Long-Term Tolerance and Recovery of β-Propiolactone/Ultraviolet (βPL/UV) Treated PPSB in Chimpanzees

1981 ◽  
Vol 46 (02) ◽  
pp. 511-514 ◽  
Author(s):  
W Stephan ◽  
R Kotitschke ◽  
A M Prince ◽  
B Brotman

SummaryRecent experiments have shown that a preparation of PPSB (factor IX concentrate) derived from βPL/UV treated plasma was not infectious in chimpanzees with respect to hepatitis B and non-A, non-B. To answer the question whether the βPL/UV treatment influences the tolerance and efficacy of the PPSB concentrate, long-term application of PPSB-Biotest was carried out in chimpanzees. After 10 applications of 25 U factor IX/kg at weekly intervals, no signs of intolerance were observed by measurement of blood pressure during i. v. application and by means of skin-testing. Determination of coagulation factor activity during the application period revealed the same factor IX recovery at the beginning and at the end of the study.

1981 ◽  
Author(s):  
W Stephan ◽  
A M Prince ◽  
R Kotitschke

Recent experiments have shown, that PPSB (factor IX-concentrate) derived from ß-propiolactone/ultraviolet (ß-PL/UV)-treated (cold sterilized)plasma is not infectious in chimpanzees in respect to hepatitis B and Non A-Non B. To answer the question whether the B-PL/UV treatment influences the tolerance and efficacy of the cold sterilized PPSB- concentrate, long term application of PPSB-Biotest was performed in chimpanzees.After 12 applications of 25 units factor IX/kg in weekly intervals no signs of intolerance were observed by means of skintesting and observation of blood pressure during i.v. application. Determination of coagulation factor activity during the application period shows the same factor IX- recovery at the beginning and at the end of the study.


2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (14) ◽  
pp. 7647
Author(s):  
E. Carlos Rodríguez-Merchán ◽  
Juan Andres De Pablo-Moreno ◽  
Antonio Liras

Hemophilia is a monogenic mutational disease affecting coagulation factor VIII or factor IX genes. The palliative treatment of choice is based on the use of safe and effective recombinant clotting factors. Advanced therapies will be curative, ensuring stable and durable concentrations of the defective circulating factor. Results have so far been encouraging in terms of levels and times of expression using mainly adeno-associated vectors. However, these therapies are associated with immunogenicity and hepatotoxicity. Optimizing the vector serotypes and the transgene (variants) will boost clotting efficacy, thus increasing the viability of these protocols. It is essential that both physicians and patients be informed about the potential benefits and risks of the new therapies, and a register of gene therapy patients be kept with information of the efficacy and long-term adverse events associated with the treatments administered. In the context of hemophilia, gene therapy may result in (particularly indirect) cost savings and in a more equitable allocation of treatments. In the case of hemophilia A, further research is needed into how to effectively package the large factor VIII gene into the vector; and in the case of hemophilia B, the priority should be to optimize both the vector serotype, reducing its immunogenicity and hepatotoxicity, and the transgene, boosting its clotting efficacy so as to minimize the amount of vector administered and decrease the incidence of adverse events without compromising the efficacy of the protein expressed.


Blood ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 110 (11) ◽  
pp. 496-496 ◽  
Author(s):  
Junjiang Sun ◽  
Narine Hakobyan ◽  
Leonard A. Valentino ◽  
Paul E. Monahan

