Hari ini tanggal 5 september 2015 kami menjalani hari pertama BTOPH. Hari ini sungguh menyenangkan sekali, saya bertemu dengan salah satu orang paling berpengaruh di dunia public health. Beliau adalah Prof Dr. dr. Adik Wibowo M.P.H. Beliau adalah salah satu kepala WHO yang bertempat di New Delhi India. Beliau juga orang yang sangat memberi inspirasi kepada banyak mahasiswa yang merasa kehilangan arah setelah masuk kesehatan masyarakat atau yang biasa kita sebut public health. Beliau juga salah satu founder dari buku yang berjudul kesehatan masyarakat Indonesia. Beliau memiliki banyak sekali pengalaman yang menyangkut dengan bidang kesehatan. Pada awalnya beliau adalah salah satu dokter umum yang bekerja di puskesmas di daerah Senen, Jakarta Pusat. Lalu setelah itu beliau berubah jalur karena lebih tertarik dengan pendekatan ke masyarakat dari pada pendekatan personal ke individu satu per satu. Beliau memulai mendekati kelompok atau masyarakat luas setelah beberapa kali mendapatkan pasien yang mempunyai keluhan sama yaitu keputihan, hamil diluar nikah, menstruasi yang telat dan lain sebagainya. Beliau mulai tertarik karena bagaimana bisa dalam satu Rukun Tetangga (RT) bisa banyak warganya yang terkena penyakit yang hampir sama. Setelah itu beliau memulai kuliah di bidang kesehatan masyarakat di Amerika Serikat. Beliau memperoleh gelar M.P.H dan setelah itu melanjutkan S3 nya atau Doktor nya di Amerika Serikat juga. Setelah kuliah umum dengan Ibu Prof. Dr. dr Adik Wibowo M.P.H kami melakukan analisis lingkungan. Kelompok saya yaitu K3 mendapatkan tempat di toilet lantai dua. Kami menelaah kekurangan yang ada di toilet lantai dua. Disana terdapat banyak kekurangan seperti ventilasi yang kurang, tidak adanya sabun cuci tangan, tidak adanya tissue toilet dan lampu penerangan adalah beberapa kekurangan di dalam toilet yang kami telaah. Setelah itu kami melakukan presentasi di depan kelas. Setelah isoma seperti biasa kami melakukan makan bersama dengan waktu 7 menit. Setelah itu kami masuk lagi ke kelas dan melakukan presentasi tentang bidang kami yaitu K3.
Nadine K3
Sabtu, 05 September 2015
Jumat, 04 September 2015
Diary OSMB hari kedua
Hari ini tanggal 29 agustus 2015 adalah hari kedua OSMB. Pada pagi hari seperti biasa yaitu diadakan upacara pembukaan pada hari kedua OSMB. Pada hari kedua setelah pembukaan kami menyandungkan yel-yel angkatan kami. Sebetulnya yel-yel tersebut hanya terbentuk sehari karena kesalahan angkatan kami. Setelah menyandungkan yel-yel kami diminta untuk mencontohkan senam yang angkatan kami buat sebelumnya. Namun, karena kesalahan saya yang tidak mengkopi lagu dari leptop, angakatan kami jadi tidak bisa memulai senam yang telah direncanakan sebelumnya. Akhirnya senam angkatan kami di pandu oleh tim hore yang beranggotakan mba mayya, mba diana dan mba christy. Setelah senam angkatan, kami ternyata mempunyai acara lanjutan yaitu outbond! Awalnya kami lelah karena senam tapi setelah mendengar akan outbond kami langsung semangat. Para ketua kelompok dipanggil kedepan untuk dibagikan peta yang dimana terdapat beberapa pos yang harus kami datangi. Pos tersebut adalah pos permainan yang sangat seru. Beberapa pos berisikan permainan yang seru, tapi ada satu pos yang berisi jebakan!! Hati-hati. Pos yang berisi jebakan menawarkan origami berbentuk hati berwarna merah yang jika kami ingin menang kami harus meninggalkan salah satu anggota kelompok kami. Awalnya saya yang lelah karena beberapa permainan mengajukan diri untuk diserahkan agar kelompok kami dapat menang, tetapi teman-teman kelompok saya yang lain tidak mengijinkan karena kalau tidak ada saya tidak ada yang berteriak menyebutkan jargon kelompok. Setelah itu ketua kelompok kami mengajak berunding untuk menentukan apakah ada yang ditinggal atau tidak. Ketua kami memutuskan tidak ada yang akan ditinggal karena kalau tidak ada satu tidak akan ramai dan tidak terasa kekeluargaan K3. Kami terus dibujuk untuk menyerahkan salah satu dari anggota dengan berazaskan kan berkorban untuk kelompok, namun kami gigih tidak akan menyerahkan siapapun. Jika kami mulai dari nol bersama maka jika kami mencapai seratus pun harus bersama. Setelah itu kami pergi dari pos jebakan dengan membawa satu kelompok full tanpa ada yang diserahkan. Kami lanjut ke pos selanjutnyaa yaitu pos eat bulaga. Salah satu pos favourite saya karena kami satu kelompok sangat amat heboh karenaa kami bukan berasal dari purwokerto. Kami mencoba menebak benerapa kali namun sayaa paling hafal dengan gang sadar. Gang Sadar sama saja seperti Gang Dolly di surabaya cuma bedanya saja Gang Sadar berada di Purwokerto dan Gang Dolly berada di Surabaya. Selain itu tempe mendoan dan batu raden adalah hal-hal yang saya tau tentang Purwokerto. Saya dapat menjawab salah satu tempat khas yang berada di Purwokerto yaitu Mall Moro. Mall Moro salah satu supermarket terbesar yang berada di Purwokerto yang menjual bahan-bahan sembako dan makanan serta barang-barang rumah tangga dalam satu tempat. Setelah itu kelompok kami lanjut ke pos tahukah kamu. Pos tahukah kamu adalah pos yang menggunakan otak untuk berfikir. Ini seperti menjawab quiz yang menggunakan pengetahuan semasa SMA seperti ditemukan dimana homo sapiens? Kelompok kami kompak menjawab di Bengawan Solo dan jawaban kami benar
