Litcius/Paper detail

Gene therapy for ischaemic heart disease and heart failure

H Korpela, Niko Järveläinen, Satu Siimes, Jaakko Lampela, Jonna Airaksinen, Kaisa Valli, Mikko Turunen, Juhani Pajula, Jussi Nurro, Seppo Ylä‐Herttuala

2021Journal of Internal Medicine57 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Gene therapy has been expected to become a novel treatment method since the structure of DNA was discovered in 1953. The morbidity from cardiovascular diseases remains remarkable despite the improvement of percutaneous interventions and pharmacological treatment, underlining the need for novel therapeutics. Gene therapy-mediated therapeutic angiogenesis could help those who have not gained sufficient symptom relief with traditional treatment methods. Especially patients with severe coronary artery disease and heart failure could benefit from gene therapy. Some clinical trials have reported improved myocardial perfusion and symptom relief in CAD patients, but few trials have come up with disappointing negative results. Translating preclinical success into clinical applications has encountered difficulties in successful transduction, study design, endpoint selection, and patient selection and recruitment. However, promising new methods for transducing the cells, such as retrograde delivery and cardiac-specific AAV vectors, hold great promise for myocardial gene therapy. This review introduces gene therapy for ischaemic heart disease and heart failure and discusses the current status and future developments in this field.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineGenetic enhancementHeart failureClinical trialCoronary artery diseaseDiseaseClinical endpointIntensive care medicineTherapeutic angiogenesisCardiologyGene deliveryInternal medicineAngiogenesisNeovascularizationGeneBiochemistryChemistryCRISPR and Genetic EngineeringPluripotent Stem Cells ResearchVirus-based gene therapy research
Gene therapy for ischaemic heart disease and heart failure | Litcius