AAV5–Factor VIII Gene Transfer in Severe Hemophilia A
Hampshire Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust · BioMarin (United States) · +8 more institutions
Abstract
Patients with hemophilia A rely on exogenous factor VIII to prevent bleeding in joints, soft tissue, and the central nervous system. Although successful gene transfer has been reported in patients with hemophilia B, the large size of the factor VIII coding region has precluded improved outcomes with gene therapy in patients with hemophilia A.
We infused a single intravenous dose of a codon-optimized adeno-associated virus serotype 5 (AAV5) vector encoding a B-domain-deleted human factor VIII (AAV5-hFVIII-SQ) in nine men with severe hemophilia A. Participants were enrolled sequentially into one of three dose cohorts (low dose [one participant], intermediate dose [one participant], and high dose [seven participants]) and were followed through 52 weeks.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 52.79
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 29
Authors
11Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Gene transfer
- Genetic enhancement
- Factor IX
- Factor VIIa
- Gene
- Severe bleeding
- Coagulopathy
- Zero hunger