Jumat, 28 Agustus 2015
International Journal
http://www.ojrd.com/content/7/1/97
Advanced
therapies for the treatment of hemophilia: future perspectives
Antonio
Liras1,2*, Cristina Segovia1 and Aline S Gabán1,3

Abstract
Monogenic
diseases are ideal candidates for treatment by the emerging advanced therapies,
which are capable of correcting alterations in protein expression that result
from genetic mutation. In hemophilia A and B such alterations affect the activity
of coagulation factors VIII and IX, respectively, and are responsible for the
development of the disease. Advanced therapies may involve the replacement of a
deficient gene by a healthy gene so that it generates a certain functional,
structural or transport protein (gene therapy); the incorporation of a full
array of healthy genes and proteins through perfusion or transplantation of
healthy cells (cell therapy); or tissue transplantation and formation of
healthy organs (tissue engineering). For their part, induced pluripotent stem
cells have recently been shown to also play a significant role in the fields of
cell therapy and tissue engineering. Hemophilia is optimally suited for
advanced therapies owing to the fact that, as a monogenic condition, it does
not require very high expression levels of a coagulation factor to reach
moderate disease status. As a result, significant progress has been possible
with respect to these kinds of strategies, especially in the fields of gene
therapy (by using viral and non-viral vectors) and cell therapy (by means of
several types of target cells). Thus, although still considered a rare
disorder, hemophilia is now recognized as a condition amenable to gene therapy,
which can be administered in the form of lentiviral and adeno-associated
vectors applied to adult stem cells, autologous fibroblasts, platelets and
hematopoietic stem cells; by means of non-viral vectors; or through the repair
of mutations by chimeric oligonucleotides. In hemophilia, cell therapy approaches
have been based mainly on transplantation of healthy cells (adult stem cells or
induced pluripotent cell-derived progenitor cells) in order to restore
alterations in coagulation factor expression.
Keywords: Advanced therapies,
Gene therapy, Cell therapy, Hemophilia A, Hemophilia B
Introduction
|
pharmaceutical
costs which, in less advantaged coun-
|
|
Hemophilia
is a recessive X-linked hereditary disorder
|
tries, could
result in disabling clinical conditions if not
|
|
caused by
a deficiency of coagulation factor
VIII
|
in a higher
mortality rate. Contrary to other rare dis-
|
|
(hemophilia
A) or IX (hemophilia B). The disease is con-
|
eases, over
the last few decades hemophilia has benefited
|
|
sidered
to be severe when factor levels are below 1% of
|
from a greater
understanding of the causes and mechan-
|
|
normal
values, moderate when they are between 1 and
|
isms
responsible for its development as well as of the
|
|
5%
and mild when levels range between 5% and 40% [1].
|
molecular and
physiological characteristics of the disease
|
|
As
the prevalence of the disease is 7.7/100,000, it is con-
|
and its
proper diagnostic and
clinical management
|
|
sidered a
rare hematologic disorder
(Orpha number
|
(Table 2).
This has undoubtedly aided in the design of
|
|
ORPHA448)
(Table 1).
|
highly
appropriate treatment schedules [1].
|
|
As other
medical conditions, hemophilia is a chronic
|
The
etiopathogenesis of the disease is related to differ-
|
|
disease associated
with substantial healthcare
and
|
ent kinds of
mutations (large deletions and insertions,
|
|
inversions and
point mutations) that occur in the gene
|
||
expressing the
deficient coagulation factor. The clinical
|
||
*
Correspondence: aliras@hotmail.com
|
||
1Department of Physiology, School of Biology,
Complutense University of
|
characteristics
of both types of hemophilia are very simi-
|
|
Madrid, and Cell Therapy and Regenerative Medicine Unit,
La Paz University
|
lar: spontaneous
or traumatic hemorrhages, muscle
|
|
Hospital
Health Research Institute-IdiPAZ, Madrid, Spain
|
||
hematomas,
hemophilic arthropathy resulting from the
|
||
2Royal Foundation
“Victoria Eugenia” of Hemophilia, Madrid, Spain
|
||
Full
list of author information is available at the end of the article
|
© 2012 Liras et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. This is
an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons
Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits
unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the
original work is properly cited.
