Bilateral gene therapy in children with autosomal recessive deafness 9: single-arm trial results

Author:

Wang Hui,Chen Yuxin,Lv Jun,Cheng Xiaoting,Cao Qi,Wang Daqi,Zhang Longlong,Zhu Biyun,Shen Min,Xu Chunxin,Xun Mengzhao,Wang Zijing,Tang Honghai,Hu Shaowei,Cui Chong,Jiang Luoying,Yin Yanbo,Guo Luo,Zhou Yi,Han Lei,Gao Ziwen,Zhang Jiajia,Yu Sha,Gao Kaiyu,Wang Jinghan,Chen Bing,Wang Wuqing,Chen Zheng-YiORCID,Li Huawei,Shu YilaiORCID

Abstract

AbstractGene therapy is a promising approach for hereditary deafness. We recently showed that unilateral AAV1-hOTOF gene therapy with dual adeno-associated virus (AAV) serotype 1 carrying human OTOF transgene is safe and associated with functional improvements in patients with autosomal recessive deafness 9 (DFNB9). The protocol was subsequently amended and approved to allow bilateral gene therapy administration. Here we report an interim analysis of the single-arm trial investigating the safety and efficacy of binaural therapy in five pediatric patients with DFNB9. The primary endpoint was dose-limiting toxicity at 6 weeks, and the secondary endpoint included safety (adverse events) and efficacy (auditory function and speech perception). No dose-limiting toxicity or serious adverse event occurred. A total of 36 adverse events occurred. The most common adverse events were increased lymphocyte counts (6 out of 36) and increased cholesterol levels (6 out of 36). All patients had bilateral hearing restoration. The average auditory brainstem response threshold in the right (left) ear was >95 dB (>95 dB) in all patients at baseline, and the average auditory brainstem response threshold in the right (left) ear was restored to 58 dB (58 dB) in patient 1, 75 dB (85 dB) in patient 2, 55 dB (50 dB) in patient 3 at 26 weeks, and 75 dB (78 dB) in patient 4 and 63 dB (63 dB) in patient 5 at 13 weeks. The speech perception and the capability of sound source localization were restored in all five patients. These results provide preliminary insights on the safety and efficacy of binaural AAV gene therapy for hereditary deafness. The trial is ongoing with longer follow-up to confirm the safety and efficacy findings. Chinese Clinical Trial Registry registration: ChiCTR2200063181.

Funder

Ministry of Science and Technology of the People’s Republic of China

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Science and Technology Commission of Shanghai Municipality

Shanghai Municipal Education Commission

Fudan University

Funder: MEE. Grant: the Ines and Fredrick Yeatts Fund.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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