Abstract Hemophilic arthropathy is the major morbidity of congenital factor VIII and IX deficiency. Therapies localized to hemophilic joints could provide adjunctive protection, in addition to that provided by systemic factor replacement. However, the ability of extravascular clotting factors to contribute to hemostatic protection within joint tissue is unknown. We hypothesized that replacing deficient factor VIII or IX within the injured joint capsule of mice with hemophilia A (FVIII −/ −) or hemophilia B (FIX −/ −), respectively, would decrease the progression of synovitis. We developed a bleeding model consisting of a unilateral knee joint capsule needle puncture to induce hemorrhage in hemophilic mice. Pathology of the joint at two weeks after the injury is graded 0 to 10 using a murine hemophilic synovitis grading system (Valentino, Hakobyan. Haemophilia, 2006). Hemostatically normal mice do not develop synovitis following this injury, but > 95% of FIX −/ − mice develop bleeding and synovitis with a mean grade of 3–4 or greater. Coincident with needle puncture, recombinant human coagulation factor doses ranging from 0 to 20 IU/kg body weight of factor IX or 0 to 25 IU/kg of factor VIII were instilled intraarticularly (I.A.). Comparison groups received the same injury and intravenous (I.V.) factor IX or VIII doses of 25 IU/kg to 100 IU/kg (n= 4–7 mice per study group). Joint bleeding phenotype of the two strains of mice was similar. Mice receiving only saline injection at the time of needle puncture developed mean synovitis scores of 5 ±0.5 in the FVIII −/ − mice and 6 ±0.5 in the FIX −/ − mice. Protection by human clotting factor in the mouse coagulation system was incomplete; mice receiving 100 IU/kg I.V. of factor VIII or factor IX developed synovitis scores of 2.6 ± 1.7 and 2.1 ± 0.2, respectively. In contrast, pathology grade of FVIII −/ − mice dosed with 25 IU/kg I.A. was 0.67 ± 0.3 (p = 0.05 for comparison of 25 IU/kg I.A. with 100 IU/kg IV); FIX−/ − mice receiving 20 IU/kg I.A. had synovitis scores of 0.45 ± 0.58 (p < 0.01 for comparison of 25 IU/kg I.A. with 100 IU/kg I.V.). We next ruled out the possibility that I.A. factor was entering the circulation, and via that route resulting in joint protection, either through technical error at the time of injection, or from a depot effect in the joint with late equilibration into the circulation. Additional groups of mice received factor VIII or IX intravenously at 100 IU/kg, or intraarticularly at 4 times the doses used in the hemarthrosis challenge (80 IU/kg FIX or 100 IU/kg FVIII), and factor activity assays were performed at 1, 4, 12, 24, and 48 hours. Expected circulation kinetics were seen following I.V. dosing; no increase in circulating factor VIII or IX activity were seen in the intraarticular dosing groups at any timepoint. In considering the potential immunogenicity of an intraarticular therapy approach for hemophilic joint therapy, factor VIII −/ − mice were treated with three doses of human factor VIII 100 IU/kg at five day intervals either I.V. or I.A. At two weeks after exposure, 5/5 I.V.-treated mice developed inhibitor antibodies with titers ranging 0.8–7.2 BU; 2/5 I.A.-treated mice had detectable low-titer antibodies (1.3 BU), indicating no greater immunogenicity in the I.A. model. Extravascular factor VIII and factor IX can contribute to protection against blood-induced joint deterioration; enhancing local tissue hemostasis with protein or gene therapy may prove a useful adjunct to systemic replacement.


Blood ◽  
2002 ◽  
Vol 99 (8) ◽  
pp. 2670-2676 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jane D. Mount ◽  
Roland W. Herzog ◽  
D. Michael Tillson ◽  
Susan A. Goodman ◽  
Nancy Robinson ◽  
...  

Abstract Hemophilia B is an X-linked coagulopathy caused by absence of functional coagulation factor IX (FIX). Using adeno-associated virus (AAV)–mediated, liver-directed gene therapy, we achieved long-term (&gt; 17 months) substantial correction of canine hemophilia B in 3 of 4 animals, including 2 dogs with an FIX null mutation. This was accomplished with a comparatively low dose of 1 × 1012 vector genomes/kg. Canine FIX (cFIX) levels rose to 5% to 12% of normal, high enough to result in nearly complete phenotypic correction of the disease. Activated clotting times and whole blood clotting times were normalized, activated partial thromboplastin times were substantially reduced, and anti-cFIX was not detected. The fourth animal, also a null mutation dog, showed transient expression (4 weeks), but subsequently developed neutralizing anti-cFIX (inhibitor). Previous work in the canine null mutation model has invariably resulted in inhibitor formation following treatment by either gene or protein replacement therapies. This study demonstrates that hepatic AAV gene transfer can result in sustained therapeutic expression in a large animal model characterized by increased risk of a neutralizing anti-FIX response.