Liras
et al. Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases 2012, 7:97 Page 2 of 9
http://www.ojrd.com/content/7/1/97
Table
1 Classification (Orpha number), synonyms, prevalence and clinical description
of hemophilia (Adapted from Orphanet portal [http://www.orpha.net])
Type of hemophilia
|
Orpha
|
Synonyms
|
Prevalence
|
Clinical description
|
number
|
||||
Hemophilia (general)
|
448
|
Factor VIII or IX
|
7.7/100,000
|
Bleeding episodes.
|
deficiency
|
||||
Hemophilia A
|
98878
|
Factor VIII
|
1/6,000
|
Spontaneous or prolonged hemorrhages.
|
deficiency
|
||||
Hemophilia B
|
98879
|
Factor IX
|
1/30,000
|
Spontaneous or prolonged hemorrhages.
|
deficiency
|
||||
Mild hemophilia A
|
169808
|
Mild factor VIII
|
40% of all cases
|
Small deficiency of factor VIII leading to abnormal
bleeding as a result of
|
deficiency
|
of hemophilia
|
minor injuries, or
following surgery or tooth extraction. The biological
|
||
A
|
activity of factor
VIII is between 5 and 40%. Spontaneous hemorrhages
|
|||
do not occur.
|
||||
Mild hemophilia B
|
169799
|
Mild factor IX
|
30% of all cases
|
Small deficiency of factor IX leading to abnormal
bleeding as a result of
|
deficiency
|
of hemophilia B
|
minor injuries, or
following surgery or tooth extraction. The biological
|
||
activity of factor
IX is between 5 and 40%. Spontaneous hemorrhages do
|
||||
not occur.
|
||||
Moderately severe
|
169805
|
Moderately severe
|
20% of all cases
|
Abnormal bleeding as a result of minor injuries, or
following surgery or
|
hemophilia A
|
factor VIII
|
of hemophilia
|
tooth extraction.
The biological activity of factor VIII is between 1% and
|
|
deficiency
|
A
|
5%. Spontaneous
hemorrhages are rare.
|
||
Moderately severe
|
169796
|
Moderately severe
|
30% of all cases
|
Abnormal bleeding as a result of minor injuries, or
following surgery or
|
hemophilia B
|
factor IX
deficiency
|
of hemophilia B
|
tooth extraction.
The biological activity of factor IX is between 1% and
|
|
5%. Spontaneous
hemorrhages are rare.
|
||||
Severe hemophilia A
|
169802
|
Severe factor VIII
|
40% of all cases
|
Frequent spontaneous hemorrhage and abnormal bleeding as
a result of
|
deficiency
|
of hemophilia
|
minor injuries, or
following surgery or tooth extraction. The biological
|
||
A
|
activity of factor
VIII is below 1%.
|
|||
Severe hemophilia B
|
169793
|
Severe factor IX
|
40% of all cases
|
Frequent spontaneous hemorrhage and abnormal bleeding as
a result of
|
deficiency
|
of hemophilia B
|
minor injuries, or
following surgery or tooth extraction. The biological
|
||
activity of factor
IX is below 1%.
|
||||
Symptomatic form of
|
177926
|
Hemophilia A
|
Unknown(very
|
In some women with mutations in the F8 gene, encoding
coagulation
|
hemophilia A in
female
|
carriers
|
rare)
|
factor VIII.
Symptoms include abnormal bleeding as a result of minor
|
|
carriers
|
injuries, or
following surgery or tooth extraction. Spontaneous
|
|||
hemorrhages may
occur occasionally. The biological activity of factor VIII
|
||||
is below ~30%.
|
||||
Symptomatic form of
|
177929
|
Hemophilia B
|
Unknown (very
|
In some women with mutations in the F9 gene, encoding
coagulation
|
hemophilia B in
female
|
carriers
|
rare)
|
factor IX.
Symptoms include abnormal bleeding as a result of minor
|
|
carriers
|
injuries, or
following surgery or tooth extraction. Spontaneous
|
|||
hemorrhages may
occur occasionally. The biological activity of factor IX
|
||||
is below ~30%.
|
||||
articular
damage caused by repetitive bleeding episodes in the target joints, or
hemorrhages in the central nervous system (Table 1). In the absence of
appropriate replace-ment treatment with exogenous coagulation factors, these
manifestations of the disease can have disabling or even
fatal
consequences thus negatively impacting patients' quality of life and reducing
their life expectancy [2]. Bleeding episodes may be spontaneous in the severe
and (less so) in the moderate forms of the disease, with 70% of them being
articular, 15% muscular and 15% visceral.
