectors, effectively redosed. A third-generation lentiviral vector pseudotyped with Sendai virus F and HN envelope proteins (rSIV.F/HN) has been developed for the treatment of CF. Promising preclinical results support the progression of this vector carrying a full-length transgene (BI 3720931) into a first-in-human clinical trial expected to begin in 2024.
囊性纤维化(CF)是一种由囊性纤维化跨膜传导调节因子(CFTR)基因突变引起的遗传性疾病。尽管CF是一种多器官疾病,但其发病和死亡的主要原因与进行性肺部疾病有关。目前对广泛的CFTR基因突变对CFTR功能影响的理解,使得CFTR调节剂疗法得以发展。尽管这些疗法产生了显著影响,但仍有相当一部分CF患者(估计占全球CF患者的10%-15%)在基因上不符合当前CFTR靶向疗法的条件,或对其不耐受,他们的治疗需求仍未得到满足。吸入式基因疗法为解决CF患者未得到满足的肺部治疗需求带来了希望,目前正在探索多种方法,包括基因添加疗法(本综述的重点)、基于RNA的疗法、反义寡核苷酸和基因编辑。已经对各种非病毒和病毒载体进行了研究,用于CF基因添加疗法,以在肺部实现与突变无关的CFTR功能恢复。慢病毒载体具有高效和持久基因表达的前景,并且与其他常用病毒载体相比,具有安全且可有效重新给药的潜力。一种用仙台病毒F和HN包膜蛋白假型化的第三代慢病毒载体(rSIV.F/HN)已被开发用于治疗CF。有前景的临床前结果支持将这种携带全长CFTR转基因的载体(BI 3720931)推进到预计2024年开始的首次人体临床试验。