Document Type
Journal ArticlePublication Date
2018-04-01Keywords
AAVapproved clinical products
gammaretrovirus
gene editing
lentivirus
vector platforms
Congenital, Hereditary, and Neonatal Diseases and Abnormalities
Genetic Phenomena
Genetics and Genomics
Therapeutics
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Gene therapy is emerging as a viable option for clinical therapy of monogenic disorders and other genetically defined diseases, with approved gene therapies available in Europe and newly approved gene therapies in the United States. In the past 10 years, gene therapy has moved from a distant possibility, even in the minds of much of the scientific community, to being widely realized as a valuable therapeutic tool with wide-ranging potential. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has recently approved Luxturna (Spark Therapeutics Inc, Philadelphia, PA, USA), a recombinant adeno-associated virus (rAAV) 2 gene therapy for one type of Leber congenital amaurosis 2 ( 1 , 2 ). The European Medicines Agency (EMA) has approved 3 recombinant viral vector products: Glybera (UniQure, Amsterdam, The Netherlands), an rAAV vector for lipoprotein lipase deficiency; Strimvelis (Glaxo Smith-Kline, Brentford, United Kingdom), an ex vivo gammaretrovirus-based therapy for patients with adenosine deaminase-deficient severe combined immune deficiency (ADA-SCID); and Kymriah (Novartis, Basel, Switzerland), an ex vivo lentivirus-based therapy to engineer autologous chimeric antigen-receptor T (CAR-T) cells targeting CD19-positive cells in acute lymphoblastic leukemia. These examples will be followed by the clinical approval of other gene therapy products as this field matures. In this review we provide an overview of the state of gene therapy by discussing where the field stands with respect to the different gene therapy vector platforms and the types of therapies that are available.Source
FASEB J. 2018 Apr;32(4):1733-1740. doi: 10.1096/fj.201700982R. Link to article on publisher's site
DOI
10.1096/fj.201700982RPermanent Link to this Item
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14038/43696PubMed ID
31282760Related Resources
ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1096/fj.201700982R