Sustained correction of FVII deficiency in dogs using AAV-mediated expression of zymogen FVII

Factor VII (FVII) deficiency is a rare autosomal recessive bleeding disorder treated by infusion of fresh-frozen plasma, plasma-derived FVII concentrates and low-dose recombinant activated FVII. Clinical data suggest that a mild elevation of plasma FVII levels (>10% normal) results in improved he...

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Veröffentlicht in:Blood 2016-02, Vol.127 (5), p.565-571
Hauptverfasser: Marcos-Contreras, Oscar A., Smith, Shannon M., Bellinger, Dwight A., Raymer, Robin A., Merricks, Elizabeth, Faella, Armida, Pavani, Giulia, Zhou, Shangzhen, Nichols, Timothy C., High, Katherine A., Margaritis, Paris
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Factor VII (FVII) deficiency is a rare autosomal recessive bleeding disorder treated by infusion of fresh-frozen plasma, plasma-derived FVII concentrates and low-dose recombinant activated FVII. Clinical data suggest that a mild elevation of plasma FVII levels (>10% normal) results in improved hemostasis. Research dogs with a G96E missense FVII mutation (FVII-G96E) have 1 year (ongoing) without antibody formation to the cFVII transgene. Sustained and supraphysiological expression of 770% normal was observed using 4.95E13 vg/kg of AAV (2.6 years, ongoing). No evidence of pathological activation of coagulation or detrimental animal physiology was observed as platelet counts, d-dimer, fibrinogen levels, and serum chemistries remained normal in all dogs (cumulative 6.4 years). We observed a transient and noninhibitory immunoglobulin G class 2 response against cFVII only in the dog receiving the highest AAV dose. In conclusion, in the only large-animal model representing the majority of FVII mutation types, our data are first to demonstrate the feasibility, safety, and long-term duration of AAV-mediated correction of FVII deficiency. •Dogs with an FVII G96E mutation (FVII-G96E) represent the most common human FVII mutation type and are ideal for testing new therapies.•cFVII gene delivery in FVII-G96E dogs via AAV at a dose effective in humans showed stable and clinically therapeutic FVII expression.
ISSN:0006-4971
1528-0020
DOI:10.1182/blood-2015-09-671420