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Conditioning Regimens in Long-Term Pre-Clinical Studies to Support Development of <i>Ex Vivo</i> Gene Therapy: Review of Nonproliferative and Proliferative Changes

Franck Chanut, Francesca Sanvito, Giuliana Ferrari, Ilaria Visigalli, Nicola Carriglio, Raisa Jofra Hernández, Rossana Norata, Claudio Doglioni, Luigi Naldini, Patrizia Cristofori

2020Human Gene Therapy14 citationsDOI

Abstract

Hematopoietic stem cell gene therapy has become a successful therapeutic strategy for some inherited genetic disorders. Pre-clinical toxicity studies performed to support the human clinical trials using viral-mediated gene transfer and autologous hematopoietic stem and progenitor cell (HSPC) transplantation are complex and the use of mouse models of human diseases makes interpretation of the results challenging. In addition, they rely on the use of conditioning agents that must induce enough myeloablation to allow engraftment of transduced and transplanted HSPC. Busulfan and total body irradiation (TBI) are the most commonly used conditioning regimens in the mouse. Lenticular degeneration and atrophy of reproductive organs are expected histopathological changes. Proliferative and nonproliferative lesions can be observed with different incidence and distribution across strains and mouse models of diseases. The occurrence of these lesions can interfere with the interpretation of pre-clinical toxicity and tumorigenicity studies performed to support the human clinical studies. As such, it is important to be aware of the background incidence of lesions induced by different conditioning regimens. We review the histopathology results from seven long-term studies, five using TBI and two using busulfan.

Topics & Concepts

BusulfanTotal body irradiationGenetic enhancementProgenitor cellHaematopoiesisStem cellMedicineTransplantationEx vivoHematopoietic stem cell transplantationPathologyImmunologyCancer researchBiologyOncologyBioinformaticsCyclophosphamideIn vivoInternal medicineChemotherapyGeneBiotechnologyBiochemistryGeneticsVirus-based gene therapy researchCRISPR and Genetic EngineeringPluripotent Stem Cells Research
Conditioning Regimens in Long-Term Pre-Clinical Studies to Support Development of <i>Ex Vivo</i> Gene Therapy: Review of Nonproliferative and Proliferative Changes | Litcius