Table 2 Some molecular and physiological
characteristics of hemophilia A and B
Type of
|
Deficient
|
Protein size
|
DNA
|
Half life
|
Function
in the
|
Plasma concentration
(ng/ml)1,2
|
||
hemophilia
|
factor
|
(Kilodaltons)
|
length
|
(Hours)
|
coagulation
|
|||
(bp)
|
cascade
|
|||||||
Mild hemophilia
|
Moderately Severe
|
Severe
|
||||||
Hemophilia
|
Hemophilia
|
|||||||
Hemophilia A
|
VIII
|
280
|
7056
|
8-12
|
Activated by thrombin
|
10-80 (5-40%)
|
2-10 (1-5%)
|
< 2 (<1%)
|
and activates to FX3
|
||||||||
Hemophilia B
|
IX
|
68
|
1389
|
15-25
|
Activated by FXIa4,
|
500-2000 (5-40%)
|
50-500 (1-5%)
|
< 50 (<1%)
|
and activates to FX
|
||||||||
1Normal
plasma level of coagulation factors: Factor VIII, 200 ng/mL; factor IX, 5000
ng/mL; 2One International Unit (IU) of factor
VIII or IX, per kg of body weight, increases the activity of factor in plasma,
1% to 2% of normal level; 3FX, factor X; 4FXIa,
factor XI activated.
Diagnosis of hemophilia is aimed at identifying type
of hemophilia and degree of involvement as well as detect-ing symptomatic or
asymptomatic carriers of the disease, either obligate (daughters of
hemophiliacs) or de novo (women by sporadic and
spontaneous mutations). Diag-nostic methods are based on the determination of
co-agulation factor levels in plasma and the detection of the mutation in the
DNA extracted from peripheral blood leucocytes by means of direct or indirect
genetic meth-ods (detection of genetic polymorphism).
As hemophilia is a gender-related condition, genetic
guidance is provided to couples on the basis of an odds analysis based on
genealogy and coagulation factor data and a study of the mutation responsible
for the disease. Moreover, either a prenatal diagnosis [3], —which
can now be carried out non-invasively [4]—,
or a pre-implantational diagnosis are provided [5]. In this respect, it is
necessary to emphasize that access to prenatal or pre-implantation genetic
diagnosis is not universally available but rather depends on the economic
con-straints imposed by different countries in accordance with their
development status.
At present, patients with hemophilia benefit from
opti-mized treatment schedules based on the intravenous sys-temic delivery of
exogenous coagulation factors, either prophylactically or on demand protocols.
The current policy in developed countries is in general to administer a
prophylactic treatment (2 or 3 times a week) from early childhood into
adulthood [2]. Such prophylactic protocols result in a marked improvement in
patients' quality of life on account of the prevention of hemophilic
arthropathy and other fatal manifestations of the disease as well as a
reduction in the long-term costs of treatment because of a decrease in the need
of surgi-cal procedures such as arthrodesis, arthroplasty or syno-vectomy [6].
Conventional treatment of hemophilia [7,8] is
cur-rently based on the use of plasma-derived products —
duly treated with heat and detergent to inactivate lipid-coated viruses [9]—,
or the recently developed recom-binant high-purity coagulation factor
concentrates which do not contain proteins of human or animal origin [10,11].
Both kinds of factor boast high efficacy and safety profiles, at least for the
inactivation-susceptible pathogens known to date. The choice of one product
over the other is usually based on the clinical character-istics of the patient
and on cost and availability consid-erations [12,13].
Now that infections by pathogenic viruses (VIH, HCV)
that were common a few decades ago have been eradicated, the most distressing
adverse effect observed when using both recombinant and plasma-derived
pro-ducts is the development of antibodies (inhibitors) against the perfused
exogenous factors [14,15]. The
appearance
of inhibitors renders current treatment with factor concentrates inefficient,
increasing morbidity and mortality, leading to the early onset of hemophilic
arthropathy and disability and to a consequent reduction in patients' quality
of life. Inhibitors also result in higher costs as treatment must be provided
both for bleeding episodes and inhibitor eradication (immune tolerance
induction). The incidence of inhibitors is around 30% in hemophilia A and 6% in
hemophilia B [2].
The immunologic mechanism whereby these
neu-tralizing antibodies are generated is highly complex and involves several
messenger molecules (tumor ne-crosis factor, interleukins. .
.),
and cells (T-lymphocytes B-lymphocytes, macrophages . .
.).
They are directed at certain regions in the factor molecule that interact with
other components of the coagulation cascade and, de-pending on their titre
level and on whether they are transient or persistent, they will bring about
greater or lesser alterations in the coagulation cascade. The causes that
influence inhibitor development may be genetic —
inherent in the patients themselves [14]—,
such as ethni-city, familial history, type of mutation or certain changes in
some of the genes involved in the immune response; or non-genetic —environmental
[16]—,
such as stimula-tion of the immune system by other antigens or the treat-ment
regimen used (prophylactic vs. on demand). The influence of type of factor
concentrate used (plasma-derived or recombinant) is still a subject for debated
[17,18].
Short and medium-term perspectives for the treatment
of hemophilia strongly rely on the current research efforts directed increasing
the safety levels of (especially) plasma-derived factors with respect to the
detection and subsequent inactivation of blood-borne pathogens in donors, such
as prions and other potential emerging agents [19-21]. It is also important to
enhance the effi-ciency of recombinant factors increasing their half-life (by
PEGylating the factor molecule or using fusion pro-teins, both for factor VIII
and factor IX [22-25]). These studies are now in progress and no definite
statements can be made about the safety of long-acting products as none of them
have yet been authorized for clinical use. Another strategy could be to
attenuate their immuno-genic capacity to produce inhibitors by chemically
modi-fying them [26] or by developing recombinant factors of human origin [27].
