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- <text id=90TT2530>
- <title>
- Sep. 24, 1990: Giant Step For Gene Therapy
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Sep. 24, 1990 Under The Gun
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- MEDICINE, Page 74
- Giant Step for Gene Therapy
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>An experiment on a young girl opens a new era in the fight
- against hereditary diseases
- </p>
- <p>By Leon Jaroff--Reported by Andrea Dorfman/New York and Dick
- Thompson/Washington
- </p>
- <p> She weighed around 35 lbs., came down with an occasional
- cold or ear infection, and appeared to be a healthy
- four-year-old. But a dark cloud hung over her future. She
- suffered from ADA deficiency, the rare, incurable and deadly
- genetic disease that shuts down the immune system--a disorder
- similar to the one that in 1984 finally claimed the life of
- David, the famous but unfortunate "bubble boy." Only the weekly
- injection of a newly developed drug seemed to stand between the
- little girl and the same fate.
- </p>
- <p> Last week, on the 10th floor of the massive Clinical Center
- of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) in Bethesda, Md.,
- the still unidentified child assumed a historic role. In the
- first federally approved use of gene therapy, a team of doctors
- introduced into her bloodstream some 1 billion cells, each
- containing a copy of a foreign gene. If all goes well, these
- cells will begin producing ADA, the essential enzyme she
- requires, and her devastated immune system will slowly begin
- to recover.
- </p>
- <p> The procedure lacked the drama of an epochal event. For 28
- minutes, a grayish liquid in a suspended plastic bag dripped
- intravenously into the left hand of the child, who sat upright
- in a bed in the Clinical Center's pediatric intensive-care
- unit. That was it. But if the technique works as the doctors
- hope it will, the results could be little short of miraculous.
- Their patient may eventually begin to lead a normal life,
- without need for the costly and only partly effective drug now
- used to extend the lives of young victims of the disease.
- </p>
- <p> The landmark experiment, led by Dr. W. French Anderson, a
- pioneering advocate of gene therapy, and Drs. R. Michael Blaese
- and Kenneth Culver, raised the curtain on what some experts
- believe will be a new era in medicine, when many previously
- incurable genetic diseases will be contained or even conquered.
- The long-term impact on society could be enormous. Up to 5% of
- the infants born in the U.S. are afflicted with often
- debilitating and sometimes fatal genetic diseases. In most
- cases, no effective treatment exists for these disorders, which
- are caused by one or more faulty or missing genes among the
- estimated 100,000 genes in human DNA.
- </p>
- <p> Each gene consists of a segment of the DNA that is found in
- the nucleus of every one of the body's 100 trillion cells (with
- the exception of red blood cells, which have no nuclei). And
- each gene is responsible for the manufacture of a particular
- protein that contributes to either the structure or the
- functioning of the body. If the gene is defective, protein
- synthesis will be faulty and a deformity or genetic disease
- will result.
- </p>
- <p> The object of gene therapy, simply put, is to provide the
- body with healthy replacement genes that can fulfill the
- intended role of defective ones. "Gene therapy is actually a
- sophisticated drug-delivery system," Anderson explains.
- "Anything given now by injection--growth factor, factor VIII,
- insulin--you can just engineer the patient's own cells to
- pump them out. The advantage is that it's a one-time treatment."
- </p>
- <p> It all sounds rather straightforward, but medical
- researchers will have to overcome some formidable technological
- barriers before gene therapy becomes commonplace. Delivering
- replacement genes to particular cells, inserting them into the
- correct place in the DNA of those cells and then coaxing the
- genes to function properly are goals that still often elude
- scientists.
- </p>
- <p> And there are risks. If a gene is accidentally spliced into
- a vital segment of a cell's DNA, it could disrupt the
- functioning of another critical gene. Or it might activate a
- nearby oncogene, initiating the growth of a tumor. Transplanted
- without all its accompanying regulatory DNA, the new gene might
- order the production of too much or too little of a protein,
- with unforeseen consequences.
- </p>
- <p> These risks and the fears of some critics that the technique
- could be misused have raised safety and ethical issues that the
- practitioners of the new art are quick to recognize. "For the
- first time, we're altering an individual's genes," says W.
- ("Dusty") Miller, a gene-therapy researcher at the Fred
- Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle. "That's a new
- frontier, and you had better make sure you're doing the right
- thing. These are really exploratory times for gene therapy, and
- no one knows where it will lead." Despite his enthusiasm for
- gene therapy, Anderson too is aware of its implications. "The
- emotional impact of having somebody manipulate the fundamental
- blueprint of a human being is very frightening," he
- acknowledges. "We need to have the public understand it and to
- have adequate safeguards."
