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April
27, 2004
Preliminary Results Are Promising
In Alzheimer’s Gene Therapy Trial
By Leslie
Franz
Surgical placement
of genetically modified tissue directly into the brains of patients
with Alzheimer’s disease, an experimental approach to
delaying brain cell loss associated with the disease, leads
to increased metabolic activity in the brain, with cells apparently
responding to the insertion of growth factor-producing grafts,
according to preliminary findings reported April 27 at the American
Academy of Neurology meeting in San Francisco.
Though the Phase I
study conducted at the University of California, San Diego (UCSD)
was small and designed to test safety and toxicity, the subjects
may also show some early indications of reduction in the advancement
of their disease, according to the study’s principal investigator
Mark Tuszynski, M.D., Ph.D., professor of neurosciences at the
UCSD School of Medicine.
"These results
are intriguing," said Tuszynski. "If these effects
are borne out in larger, controlled trials, this could be a
significant advance over existing therapies for Alzheimer's
disease."
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| On
April 5, 2001, in a groundbreaking
procedure, physicians at the University of California,
San Diego (UCSD) School of Medicine surgically implanted
genetically modified tissue into the brain of an Alzheimer’s
patient. This launched the first phase of an experimental
gene therapy protocol for Alzheimer’s disease.
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Eight volunteers diagnosed
with early-stage Alzheimer’s disease participated in this
study, with the first surgery performed in April 2001 at UCSD’s
John M. and Sally B. Thornton Hospital. Patients’ own
skin cells were genetically modified in culture to produce Nerve
Growth Factor (NGF), a naturally occurring protein that prevents
cell death and stimulates cell function. The NGF-producing cells
were then surgically implanted into a deep brain region where
cholinergic cell degeneration occurs in Alzheimer’s disease.
The cholinergic system is important in memory and cognitive
function. Patients received the implanted grafts in targeted
areas on either the left, right or both sides of the brain.
This human trial was
undertaken following extensive studies in primates conducted
by Tuszynski and colleagues , which showed that grafting NGF-producing
tissue into the brains of aged monkeys restored atrophied brain
cells to near-normal size and quantity, and also restored axons
connecting the brain cells, essential for communication between
cells.
With the last human
subject now more than a year beyond surgery, no adverse effects
from the NGF-producing implants have been detected in the subjects,
an indication that the biological therapy is itself safe and
well-tolerated.
The procedure initially
was performed while patients were awake but lightly sedated.
Two patients moved as the cells were being injected, resulting
in bleeding in the brain. One of these patients died of acute
myocardial infarction (heart attack) five weeks later. Following
these events, the protocol was redesigned with patients given
general anesthesia during the procedure, and subsequent procedures
were performed without complication.
The small-scale study
did not include placebo controls, and doctors and patients knew
that the procedure was performed (they were not “blinded”).
Because of this, Tuszynski is cautious about preliminary findings
regarding the cognitive function of the subjects. However, all
of the subjects underwent standard cognitive testing before
and following surgery, and reductions in rates of cognitive
decline compared to their pre-operative function were noted.
The six subjects who successfully completed the surgery showed
a 50 percent reduction in their annual rate of decline on one
of the measured cognitive scales. On another scale, the subjects
showed a reduced rate of decline that persisted over the 1.5-
to two-year period of the study.
Positron Emission Tomography
(PET) imaging of the patients showed increased metabolic activity
in the areas of the brains of patients after treatment with
NGF, compared with non-treated Alzheimer’s disease patients.
An autopsy of the patient who died showed active NGF production
in the brain, and a growth response of brain cells to the NGF
delivery.
Based on these results,
Tuszynski concludes that the NGF implants are safe and well-tolerated
by patients, and when performed with patients fully anesthetized,
the injection procedure is safe.
Tuszynski is also director
of the Center for Neural Repair at UCSD and a neurologist with
the UCSD Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center (ADRC) and
San Diego Veterans Affairs Medical Center.
Co-authors of the AAN
abstract, in addition to Tuszynski, are Leon Thal, M.D., UCSD
chair of neurosciences and director of the UCSD ADRC; Mary Margaret
Pay, R.N. of the UCSD ADRC; Hoi-Sang U, UCSD professor of surgery;
Roy Bakay, M.D., neurosurgeon at Rush University Medical Center
in Chicago; John Alksne, M.D. UCSD professor of surgery; David
Salmon, Ph.D., UCSD professor of neurosciences and member of
the ADRC; Gilbert Ho, M.D., Assistant Professor of Neurosciences
at UCSD: G. Tong, M.D., Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Neurosciences
at UCSD; Armin Blesch, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Neurosciences
at UCSD; Lee Vahlsing , M.S., specialist at UCSD; James Connor,
Ph.D., Project Scientist at UCSD; S. Potkin, M.D., Professor
of Neurology at UC Irvine; and Christine Gall, M.D., Professor
of Neurobiology at UC Irvine.
This work was supported
by the Shiley Family Foundation and The Institute for the Study
of Aging in New York.
A new Phase I/II study,
using direct NGF gene delivery to the brain thereby eliminating
the need for grafting cells, will be led by David Bennett, M.D.,
neurologist and director of the Rush University Alzheimer’s
Disease Center, and Zoe Arvanitakis, M.D., neurologist at Rush
University Medical Center in Chicago. Additional sites will
be enrolled as subsequent phases of the trial proceed, sponsored
by Ceregene, Inc., a San Diego-based biotechnology company.
Dr. Roy Bakay, a Rush University Medical Center neurosurgeon,
will perform the surgery. Bakay, an experienced neurosurgeon
in performing stereotactic injection, participated in some of
the UCSD surgeries.
The University of California
holds the patent to this technology. The exclusive world-wide
licensee is Ceregene, Inc. a biotechnology company focused on
the development and commercialization of gene therapies for
neurological disorders including Alzheimer’s disease,
Parkinson’s disease and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
(ALS). Ceregene was launched in January 2001 and is a majority-owned
subsidiary of Cell Genesys, Inc. (Nasdaq: CEGE), which is headquartered
in South San Francisco, CA. The University of California and
some of its investigators have a financial interest in Ceregene.
Media
Contact: Leslie Franz (619)
543-6163
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