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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Long-term retinal outcomes after gene therapy in middle-aged RPE65

By Gardiner, Kristin L et al.·Published in Molecular therapy : the journal of the American Society of Gene Therapy·2020·Department of Clinical Sciences & Advanced Medicine, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Long-Term Structural Outcomes of Late-Stage RPE65 Gene Therapy.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of four dogs with hereditary blindness caused by RPE65 mutations received gene therapy to improve their vision. These dogs were between 5 and 6 years old and had varying degrees of retinal health at the time of treatment. Over the next 4 to 5 years, the areas with more healthy photoreceptors showed significant retention of these cells, leading to better long-term vision outcomes. However, areas with fewer healthy photoreceptors at the start continued to degenerate, similar to untreated areas. Overall, the study suggests that gene therapy is most effective when there are still some healthy photoreceptors present at the time of treatment.

People also search for: dog vision problems · RPE65 gene therapy for dogs · hereditary blindness in dogs

Abstract

The form of hereditary childhood blindness Leber congenital amaurosis (LCA) caused by biallelic RPE65 mutations is considered treatable with a gene therapy product approved in the US and Europe. The resulting vision improvement is well accepted, but long-term outcomes on the natural history of retinal degeneration are controversial. We treated four RPE65-mutant dogs in mid-life (age = 5-6 years) and followed them long-term (4-5 years). At the time of the intervention at mid-life, there were intra-ocular and inter-animal differences in local photoreceptor layer health ranging from near normal to complete degeneration. Treated locations having more than 63% of normal photoreceptors showed robust treatment-related retention of photoreceptors in the long term. Treated regions with less retained photoreceptors at the time of the intervention showed progressive degeneration similar to untreated regions with matched initial stage of disease. Unexpectedly, both treated and untreated regions in study eyes tended to show less degeneration compared to matched locations in untreated control eyes. These results support the hypothesis that successful long-term arrest of progression with RPE65 gene therapy may only occur in retinal regions with relatively retained photoreceptors at the time of the intervention, and there may be heretofore unknown mechanisms causing long-distance partial treatment effects beyond the region of subretinal injection.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31604676/