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Hematologic Cancer after Gene Therapy for Cerebral Adrenoleukodystrophy

  • Christine N. Duncan
  • , Jacob R. Bledsoe
  • , Bartosz J Grzywacz
  • , Amy Beckman
  • , Melissa Bonner
  • , Florian S. Eichler
  • , Jörn Sven Kühl
  • , Marian H. Harris
  • , Sarah Slauson
  • , Richard A. Colvin
  • , Vinod K. Prasad
  • , Gerald F. Downey
  • , Francis J. Pierciey
  • , Melissa A. Kinney
  • , Marianna Foos
  • , Ankit Lodaya
  • , Nicole Floro
  • , Geoffrey Parsons
  • , Andrew C. Dietz
  • , Ashish O Gupta
  • Paul J Orchard, Himal L. Thakar, David A. Williams

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Background Gene therapy with elivaldogene autotemcel (eli-cel) consisting of autologous CD34+ cells transduced with lentiviral vector containing ABCD1 complementary DNA (Lenti-D) has shown efficacy in clinical studies for the treatment of cerebral adrenoleukodystrophy. However, the risk of oncogenesis with eli-cel is unclear. Methods We performed integration-site analysis, genetic studies, flow cytometry, and morphologic studies in peripheral-blood and bone marrow samples from patients who received eli-cel therapy in two completed phase 2-3 studies (ALD-102 and ALD-104) and an ongoing follow-up study (LTF-304) involving the patients in both ALD-102 and ALD-104. Results Hematologic cancer developed in 7 of 67 patients after the receipt of eli-cel (1 of 32 patients in the ALD-102 study and 6 of 35 patients in the ALD-104 study): myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) with unilineage dysplasia in 2 patients at 14 and 26 months; MDS with excess blasts in 3 patients at 28, 42, and 92 months; MDS in 1 patient at 36 months; and acute myeloid leukemia (AML) in 1 patient at 57 months. In the 6 patients with available data, predominant clones contained lentiviral vector insertions at multiple loci, including at either MECOM-EVI1 (MDS and EVI1 complex protein EVI1 [ecotropic virus integration site 1], in 5 patients) or PRDM16 (positive regulatory domain zinc finger protein 16, in 1 patient). Several patients had cytopenias, and most had vector insertions in multiple genes within the same clone; 6 of the 7 patients also had somatic mutations (KRAS, NRAS, WT1, CDKN2A or CDKN2B, or RUNX1), and 1 of the 7 patients had monosomy 7. Of the 5 patients with MDS with excess blasts or MDS with unilineage dysplasia who underwent allogeneic hematopoietic stem-cell transplantation (HSCT), 4 patients remain free of MDS without recurrence of symptoms of cerebral adrenoleukodystrophy, and 1 patient died from presumed graft-versus-host disease 20 months after HSCT (49 months after receiving eli-cel). The patient with AML is alive and had full donor chimerism after HSCT; the patient with the most recent case of MDS is alive and awaiting HSCT. Conclusions Hematologic cancer developed in a subgroup of patients who were treated with eli-cel; the cases are associated with clonal vector insertions within oncogenes and clonal evolution with acquisition of somatic genetic defects. (Funded by Bluebird Bio; ALD-102, ALD-104, and LTF-304 ClinicalTrials.gov numbers, NCT01896102, NCT03852498, and NCT02698579, respectively.)

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)1287-1301
Number of pages15
JournalNew England Journal of Medicine
Volume391
Issue number14
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 10 2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Massachusetts Medical Society.

UN SDGs

This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

  1. SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being
    SDG 3 Good Health and Well-being

Keywords

  • Adolescent Medicine
  • Allergy/Immunology
  • Bone Marrow Transplantation
  • Childhood Cancer
  • Childhood Diseases
  • Gene Editing
  • Genetics
  • Hematology/Oncology
  • Inflammatory Disease
  • Leukemia/Lymphoma
  • Neurology/Neurosurgery
  • Neurology/Neurosurgery General
  • Neuromuscular Disease
  • Neuroscience
  • Pediatrics
  • Pediatrics General
  • Stem Cells

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