- </p>
- <p> Anderson is painfully familiar with safeguards. He and
- Blaese first submitted their proposal for treating ADA
- deficiency in April 1987. Since then, it has been reviewed a
- dozen times by a variety of NIH regulatory committees and
- altered again and again to meet their requirements. At long
- last, early this month, the acting head of the NIH gave final
- approval, and the way was cleared for the researchers to
- proceed. Concedes Jay Greenblatt, of the Regulatory Affairs
- branch of the National Cancer Institute: "The levels of review
- of this proposal have been incredible."
- </p>
- <p> The gene at the center of all this concern "codes," or
- provides the blueprint for, adenosine deaminase (ADA), an
- enzyme that breaks down toxic biological products. In the rare
- cases of ADA-deficiency children, the gene and, consequently,
- the enzyme are missing. As a result, the toxins accumulate in
- the bloodstream, killing essential T cells and B cells and
- inactivating the immune system. With little or no defense
- against disease except germ-free environments, like the famous
- bubble, victims usually died early in childhood; ADA injected
- directly into their bloodstream could not help; it deteriorated
- within minutes.
- </p>
- <p> Then, earlier this year, the FDA approved treatment with
- PEG-ADA, a drug consisting of the enzyme with a chemical sheath
- that enables it to exist in the bloodstream for days. Weekly
- injections, at an annual cost of $60,000, have kept some of the
- dozen or so ADA-deficiency children in the U.S. alive. But a
- longer-lasting, even permanent treatment that would generate
- ADA in the bloodstream is obviously preferable.
- </p>
- <p> Anderson and Blaese are confident that gene therapy could
- fit the bill. Ideally they would prefer to insert ADA genes
- into bone-marrow stem cells, which would continuously
- manufacture blood cells containing the gene and ensure a steady
- supply of the enzyme. But researchers have yet to find a way
- to isolate marrow stem cells effectively. Instead, the NIH
- researchers opted for T cells, immune-system cells that can
- survive in the bloodstream for months and even years.
- </p>
- <p> Extracting viable T cells from their young patient, Anderson
- and Blaese exposed them to mouse leukemia retro-viruses into
- which human ADA genes had been spliced. The retroviruses,
- rendered harmless by genetic engineering, were the vectors, the
- vehicles that would deliver the genes to their target. They
- invaded the T cells and, as retroviruses are wont to do,
- burrowed into the T-cell DNA, carrying the ADA gene with them.
- Finally, a billion or so T cells, now equipped with ADA genes
- and floating in the gray solution suspended above the little
- girl's bed in Bethesda, were dripped into her veins.
- </p>
- <p> Several months may pass before doctors can confirm that the
- ADA genes are being "expressed" and that the enzyme is being
- produced. Even so, the child will not be cured. She will have
- to return monthly for at least two years to the NIH, where
- doctors will infuse her with more engineered T cells and check
- for possible side effects. But Anderson and Blaese are
- optimistic. "We're very comfortable with the concept," says
- Blaese. In the meantime, as a precaution mandated by the FDA,
- the girl will continue to receive the PEG-ADA drug treatment.
- </p>
- <p> The milestone event should be quickly followed by a second
- application of human gene therapy, now apparently close to
- final approval. It has been proposed by NIH's Dr. Steven
- Rosenberg for treating patients with advanced cases of
- melanoma, a deadly skin cancer that afflicts 28,000 Americans
- annually. "We now use radiation, chemotherapy and surgery--external forces--on cancer patients," Rosenberg says. "But
- gene therapy uses the body's own internal mechanism. We're
- trying to make the body itself reject the disease."
- </p>
- <p> Rosenberg's strategy, devised with the help of Anderson, is
- to extract immune cells called tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes
- (TILs) from the tumors of melanoma patients. Rosenberg bathes
- the TILs in a solution of interleukin-2, a natural substance
- that invigorates them, and then exposes the TILs to
- re-engineered mouse leukemia retroviruses.
- </p>
- <p> Like the retrovirus used by Anderson, Rosenberg's delivery
- system has been made harmless and endowed by recombinant DNA
- techniques with a human gene. But this gene codes for tumor
- necrosis factor, a naturally occurring compound that attacks
- cancer cells. The altered viruses insert themselves and their
- piggyback gene into the genetic material of the TILs, which are
- then injected back into the bloodstream of the melanoma
- patients. If everything goes as planned, the activated TILs
- will home in on the tumors like guided missiles, attacking the
- cancerous cells and at the same time releasing the antitumor
- factor to help finish them off.
- </p>
- <p> Across the U.S., other scientists are preparing their own
- gene therapy experiments, some using retroviruses, others
- creating synthetic carriers or experimenting with chemical,
- electrical and even mechanical techniques to insert genes into
- cells. At St. Jude Children's Research Hospital in Memphis, Dr.
- Malcolm Brenner is working with "reporter" genes, which have
- no therapeutic value and are used merely as markers, in an
- attempt to learn more about how bone-marrow cells behave in the
- body and how they could best be used for gene therapy. He is
- seeking NIH approval to insert reporter genes into the marrow
- cells of children with cancer in an effort to learn why the
- disease recurs after remission.
