作者
Angela Lek,Brenda Wong,Allison M. Keeler,Meghan Blackwood,Kaiyue Ma,Shushu Huang,Katelyn Sylvia,Ana Rita Batista,Rebecca Artinian,Danielle Kokoski,Shestruma Parajuli,Juan Putra,Chrystalle Katte Carreon,Hart G.W. Lidov,Keryn Woodman,Sander Pajusalu,Joseph Spinazzola,Thomas Gallagher,Joan M. LaRovere,Diane Balderson,Lauren Page Black,Keith A. Sutton,Richard Horgan,Monkol Lek,Terence R. Flotte
摘要
We treated a 27-year-old patient with Duchenne’s muscular dystrophy (DMD) with recombinant adeno-associated virus (rAAV) serotype 9 containing dSaCas9 (i.e., “dead” Staphylococcus aureus Cas9, in which the Cas9 nuclease activity has been inactivated) fused to VP64; this transgene was designed to up-regulate cortical dystrophin as a custom CRISPR–transactivator therapy. The dose of rAAV used was 1×1014 vector genomes per kilogram of body weight. Mild cardiac dysfunction and pericardial effusion developed, followed by acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) and cardiac arrest 6 days after transgene treatment; the patient died 2 days later. A postmortem examination showed severe diffuse alveolar damage. Expression of transgene in the liver was minimal, and there was no evidence of AAV serotype 9 antibodies or effector T-cell reactivity in the organs. These findings indicate that an innate immune reaction caused ARDS in a patient with advanced DMD treated with high-dose rAAV gene therapy. (Funded by Cure Rare Disease.)