Lentiviral globin gene therapy with reduced-intensity conditioning in adults with β-thalassemia: a phase 1 trial

Farid Boulad, Aurelio Maggio, Xiuyan Wang, Paolo Moi, Santina Acuto, Friederike Kogel, Chayamon Takpradit, Susan Prockop, Jorge Mansilla-Soto, Annalisa Cabriolu, Ashlesha Odak, Jinrong Qu, Keyur Thummar, Fang Du, Lingbo Shen, Simona Raso, Rita Barone, Rosario Di Maggio, Lorella Pitrolo, Antonino GiambonaMaura Mingoia, John K. Everett, Pascha Hokama, Aoife M. Roche, Vito Adrian Cantu, Hriju Adhikari, Shantan Reddy, Eric Bouhassira, Narla Mohandas, Frederic D. Bushman, Isabelle Rivière, Michel Sadelain

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

27 Scopus citations

Abstract

β-Thalassemias are inherited anemias that are caused by the absent or insufficient production of the β chain of hemoglobin. Here we report 6–8-year follow-up of four adult patients with transfusion-dependent β-thalassemia who were infused with autologous CD34+ cells transduced with the TNS9.3.55 lentiviral globin vector after reduced-intensity conditioning (RIC) in a phase 1 clinical trial (NCT01639690). Patients were monitored for insertional mutagenesis and the generation of a replication-competent lentivirus (safety and tolerability of the infusion product after RIC—primary endpoint) and engraftment of genetically modified autologous CD34+ cells, expression of the transduced β-globin gene and post-transplant transfusion requirements (efficacy—secondary endpoint). No unexpected safety issues occurred during conditioning and cell product infusion. Hematopoietic gene marking was very stable but low, reducing transfusion requirements in two patients, albeit not achieving transfusion independence. Our findings suggest that non-myeloablative conditioning can achieve durable stem cell engraftment but underscore a minimum CD34+ cell transduction requirement for effective therapy. Moderate clonal expansions were associated with integrations near cancer-related genes, suggestive of non-erythroid activity of globin vectors in stem/progenitor cells. These correlative findings highlight the necessity of cautiously monitoring patients harboring globin vectors.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)63-70
Number of pages8
JournalNature Medicine
Volume28
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 2022

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

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