In the long term, efforts must be directed at the
devel-opment of advanced therapies, particularly strategies in the field of
gene therapy (by using adeno-associated viral vectors) and cell therapy (by
using adult stem cells or induced pluripotent stem cells). The chief goal of
these new strategies will be to address some of the limitations associated with
current treatment options such as the short in vivo half-life of administered
factors, the risk of
a
pathogen-induced infection and the development of inhibitors. Another goal of
the advanced therapies (cell therapy) will be palliative treatment of the
articular con-sequences derived from hemophilic arthropathy [6].
Advanced
therapies for the treatment of hemophilia
In
the future, the different types of advanced therapies such as gene therapy,
cell therapy and tissue engineer-ing, as well as the more recently developed
induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSC) technology, may offer innumerable
clinical applications for the treatment of certain monogenic diseases including
hemophilia.
True as it is that hemophilia is well suited to be
trea-ted by advanced therapy protocols on account of its monogenic nature and
of the fact that a modest increase in coagulation factor levels is enough to
convert a severe into a moderate phenotype, it cannot be forgotten that
research in this field is still at an early stage and substan-tial efforts will
have to be made before such therapies can be made readily available to the
patients, particularly in terms of safety. Safety considerations will have to
be taken very seriously, notably in this group of patients who present with
specific clinical characteristics that more often than not are the result of
their past and present-day treatment. These characteristics include the
presence of inhibitors or the predisposition to develop them, the specific
immunological status of these patients and the presence of viral co-infections
(HIV/HCV) [28].
For
these reasons, although optimism is certainly in order, caution is of the
essence to avoid raising false expectations in both physicians and patients
alike.
Gene therapy
strategies
Gene
therapy consists of transplantation of genetically modified cells so that they
may produce a functional protein, and cell therapy in the transplantation of
living cells into an organism in order to repair tissue or restore a deficient
function. Both strategies are based on the use of stem cells given their
indefinite capacity to renew themselves and differentiate to become cells of
several specific cell lines. All these are necessary conditions for their
clinical application [29].
The most significant breakthroughs in the field of
advanced therapies and hemophilia are chiefly related to both preclinical and
clinical trials in the fields of gene therapy (through the use of viral and
non-viral vectors) and cell therapy (using several types of target cell) (Table
3). Thus hemophilia reveals itself as a disease that is highly amenable to be
treated by gene therapy [30-33] by means of lentiviral and adeno-associated
vectors used in adult stem cells and autologous fibroblasts, platelets or
hematopoietic stem cells; and of the transfer of non-viral vectors and repair
of mutations by chimeric oligo-nucleotides. The studies published so far have,
in the most part, not reported any adverse event resulting from the application
of such strategies in the clinical trials performed in terms of an
immune-mediated transgene
Table 3 Preclinical studies and clinical
trials on gene- and cell therapy for hemophilia
Authors [Reference]
|
Vector or target (tissue) cells
|
Coagulation
|
Expression level (%)
|
factor expressed
|
|||
Gene therapy
(Preclinical studies)
|
|||
Jeon et al. Ref.[35]
|
LVV
|
VIII
|
1-5
|
Brown et al. Ref.[34]
|
LVV
|
IX
|
10
|
Ramezani et al. Ref.[36]
|
LVV
|
VIII
|
<40
|
Matsui. Ref.[37]
|
LVV
|
VIII
|
<40
|
Montgomery and
Shi. Ref.[40]
|
LVV
|
VIII
|
<40
|
Gene therapy (Clinical trials)
|
|||
Nathwani et al. Ref.[38]
|
AAV (Immunosuppressive therapy)
|
IX
|
2-11
|
Buchlis et al. Ref.[39]
|
AAV
|
IX
|
FIX RNA expression and AAV DNA
|
persistence
(<1% FIX)
|
|||
Cell therapy
(Preclinical studies)
|
|||
Aronovich et al. Ref.[43]
|
Embryonic day 42 spleen tissue
|
VIII
|
30-40
|
Follenzi et al. Ref.[44]
|
Liver sinusoidal endothelial cells
|
VIII
|
14-25
|
Follenzi et al.
Ref.[45]
|
Kupffer cells.
Bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stromal
|
VIII
|
10-15
|
cells
|
|||
Xu et al. Ref. [46]
|
iPSCs from
tail-tip fibroblasts and their differentiation into
|
VIII
|
8-12
|
endothelial cells
and their precursors
|
|||
Yudav et al. Ref.
[47]
|
Transdifferentiation
of iPSC-derived endothelial progenitor
|
VIII
|
20
|
cells into
hepatocytes
|
LVV, lentiviral
vector; AAV, adeno-associated vector; FIX, factor IX.
rejection
(factor VIII or IX expression) although factors such as innate cellular T cell
toxicity to adeno-associated capsid protein and the low efficacy obtained by
non-viral vectors are impeding and limiting their success [34].
Brown et al.
