Thursday, February 25, 2016

Genotoxicity in Mice Following AAV Gene Delivery: A Safety Concern for Human Gene Therapy?

Randy J Chandler, Matthew C LaFave, Gaurav K Varshney, Shawn M Burgess and Charles P Venditti; (Nature) Molecular Therapy 24, 198-201 (February 2016) | doi:10.1038/mt.2016.17


Given the lack of therapies for the many diseases that rAAV gene therapy promises to treat, such as lethal inborn errors of metabolism, the risk of toxicity imposed by rAAV exposure will need to be balanced against the significant benefits offered by effective gene therapy, which for some patients could be lifesaving.

Although the lack of natural pathogenicity and the capacity for effective gene delivery coupled with stable, long-term gene expression have supported the advancement of rAAV as an optimal vector for human clinical trials, recent studies in mice have challenged the belief that rAAV is an innocuous gene therapy vector.


Genotoxicity in Mice Following AAV Gene Delivery: A Safety Concern for Human Gene Therapy?