1980 ◽  
Vol 44 (03) ◽  
pp. 138-142 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alfred M Prince ◽  
W Stephan ◽  
B Brotman ◽  
M C van den Ende

SummaryTo evaluate the safety of a β-Propiolactone/Ultraviolet (BPL/UV), irradiated Factor IX complex preparation we inoculated 8 chimpanzees with 25 units Factor IX/Kilo from a pool of 5 production lots which had been treated in this manner. These lots were derived from approximately 1,000 donors. Animals were followed with weekly tests for hepatitis B serologic markers and transaminases, and biweekly liver biopsies, for 6 months. No evidence of transmission of hepatitis B, or non-A, non-B viruses was observed.To further evaluate the BPL/UV procedure a plasma pool was intentionally contaminated with hepatitis B virus and one half of the pool treated with BPL/UV. Factor IX complex was isolated from the treated and untreated pools and each was inoculated into 4 chimpanzees. The Factor IX derived from untreated plasma infected all four animals with an average incubation period of 10.5 weeks, whereas that prepared from BPL/UV treated plasma infected only one of four animals with an incubation period of 21 weeks. These results were interpreted as suggesting that BPL/UV can inactivate approximately 99.9% of hepatitis B virus infectivity.


10.1038/4743 ◽  
1999 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 56-63 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roland W. Herzog ◽  
Edmund Y. Yang ◽  
Linda B. Couto ◽  
J. Nathan Hagstrom ◽  
Dan Elwell ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 114 (22) ◽  
pp. 5057-5057
Author(s):  
Bruna de Moraes Mazetto ◽  
Fernanda A. Orsi ◽  
Lúcia Helena Siqueira ◽  
Erich Vinicius de Paula ◽  
Tayana B Mello ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 5057 Introduction Elevated plasma levels of blood coagulation factor IX (FIX) have been associated with increased risk of venous thromboembolism (VTE) in humans. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying elevated FIX have not been elucidated. Recently, a mutation in the FIX gene resulting in a FIX molecule with Arginine Leucine substitution at position 338 (FIX-R338L or Factor IX Padua) has been associated with very high levels of FIX (776%) in a patient with spontaneous VTE. Recombinant expression of FIX-R338L confirmed the gain-of-function mutation. Objective Here we evaluated the levels of FIX and the prevalence of Factor IX Padua in a cohort of patients with VTE followed at our center. The prevalence of FIX Padua was evaluated by using a PCR-RFLP strategy by which PCR with specific primers was followed by digestion with the enzyme TaqI. Results The prevalence of FIX Padua was evaluated in a population of 192 patients with spontaneous VTE (69 males and 123 females; median age 36-yo). A population of 192 healthy individuals matched for age, sex and ethnicity was used as a control group for the determination of FIX levels. Median FIX levels was 128.0% (61.0-207.0%) in patients with VTE. Twenty-nine patients presented FIX levels above the 90th percentile (160.2%). Factor IX Padua was not identified in any patients or controls, even in those with elevated FIX levels. Conclusion in the present study FIX Padua was not identified in any of our patients, indicating that this mutation is not associated with mild elevations of FIX levels frequently observed in patients with VTE. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2011 ◽  
Vol 13 (7-8) ◽  
pp. 365-372 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hong Sung Kim ◽  
Jong Chul Kim ◽  
Yeon Kyung Lee ◽  
Jung Seok Kim ◽  
Yong Serk Park

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