- </p>
- <p> In Ann Arbor, Dr. James Wilson, a University of Michigan
- geneticist, is polishing a technique for introducing healthy
- genes into internal organs and blood vessels with genetic
- defects. Working with rabbits afflicted with familial
- hypercholesterolemia, a metabolic disorder, Wilson is trying
- to transfer good genes into defective hepatocytes, cells in the
- liver that, when functioning properly, help clear LDL
- cholesterol from the blood. Eschewing a retrovirus vector, he
- and two University of Connecticut scientists have developed a
- synthetic protein-DNA complex to deliver the healthy genes.
- Essentially a gene encapsulated by a protein, the complex zeros
- in on a receptor on the hepatocyte and is absorbed by the cell,
- which then incorporates the gene into its own DNA.
- </p>
- <p> After all the controversy that has long surrounded genetic
- engineering and gene therapy, reaction to last week's
- pioneering effort has been generally favorable. Abbey Meyers,
- executive director of the National Organization for Rare
- Disorders, was ecstatic, noting that people with genetic
- diseases have been waiting nearly 15 years for the first round
- of gene therapy experiments. "If we could find a cure for a
- disease with a genetic component such as diabetes," she says,
- "that would probably be the most important medical advance of
- the century, if not of all time."
- </p>
- <p> Arthur Caplan, director of the Center for Biomedical Ethics
- at the University of Minnesota, who has kept a close eye on
- genetic advances over the years, is convinced that any ethical
- concerns "have been adequately met. The risks are similar to
- those involved when you are trying any innovative, invasive
- procedure. I don't think there's anything special about it
- because it's genetic."
- </p>
- <p> Still, the gene therapy currently being practiced affects
- only the patients. Opposition is bound to swell again if
- scientists turn toward a goal that is still far off: the
- genetic engineering of sperm and egg cells. Such Brave New
- World-style manipulations would affect the genetic endowment
- of future generations, raise new ethical issues and pose
- unknown risks.
- </p>
- <p> For now, however, the promise of gene therapy appears to
- outweigh any potential pitfalls. And the acceptance of the new
- techniques is particularly sweet for longtime advocates.
- "Twenty years ago, you couldn't utter the phrase gene therapy
- without being told you were talking nonsense," says Dr.
- Theodore Friedmann, a molecular geneticist at the University
- of California, San Diego. "Now it's taken for granted that it's
- coming." He sees the day when doctors will be able to treat not
- only the thousands of diseases caused by a single faulty gene
- but even complex disorders like Parkinson's and Alzheimer's
- diseases, which are probably caused by a multitude of genes.
- Hyperbole? Not at all, says Friedmann. "When it comes to
- genetics, it's dangerous to be conservative."
- </p>
- <p> Perhaps most gratified by the week's events was Anderson.
- Ever since his undergraduate days at Harvard, he has been
- insisting that genetic disease could be cured by genetic
- alterations. In 1968 his paper suggesting the probability of
- gene therapy was rejected by the prestigious New England
- Journal of Medicine on the grounds that it was too speculative.
- </p>
- <p>seriously is so delightful."
- </p>
- <p>FUTURE TARGETS
- </p>
- <p>-- HEMOPHILIA
- </p>
- <p> Affecting only males, hemophilia results from a genetic
- mutation that impairs the production of one or more factors
- involved in blood clotting. Hemophiliacs can inject themselves
- with concentrated preparations of clotting factor at the first
- sign of bleeding, but taking doses of cells containing normal
- clotting-factor genes could be an easier way of controlling
- the disease.
- </p>
- <p>-- DIABETES
- </p>
- <p> Patients are incapable of producing sufficient amounts of
- insulin, the hormone responsible for regulating glucose levels
- in the blood. Thought to be at least partially hereditary, the
- disease arises when insulin-secreting cells in the pancreas
- mysteriously begin to die. Although daily injections of
- insulin or, in some cases, a strict diet can control diabetes,
- it may be possible to treat the disease by replacing the genes
- involved in insulin production.
- </p>
- <p>-- PARKINSON'S DISEASE
- </p>
- <p> A progressive disorder of the central nervous system,
- Parkinson's results from the gradual degeneration of cells in
- the brain that produce a vital chemical called dopamine.
- Because an anatomical barrier prevents many substances injected
- into the bloodstream from entering the brain, intravenous doses
- of dopamine-producing cells would not be successful. Instead,
- researchers are trying to devise ways to graft genetically
- altered cells directly onto neurons in the brain.
- </p>
- <p>-- AIDS
- </p>
- <p> The human immunodeficiency virus that causes AIDS attacks
- the immune system by binding to specific sites, called CD-4
- receptors, on the surface of cells. By constructing a decoy
- containing a gene that produces soluble CD-4, scientists hope
- to confuse the HIV and prevent it from latching onto
- immune-system cells.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-