[35] were the first to use lentiviral vectors for treatment of hemophilia B.
Using a lentiviral vector containing a target sequence for the
hematopoietic-specific microRNA, miR-142-3p, they obtained 10% fac-tor IX
activity with no anti-FIX antibodies in hemophilia B mice at over 280 days
after injection. Since those results were published, use of lentiviral vectors
has not ceased to grow. Thus, Jeon et al.
[36] transduced this type of viral vector into skeletal muscle to increase
fac-tor VIII expression. Factor VIII plasma levels at one week post-injection
were 5.19 ng/mL vs 0.21 ng/mL in control rats, with those levels staying
constant over 4 weeks with a single dose of the vector. More recently, and also
using lentiviral vectors, Ramezani et al.
[37], adapted a nonmyeloablative conditioning regimen and directed factor VIII
protein synthesis to B lineage cells using an insulated lentiviral vector
containing an im-munoglobulin heavy chain enhancer-promoter. Trans-plantation
of lentiviral vector-modified hematopoietic stem cell resulted in an increase
in factor VIII plasma levels for 6 months, with a low immune response against
the protein expressed and a correction of the hemophilic phenotype in the
transplanted mice.
Very recently, Matsui et al.
[38], established a gene therapy strategy using autologous circulating
endothelial progenitor cells transfected with lentiviral vectors con-taining a
canine FVIII transgene. When implanted sub-cutaneously in a soluble basement
membrane scaffold, these cells produced a long-term FVIII expression over 6
months, and resulted in effective prophylaxis against bleeding.
Ward et al.
[39], have directly compared, using lentiviral vectors, FVIII expression from
FVIII-constructs contain-ing various B domains from non–codon-optimized
and codon-optimized cDNA sequences without the con-founding effect of variable
immune responses against human FVIII, neo epitopes and the Fugu B domain. A
dramatic increase in the observed level of secreted FVIII from codon optimized
cDNA sequences was obtained. These results are in contrast to transient FVIII
ex-pression levels obtained from another many previous approaches.
Gene therapy studies conducted in hemophilic
patients showed that use of adeno-associated vectors currently constitutes the
most promising option given the high safety profile of such vectors, although
they are not ex-empt from immune response-related problems. Efforts are
nowadays directed at reducing the incidence of im-mune rejection and increasing
the efficacy and length of expression. Several studies have been published in
an
attempt
to optimize the use of viral vectors. Thus, Nathwani et
al.
[40], completed a pioneering clinical trial in patients with severe hemophilia
B (<1% FIX). Patients were perfused with a dose of a serotype-8-pseudotyped,
self-complementary adeno-associated vector that expressed factor IX and could
efficiently transduce hepa-tocytes. Their results showed that factor IX
expression ranged between 2 and 11% of normal values. Significant as they may
seem, these results must be considered with caution as the expression levels
achieved rather than normalize the patient's phenotype convert it to a
mild-to-moderate form. Also treatment with glucocorticoids may be necessary to
prevent immune rejection and in-crease the duration of transgene expression.
Due ac-count must also be taken of the fact that the adeno-associated vector
has the potential to induce hepatotox-icity. For all these reasons, these
undoubtedly encour-aging results can only be considered a first step in the
development of safe and effective advanced therapies for the treatment of
hemophilia.
A recent study [41] reported on the persistent
long-term expression of factor IX in parenteral administration of an
adeno-associated viral vector in muscle tissue. The authors show that
adeno-associated serotype-2-mediated gene transfer to human skeletal muscle
persists and is transcriptionally and translationally active for a period of up
to 10 years. This is the longest reported transgene ex-pression to date.
A new alternative that has been proposed in
connec-tion with gene therapy strategies for hemophilia is the use of platelet
targeting as a mechanism of drug delivery [42]. Such a strategy could play an efficient
clinical role in the treatment of hemophilia and other hemostatic dis-orders
given that it would allow local release of factor VIII and IX at the site of
the bleeding-induced damage and, at the same time, protect such factors from
the ef-fect of the inhibitors potentially present in plasma.
Non-viral strategies also play an important role in
this area as they constitute a safe alternative for the future in the face of
the limitations that have so far been asso-ciated with viral vectors in terms of
their biosafety and potential clinical application.
Thus, Sivalingam et al.
[43], evaluated the genotoxic potential of phiC31 bacteriophage
integrase-mediated transgene integration in cord-lining epithelial cells
cul-tured from the human umbilical cord. This non-viral strategy has made it
possible to obtain stable factor VIII secretion in vitro. Xenoimplantation of
these protein-secreting cell lines into immunocompetent hemophilic mice
corrects the severe form of the disease.
Our laboratory has advanced the use of nucleofection
as a non-viral transfection method to obtain factor IX expression and secretion
in adult adipose tissue-derived mesenchymal stem cells [44]. Although it is
certainly
true
that expression efficacy with these types of proto-cols is lower than when
viral vectors are used, it must be remembered that achieving a factor plasma
level of at least 5% can transform a severe into a mild phenotype. In addition,
non-viral vectors provide higher safety levels than viral ones.
