Faculty Opinions recommendation of AAV5-Factor VIII Gene Transfer in Severe Hemophilia A.

Author(s):  
Valder Arruda ◽  
Ben Samelson-Jones
2017 ◽  
Vol 377 (26) ◽  
pp. 2519-2530 ◽  
Author(s):  
Savita Rangarajan ◽  
Liron Walsh ◽  
Will Lester ◽  
David Perry ◽  
Bella Madan ◽  
...  

1999 ◽  
Vol 82 (08) ◽  
pp. 555-561 ◽  
Author(s):  
Douglas Jolly ◽  
Judith Greengard

IntroductionHemophilia A results from the plasma deficiency of factor VIII, a gene carried on the X chromosome. Bleeding results from a lack of coagulation factor VIII, a large and complex protein that circulates in complex with its carrier, von Willebrand factor (vWF).1 Severe hemophilia A (<1% of normal circulating levels) is associated with a high degree of mortality, due to spontaneous and trauma-induced, life-threatening and crippling bleeding episodes.2 Current treatment in the United States consists of infusion of plasma-derived or recombinant factor VIII in response to bleeding episodes.3 Such treatment fails to prevent cumulative joint damage, a major cause of hemophilia-associated morbidity.4 Availability of prophylactic treatment, which would reduce the number and severity of bleeding episodes and, consequently, would limit such joint damage, is limited by cost and the problems associated with repeated venous access. Other problems are associated with frequent replacement treatment, including the dangers of transmission of blood-borne infections derived from plasma used as a source of factor VIII or tissue culture or formulation components. These dangers are reduced, but not eliminated, by current manufacturing techniques. Furthermore, approximately 1 in 5 patients with severe hemophilia treated with recombinant or plasma-derived factor VIII develop inhibitory humoral immune responses. In some cases, new inhibitors have developed, apparently in response to unnatural modifications introduced during manufacture or purification.5 Gene therapy could circumvent most of these difficulties. In theory, a single injection of a vector encoding the factor VIII gene could provide constant plasma levels of factor in the long term. However, long-term expression after gene transfer of a systemically expressed protein in higher mammals has seldom been described. In some cases, a vector that appeared promising in a rodent model has not worked well in larger animals, for example, due to a massive immune response not seen in the rodent.6 An excellent review of early efforts at factor VIII gene therapy appeared in an earlier volume of this series.7 A summary of results from various in vivo experiments is shown in Table 1. This chapter will focus on results pertaining to studies using vectors based on murine retroviruses, including our own work.


Blood ◽  
1994 ◽  
Vol 84 (7) ◽  
pp. 2197-2201 ◽  
Author(s):  
PV Jenkins ◽  
PW Collins ◽  
E Goldman ◽  
A McCraw ◽  
A Riddell ◽  
...  

Abstract Intrachromosomal recombinations involving F8A, in intron 22 of the factor VIII gene, and one of two homologous regions 500 kb 5′ of the factor VIII gene result in large inversions of DNA at the tip of the X chromosome. The gene is disrupted, causing severe hemophilia A. Two inversions are possible, distal and proximal, depending on which homologous region is involved in the recombination event. A simple Southern blotting technique was used to identify patients and carriers of these inversions. In a group of 85 severe hemophilia A patients, 47% had an inversion, of which 80% were of the distal type. There was no association with restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) haplotypes. The technique has identified a definitive genetic marker in families previously uninformative on RFLP analysis and provided valuable information for genetic counselling information may now be provided for carriers without the need to study intervening family members and the diagnosis of severe hemophilia A made in families with only a nonspecific history of bleeding. Analysis of intron 22 inversion should now be the first-line test for carrier diagnosis and genetic counselling for severe hemophilia A and may be particularly useful when there is no affected male family member or when intervening family members are unavailable for testing.


1994 ◽  
Vol 3 (7) ◽  
pp. 1035-1039 ◽  
Author(s):  
Judith Pratt Rosslter ◽  
Michele Young ◽  
Michelle L. Kimberland ◽  
Pierre Hutter ◽  
Rhett P. Ketterling ◽  
...  

1998 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 111-113
Author(s):  
Etsuko Yamazaki ◽  
Hiroshi Mohri ◽  
Hiroshi Harano ◽  
Heiwa Kanamori ◽  
Hiroshi Inaba ◽  
...  

Ten patients with severe hemophilia A and 10 with moderate and mild hemophilia A were studied. Five of 10 unrelated patients with severe hemophilia A had the distal telo meric int22h sequence, none had the proximal sequence, and one had a unique variant factor VIII gene rearrangement. Car rier detection was done in these six families. All mothers and two daughters of the patients were to be carriers. Six of the 15 at-risk female relatives were heterozygous for the rearranged and normal allele and were carriers. These results indicate that the rearrangement assay is very useful for carrier detection in families with severe hemophilia A. Key Words: Hemophilia A—Factor VIII gene rearrangement—Genetic counseling.


Author(s):  
Maysoon Mohammed Hassan

The background:One of the prevalent main concerns in the medical world is the identification of Intron22 mutations in the Factor VIII gene carried by Iraqi patient in Wasit town, in Iraq suffering Hemophilia A (classical hemophilia) which is related to a X-chromosome recessive haemorrhage afflictions as the result of a flaw in the coagulation factor VIII (FVIII). It is essentially related with F8 mutations of Intron22 in version which forms the most typical kind of mutations of blood afflictions worldwide involving half the patients suffering from severe Hemophilia A that possesses mutations, in addition to Intron 1 inversion suffered by 5% of severe Hemophilia A patients.All of the inversion mutations are suffered mainly by males,and uncommonly by females due to the intra chromosomal recombination among the homologous areas, in inversion 1 or 22, with extragenic copy posited the telomeric to the Factor VIII gene. Unfortunately, there is an absence in Iraq on researches pertaining blood affliction gene identification in persons who carries the Intron22 mutations exception in the current research.Aims of study:The objectives of the research is to to analyze through the detection mechanisms, the existence of Intron 22 mutations in the Factor VIII gene of 10 Hemophilia A Iraqi carriers cohort families. The hypothesis and anticipated result is that there will be a minimal margin of hazardous possibility for the recurrence. The hereditary F8 mutation is unknown to be present on the maternal side of the patient sufferer due to the possibilty of germline mosaics that exists within the community.


2004 ◽  
Vol 76 (1) ◽  
pp. 96-96 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shrimati Shetty ◽  
Kanjaksha Ghosh ◽  
Dipika Mohanty

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