Long-term safety and efficacy of lentiviral hematopoietic stem/progenitor cell gene therapy for Wiskott–Aldrich syndrome

  • Magnani, A.
  • Semeraro, M.
  • Adam, F.
  • Booth, C.
  • Dupré, Loïc
  • Morris, E.
  • Gabrion, A.
  • Roudaut, C.
  • Borgel, D.
  • Toubert, A.
  • Clave, E.
  • Abdo, C.
  • Gorochov, G.
  • Petermann, R.
  • Guiot, M.
  • Miyara, M.
  • Moshous, D.
  • Magrin, E.
  • Denis, A.
  • Suarez, F.
  • Lagresle, C.
  • Roche, A.
  • Everett, J.
  • Trinquand, A.
  • Guisset, M.
  • Bayford, J. Xu
  • Hacein-Bey-Abina, S.
  • Kauskot, A.
  • Elfeky, R.
  • Rivat, C.
  • Abbas, S.
  • Gaspar, H.
  • Macintyre, E.
  • Picard, C.
  • Bushman, F.
  • Galy, A.
  • Fischer, A.
  • Six, E.
  • Thrasher, A.
  • Cavazzana, M.
Publication date
January 2022
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Abstract

International audiencePatients with Wiskott–Aldrich syndrome (WAS) lacking a human leukocyte antigen-matched donor may benefit from gene therapy through the provision of gene-corrected, autologous hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells. Here, we present comprehensive, long-term follow-up results (median follow-up, 7.6 years) (phase I/II trial no. NCT02333760 ) for eight patients with WAS having undergone phase I/II lentiviral vector-based gene therapy trials (nos. NCT01347346 and NCT01347242 ), with a focus on thrombocytopenia and autoimmunity. Primary outcomes of the long-term study were to establish clinical and biological safety, efficacy and tolerability by evaluating the incidence and type of serious adverse events and clinical status and...

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