Cell therapy
strategies
The
use of cell therapy in the treatment of hemophilia has to date consisted mainly
in the transplantation of healthy cells in an attempt to repair or replace a
coagu-lation factor deficiency. These procedures have been conducted mainly
with adult stem cells and, more re-cently, with progenitor cells partially
differentiated from iPSCs, albeit in most cases the mechanisms by which
transplanted cells (to a greater or lesser extent) engraft and go on to
proliferate and function remain unknown.
Aronovich et al.
[45], have shown that transplantation of embryonic day 42 spleen tissue in
immunocompetent mice with hemophilia A attenuates the severity of the disease
in the 2–3 months after the
procedure. These results would seem to indicate that transplantation of a fetal
spleen —obtained from a
developmental stage prior to the appearance of T-cells— may potentially be used to treat some genetic
disorders. For their part, Follenzi et al. [46],
reported that once liver sinusoidal endothelial cells
were transplanted and successfully engrafted into mice with hemophilia A, they
were seen to proliferate and partially replace some areas of the hepatic
endothe-lium. This resulted in a restoration of factor VIII plasma levels and
in the correction of the bleeding phenotype. More recently, this same team [47]
demonstrated that transplantation of healthy mouse Kupffer cells (liver
macrophage/mononuclear cells), which predominantly originate from bone marrow,
or of healthy bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stromal cells, can correct the
phenotype of hemophilic mice and restore factor VIII levels in plasma.
As far as the use of iPSCs is concerned, the first
paper was published by Xu et al. [48] who
reported on the generation of murine iPSCs from tail-tip fibroblasts and their
differentiation into endothelial cells and their pre-cursors. These
iPSC-derived cells express specific mem-brane markers such as CD31, CD34 and
Flk1, as well as factor VIII. Following transplantation of these cells into
mice with hemophilia A, the latter survived the tail-clip bleeding assay by
over 3 months and their factor VIII plasma levels increased to 8%-12%. Yadav et
al.
[49], have studied the transdifferentiation of iPSC-derived endothelial
progenitor cells into hepatocytes (primary cells of FVIII synthesis). These
cells were injected into the liver parenchyma where they integrated
functionally and made correction of the possible hemophilic pheno-type. High
levels of FVIII mRNA were detected in the
spleen,
heart, and kidney tissues of injected animals with no induction of tumors or
any other adverse events in the long-term. Alipio et
al.
[50] for their part also reported on the generation of factor VIII in a
hemophilic murine model one year after transplantation of iPSC-derived
endothelial cells.
Advanced therapies in
the hemophilic arthropathy
Lastly,
it is important to consider the potential applica-tion of advanced therapies in
the palliative treatment of the articular consequences of hemophilic
arthropathy. Although adequate treatment is currently available for hemophilia,
which is specifically efficient regarding the negative consequences of
hemophilic arthropathy, it cannot be forgotten that only 25% of hemophiliacs,
most of them living in developed countries, can benefit from such treatment. In
the rest of the world, hemophilic arthropathy and its disabling sequelae are
the norm. But even in the developed world many patients still present moderate
or severe hemophilic arthropathy on account of the fact that they either
developed inhibitors or started being treated a few decades ago when
present-day therapies were still unavailable.
Against this background, advanced therapies may
con-stitute a solution of these patients [6]. Chondrocyte im-plantation and
cell therapy using bioreactors, growth factors, mesenchymal stem cells and
genetically modified cells may be used as an adjunct or even as an alternative
to the current approaches (bone marrow stimulation, osteochondral autograft or
allograft transplantation) for the repair of chondral damage in advanced
arthropathic disease.
Mesenchymal stem cells appear hold great promise for
chondral repair given their high differentiation ability and their proven
therapeutic effects [51]. Implantation of autologous chondrocytes or
mesenchymal stem cells was up to now able to address only highly localized
chondral lesions, and the use of bioreactors and growth factors, which
stimulate cartilage formation, may optimize such strategies.
Concluding
remarks
Hemophilia
is highly amenable to treatment by protocols based on advanced therapies ―gene therapy, cell ther-apy, tissue engineering or
induced pluripotent stem cell technology—.
This is because it is a monogenic disease which requires low circulating levels
of coagulation fac-tor and no gene regulation to achieve a moderate pheno-type,
and because a large variety of pathological animal models are available for
experimentation. However, advanced therapies are still at an early research
phase and much effort and investment will be required before they can be applied
in a generalized way. For these rea-sons, although optimism is warranted care
must be
taken
not to raise false expectations in physicians or patients.
Safety is a key component in any therapeutic
strategy or pharmacological product. But for patients with hemophilia safety is
even more essential for several rea-sons including the specific clinical characteristics
of the patients, such as the presence of inhibitors or the predis-position to
develop them; the alteration of the indivi-dual's immunological status; or the
presence of viral co-infection with HIV/HCV.
The most significant advances made in the field of
advanced therapies and their application in the future treatment of several
diseases, and hemophilia in particu-lar, have been related to the development
of viral gene therapy using lentiviral and adeno-associated vectors; non-viral
gene transfer by nucleofection, phiC31 bac-teriophage integrase or lipofection;
or mutation repair by chimeric oligonucleotides. Cell therapy using adult,
fetal, embryonic or IPSC-derived stem cells has also played a substantial role.
