Evading and overcoming AAV neutralization in gene therapy
Joseph Earley, Elena Piletska, Giuseppe Ronzitti, Sergey A. Piletsky
Abstract
Adeno-associated virus (AAV)-derived viral vectors are a promising platform for the delivery of curative, life-changing therapies to a huge number of patients with monogenic disorders. There are currently over 250 clinical trials ongoing worldwide. However, for these therapies to benefit as many patients as possible, techniques must be developed to treat those with pre-existing immunity and to potentially allow re-administration of a dose in the future, should efficacy wane over time. This review discusses the current state and prospects of technologies to evade and overcome these immune responses and allow successful treatment of the greatest number of patients possible.
Topics & Concepts
Genetic enhancementAdeno-associated virusClinical trialIntensive care medicineMedicineGene deliveryViral vectorImmune systemVirusVirologyBioinformaticsImmunologyBiologyVector (molecular biology)GeneGeneticsRecombinant DNAVirus-based gene therapy researchRNA Interference and Gene DeliveryViral Infections and Immunology Research