Gene Therapy for Hemophilia and
Heart Disease
Gene Therapy for Hemophilia and Heart Disease Overview
- Mark A. Kay, MD, Principal Investigator
The inter-institutional Program of Excellence in Gene Therapy (PEGT)
includes Stanford University, The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, and
University of Pennsylvania. The investigators have a well-documented history
of collaboration. The overall goal is to develop the scientific principles
to advance basic, preclinical and clinical gene therapy. In this program,
there are 3 basic/preclinical gene therapy projects, and 3 clinical trials
within two clinical projects. In addition we offer an individualized
training program in clinical gene therapy. The goal of which is to graduate
rigorous and outstanding post doctoral fellows into independent
investigators who will continue to advance the field of gene therapy. The
proposals within the PEGT have a common theme; gene based therapies for
hemophilia based on recombinant adeno-associated viruses as a vector for
preclinical and clinical gene transfer. A brief summary of each project
follows: Dr. Katherine High will test the hypothesis that the bleeding
diathesis in hemophilia patients with inhibitory antibodies can be treated
with a gene therapy approach. This grant builds on a decade of clinical
experience with recombinant VIIa and on the investigator's expertise with
coagulation proteins and their expression using AAV vectors. Dr. Haig
Kazazian and colleagues will work in collaboration with Drs. High and Kay to
develop optimal liver -based rAAV vectors for factor VIII deficiency, and
then test those vectors in appropriate pre-clinical animal models. Dr. Mark
Kay plans to develop a non-surgical asanguinous liver perfusion technology
in large animals for tissue specific delivery of vectors as a prelude to
clinical application, and to address important biological questions related
to AAV transduction of liver. His group will also use this approach for
preclinical evaluation of a new integrating, non-viral vector. Dr. Bert
Glader proposes two liver-based AAV trials for hemophilias A and B. Dr.
Catherine Manno has developed a new AAV muscle-based clinical trial for
factor IX deficiency based on proposed preclinical studies to select an
improved expression cassette, vector serotype, and site of vector injection.
There are two supporting cores (for the investigators of this PEGT), a
Research Grade AAV and Clinical Core. There is a National Morphology Core
open to NHLBI Investigators. This core facility allows for tissue analyses
and vector characterization related to gene transfer studies. In total, this
highly interactive group of scientific and clinical investigations will be
used to enhance progress in clinical gene therapy.
- Project
1 - Gene
Based Approach to Treating Hemophilic Inhibitors. K. High
- Project
2 - Modeling
Gene Therapy of Hemophilia A via Liver Directed Gene Expression.
H. Kazazian
- Project
3 -Isolated
Liver Perfusion for rAAV and Non-Viral Vector Delivery. M.
A. Kay
- Project
4 - A
Phase I Safety Study in Patients with Severe Hemophilias A and
B Using AAV Vector to Deliver the Gene for Human Factors VIII
and IX into the Liver. B. Glader
- Project
5 - A
Novel Vector for Gene Transfer for Hemophilia B. C. Manno
- National Service Core:
PEGT National Cell Morphology
Core
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