Results were generally satisfac-tory although the plasma levels of factor VIII
or IX obtained were, at best, those corresponding to a mild-moderate phenotype
of the disease when viral gene transfer was employed and to a moderate
phenotype when non-viral methods were used. Even if duration of expression of
the protein was in some cases consider-able, the factor plasma concentrations
achieved were nonetheless transient and eventually cleared. Moreover, in the
clinical trials carried out, hepatotoxic effects were observed as a result of
the use adeno-associated vectors and of an immune response against the
transgenes or the components of the virus coating themselves. Factors such as
the need to use concomitant treatment with immunosuppresors to overcome some of
this problems, as well as small sample sizes of patients and the difficul-ties
inherent in extrapolation of pre-clinical results to humans and large-scale
production of both vectors and cells, have so far somewhat undermined the
success expected from these therapies.
Cell therapy approaches hold significant hope for
pal-liative treatment of the disabling articular sequelae of hemophilic
arthropathy in patients who, several decades ago, had no access to the optimal
treatment available at present; in those that have developed inhibitors; or in
that 75% of patients on the planet for whom access to adequate treatment is
simply not possible.
An important consideration to be borne in mind when
implementing new therapeutic strategies is the feasibility of the investment
required. Given their low prevalence, treatment of many rare diseases is
unfortunately not considered feasible in this respect. Feasibility of the
in-vestment must be considered in terms of justifying the long-term benefits
achieved both for a certain patient population and for the entity laying out
the funds. The
determining
factors are the number of affected indivi-duals, the costs derived from the
current treatment of these rare conditions, their chronicity and the long-term
duration and their consequences (emerging pathogen-derived infections among
others). The availability or otherwise of conventional treatment together with
other disease-specific factors should also be taken into account.
For the reasons above, hemophilia is an excellent
and financially feasible candidate for advanced therapies, if for no other
reason than the high cost of its current treatment. When all of these factors
are added to the fact that hemophilia is a rare low-incidence disease and to
the technical and methodological problems men-tioned above, it is not difficult
to understand that pro-gress will be slow. Even so, given that patient safety
should always be a paramount consideration, it may be necessary to settle for
slightly lower expression levels (a mild-to-moderate phenotype) in return for
higher safety levels. The question is: how is this to be achieved? And, though
the answer is by no means an easy one, the results obtained so far by the
combination of cell therapy and gene therapy —based
on viral (lentiviral and adeno-associated) vectors with improved transfection
efficacy and immunogenic properties, or non-viral vectors—
may be pointing in the right (and most promising) direction.
Finally, although optimism is clearly justified,
fantasy is best avoided in order not to raise false expectations in the
patients suffering from these rare diseases that may be subject to either
curative or palliative treatment by advanced therapies protocols.
Competing interests
AL is
Principal Researcher in a preclinical project, but not a clinical trial, with
adipose mesenchymal stem cells and gene/cell therapy protocols for the
treatment of hemophilia. AL has no other relevant affiliations or financial
involvement with any organization or entity with a financial interest in or
financial conflict with the subject matter or materials discussed in this
manuscript apart from those disclosed. The authors have been supported by
funding from a grant from the Victoria Eugenia Royal Hemophilia Foundation.
Authors’ contributions
AL
has conceived the manuscript, and its design. CS and ASG have made intellectual
contributions and have been in charge of the acquisition, analysis and
interpretation of part of the literature data, being responsible for the
manuscript draft and for its final revised version. All authors have read and
approved this final form.
Authors’ information
Dr.
Antonio Liras is member of the Editorial Board of several scientific journals
(International Archives of Medicine; Expert Review of Hematology; American
Journal of Translational Research and International Journal of Clinical and
Experimental Medicine). Dr. Antonio Liras is Coordinator of a project on ex
vivo non-viral gene therapy and cell therapy for hemophilia using mesenchymal
stem cells from human adult adipose tissue, in collaboration with the Cell
Therapy and Regenerative Medicine Unit, La Paz University Hospital Health
Research Institute-IdiPAZ. This project has received several awards for best
research initiative in hemophilia from the Spanish Society of Thrombosis and
Hemostasis, the Victoria Eugenia Royal
Liras
et al. Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases 2012, 7:97
http://www.ojrd.com/content/7/1/97
Hemophilia Foundation and Octapharma S.A.,
Baxter BioScience and Pfizer
Spain.
Author details
1Department
of Physiology, School of Biology, Complutense University of Madrid, and Cell
Therapy and Regenerative Medicine Unit, La Paz University Hospital Health
Research Institute-IdiPAZ, Madrid, Spain. 2Royal
Foundation “Victoria Eugenia” of Hemophilia, Madrid, Spain. 3University
for the Development of State and the Pantanal Region, Campo Grande, Brazil.
Received:
19 September 2012 Accepted: 7 December 2012 Published: 13 December 2012
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doi:10.1186/1750-1172-7-97
Cite
this article as: Liras et al.: Advanced therapies for the treatment of
hemophilia: future perspectives. Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases 2012
7:97.

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