Fetal Stem Cell Therapy Ready for use
Transcription
Fetal Stem Cell Therapy Ready for use
©CBreymann Fetal Stem Cell Therapy Ready for use ? Prof. Dr. Christian Breymann University Hospital Zurich Dept. OBGYN and Obstetric Research Congenital Amaurosis ©CBreymann Time Mag, 2009 Time Mag, 2009 Perinatal SCT Fetus as recipient Current experience How to improve success ? Fetal and Postnatal Gene Therapy Safety & Ethical aspects ©CBreymann Fetus as recipient Prenatal diagnostics is mandatory Invasive (CVS) , maternal blood (fetal DNA) Chromosomal defects, single gene disorders Karyotyping and molecular biology techniques (PCR) Abnormal karyotype not from maternal blood !! New: DNA chip technology (snips, duplications…) ©CBreymann the early gestational fetus (<12 week) is Fetal tolerance immunologically naive • for alloantigen Avoid early onset organ damage • May allow targeting of otherwise inaccessible organs and tissues May allow permanent repair by cell replacement through engraftment or induce tolerance for the transplant • Outcome With permission from: The-Hung Bui, MD The Karolinska Institute Early gestation, an highly proliferative environment •Large scale migration of stem cells to seed anatomic compartments for tissue differentiation • Exponential expansion of cellular compartments With permission from: The-Hung Bui, MD The Karolinska Institute Large amounts of stem cell can be • fetus < 75 g given before week 13 IUT, a recapitulation of ontogeny •Engraftment, migration, expansion of transplanted cells, and differentiation Non-myeloablative strategy Prenatal tolerance induction to facilitate postnatal transplantation Near complete or complete donor chimerism Large number of target disorders Minimally invasive procedure With permission from: The-Hung Bui, MD The Karolinska Institute Fetal liver from early gestations Hematopoietic SC T-cells depleted adult bone marrow MSCs from fetal liver or adult BM But !............. Limited success of treatment in children !! Promising results in 1/3 after allogeneic SCT Irreversible damage at birth frequent HLA compatibility Immunosupression (recipient) GvHD Graft failure Storage disease, Thallassemia, Osteogenesis imperfecta Diagnose and treat early >> ameliorate long term health ©CBreymann Prenatal Transplantation = window of opportunity….. 1-2 Trimester Ontogenetic properties of haematopoietic system Immunological incompetence until 2. Tm Across HLA barrirs No immunosupression,GvHD Stable engraftment and chimerism Prevention of full organ damage ©CBreymann With permission from: The-Hung Bui, MD The Karolinska Institute Current Experience…… > 30 experimental PST (Flake 1996) Mostly no clinical benefit Pirovano 2004 >> improve immune system (T cells) Hb pathies, storage disease >> no sign. Engraftment (Sanna 1999, Bambach 1997) Window of opportunity only until 12 wog ? Immunological barriers ? Host defense ? NK cells ? Competition of host hematopoeitic cells ? ©CBreymann success in only a few fetuses all with immunodeficiency disorders bare lymphocyte syndrome SCID Omenn syndrome Touraine et al. 1989, 1992; Flake et al. 1996; Wangler et al. 1996; Lanfranchi et al. 1998; Porta et al. 2000; Westgren et al. 2002; Porta et al. 2002 With permission from: The-Hung Bui, MD The Karolinska Institute With permission from: The-Hung Bui, MD The Karolinska Institute Buckley NEJM 2000 With permission from: The-Hung Bui, MD The Karolinska Institute Buckley et al NEJM 1999 Fanos & Puck A J Med Genet 2001 How to improve ? Selective advantage of donor cells Animal models (in utero transplantation): Modification of source and dose Route of administration (extracoelomic..) Cotransplantation of mesenchymal SC (MSC) Induction of microchimerism (in utero) for postnatal transplantation Graft modulation of T cells Supression of fetal haematopoiesis (parvovirus B19) >> high – level engraftments in animal models ©CBreymann Immunoglobulin • ATG • Anti-NK Immunosuppression • Corticosteroids • Parvovirus B19 Chemotherapy • Cyclosporin • FK-506 • MMF Co-transplantation with MSC Macaque Fetus With permission from: The-Hung Bui, MD The Karolinska Institute MSC (Mesenchymal stem cells) Reconstitute different tissues after in utero transplantation Bone and cartilage (>> OI) Improve engraftment if cotransplanted Improve GvHD after HSCT Less immunogenic >> later stage T possible Le Blanc 2005 (OI), 5% donor cell chimerism Open influence on clinical course Potential in Bone, connective tissue, skeletal (MDD), neurodegenration diseases ©CBreymann Götherström et al 2003, 2004, 2008; Lindton et al 2003; Le Blanc et al 2003; Rasmusson et al 2003 29 weeks GA. Fetus with multiple femur, tibia and rib fractures (osteogenesis imperfecta type III) CS at 36 weeks GA Le Blanc et al. Transplantation 2005; 79:1607-14 With permission from: The-Hung Bui, MD The Karolinska Institute Engraftment 40-50/1000 of osteoblasts XY Microchimerism 21 Trials completed 80 trials ongoin 5344 patients 42 trials autogenic (1959 patients) Fetal (autologous) gene therapy Excludes allogeneic HLA barriers Improve of transduction of SC and expression of therapeutic gene New vectors and transduction protocols Prenatal induction of long term transgene tolerance Lentiviral (HIV) based vectors Enhances efficiency and duration of gene expression (Zanjani 1999) Efficient transduction in non dividing haematopoietic cells superior to murine retroviruses Long term expression of therapeutic b-globin in thlassemia ©CBreyman Time Mag, 2009 Prenatal gene therapy In utero gene transfer models for Pulmonary epithelial cells, hepatocytes, skin, intestine, heart……. (adenovirus, murine retroviral vectors) Amniotic, tracheal, peritoneal, hepatc, vascular, placental transfer of vector gene construct Proof of principle for tolerance and gene expression after in utero transfer in mouse/ rat New approach: harvest of placental cells and retransfer after gene transfer to placenta (Portmann-Lanz 2006) Ex vivo gene therapy with haematopoietic stem cells HSC are reinduced after in vitro gene transfer In vivo gene transfer Gene containing vector is transfered to fetus Positive results in murine thalassemia model (May 2000) ©CBreymann Safety aspects……. Transduction of gonadal cells > genetic germ line transduction Risk for fetus and mother (placental migration) Insertional mutagenesis Functional gene defect, genetic disease Malignant tumour (e.g. leukemia like syndrome, liver tumours) Ex vivo transfer maybe safer Mutagenesis detected before insertion… Risk can not be completely ruled out Ethics: Step from animal model to human gene transfer Risk vs benefit (germ line transduction vs health of individual ) ? In utero gene therapy and stem cell transplantation are still in their infancy Much progress is being made in stem cell biology and vector technology In utero transplantations for SCIDs is a clinical reality and potential for new indications using MSCs and other stem cells Proceed with caution, ethical issues have to be addressed With permission from: The-Hung Bui, MD The Karolinska Institute Prenatal/ fetal stem cell therapy……is promising….. ……but not ready to take off yet…… (advantages, safety, risks……)