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1.
J Clin Immunol ; 44(5): 107, 2024 Apr 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38676811

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Patients with adenosine deaminase 1 deficient severe combined immunodeficiency (ADA-SCID) are initially treated with enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) with polyethylene glycol-modified (PEGylated) ADA while awaiting definitive treatment with hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT) or gene therapy. Beginning in 1990, ERT was performed with PEGylated bovine intestinal ADA (ADAGEN®). In 2019, a PEGylated recombinant bovine ADA (Revcovi®) replaced ADAGEN following studies in older patients previously treated with ADAGEN for many years. There are limited longitudinal data on ERT-naïve newborns treated with Revcovi. METHODS: We report our clinical experience with Revcovi as initial bridge therapy in three newly diagnosed infants with ADA-SCID, along with comprehensive biochemical and immunologic data. RESULTS: Revcovi was initiated at twice weekly dosing (0.2 mg/kg intramuscularly), and monitored by following plasma ADA activity and the concentration of total deoxyadenosine nucleotides (dAXP) in erythrocytes. All patients rapidly achieved a biochemically effective level of plasma ADA activity, and red cell dAXP were eliminated within 2-3 months. Two patients reconstituted B-cells and NK-cells within the first month of ERT, followed by naive T-cells one month later. The third patient reconstituted all lymphocyte subsets within the first month of ERT. One patient experienced declining lymphocyte counts with improvement following Revcovi dose escalation. Two patients developed early, self-resolving thrombocytosis, but no thromboembolic events occurred. CONCLUSION: Revcovi was safe and effective as initial therapy to restore immune function in these newly diagnosed infants with ADA-SCID, however, time course and degree of reconstitution varied. Revcovi dose may need to be optimized based on immune reconstitution, clinical status, and biochemical data.


Subject(s)
Adenosine Deaminase , Agammaglobulinemia , Enzyme Replacement Therapy , Severe Combined Immunodeficiency , Animals , Female , Humans , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Male , Adenosine Deaminase/deficiency , Adenosine Deaminase/genetics , Agammaglobulinemia/therapy , Immune Reconstitution , Recombinant Proteins/therapeutic use , Severe Combined Immunodeficiency/therapy , Treatment Outcome
2.
J Clin Immunol ; 38(4): 484-493, 2018 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29744787

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Adenosine deaminase (ADA) deficiency is an autosomal recessive primary immunodeficiency. It results in the intracellular accumulation of toxic metabolites which have effects particularly on lymphocytes and the brain. The aim of this study was to evaluate the outcome of 13 ADA-deficient patients. We planned to evaluate their clinical and laboratory findings before and after enzyme replacement therapy (ERT), allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (aHSCT), and hematopoietic stem cell gene therapy (HSCGT). METHODS: Measurement of ADA enzyme activity and metabolites and sequencing of the ADA gene were performed in most of the patients with ADA deficiency. One of the patients with late-onset ADA deficiency was diagnosed by the help of primary immunodeficiency panel screening. RESULTS: Ten out of 13 patients were diagnosed as SCID, while 3 out of 13 were diagnosed as delayed-/late-onset ADA deficiency. Late-onset ADA deficiency patients had clinical and laboratory findings of combined immunodeficiency (CID). Eight patients with ADA-SCID were found to have higher levels of ADA metabolite (dAXP%) (62.1% (34.6-71.9)) than 3 patients with delayed-/late-onset ADA deficiency (6.9% (2.1-8.9). All but one patient with SCID had T-B-NK- phenotype, one had T-B-NK+ phenotype. Genetic defect was documented in 11 patients. Four out of 11 patients had compound heterozygous defects. Three out of 4 patients with compound heterozygous defects had delayed-onset/late-onset ADA deficiency. Seven out of 11 patients with SCID had homozygous defects. Five out of 7 had the same homozygous indel frameshift mutation (c.955-959delGAAGA) showing a founder effect. There were two novel splice site defects: one (IVS10+2T>C) was heterozygous in a patient with late-onset ADA deficiency, and the other was homozygous (IVS2delT+2) in a SCID patient. Other defects were missense defects. Nine out of 13 patients were put on pegylated ADA ERT. Four out of six patients were transplanted without using a conditioning regimen. HSCGT was performed to one of the patients. CONCLUSION: The genetic diagnosis of SCID is utmost important. There is a chance to give ERT before the definitive therapy if the patient with SCID/CID has ADA deficiency. Although ERT was insufficient to restore a normal immune function in ADA-SCID patients, it was useful to improve and stabilize the clinical status before curative therapy (aHSCT/HSCGT). Enzyme replacement therapy was successful in patients with late-/delayed-onset ADA deficiency who presented with the features of combined immunodeficiency. Gastrointestinal polyposis in a patient with late-onset ADA deficiency may be an association or a coincidental finding. Intermittent neurodevelopmental evaluation especially for hearing impairment should be performed in most of the ADA-deficient patients. This may alleviate the speech delay and cognitive abnormalities which may be observed in the follow-up.


Subject(s)
Adenosine Deaminase/deficiency , Agammaglobulinemia/diagnosis , Genetic Association Studies , Severe Combined Immunodeficiency/diagnosis , Adenosine Deaminase/blood , Adenosine Deaminase/genetics , Agammaglobulinemia/mortality , Agammaglobulinemia/therapy , Age of Onset , Biomarkers , Biopsy , Disease Management , Enzyme Activation , Enzyme Replacement Therapy , Female , Genetic Testing , Genetic Therapy , Genotype , Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation , Homozygote , Humans , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Male , Mutation , Phenotype , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Severe Combined Immunodeficiency/mortality , Severe Combined Immunodeficiency/therapy , Treatment Outcome
3.
J Clin Immunol ; 35(4): 384-98, 2015 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25875699

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: We here describe treatment outcomes in two adenosine deaminase (ADA)-deficiency patients (pt) who received stem cell gene therapy (SCGT) with no cytoreductive conditioning. As this protocol has features distinct from those of other clinical trials, its results provide insights into SCGT for ADA deficiency. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Pt 1 was treated at age 4.7 years, whereas pt 2, who had previously received T-cell gene therapy, was treated at age 13 years. Bone marrow CD34(+) cells were harvested after enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) was withdrawn; following transduction of ADA cDNA by the γ-retroviral vector GCsapM-ADA, they were administered intravenously. No cytoreductive conditioning, at present considered critical for therapeutic benefit, was given before cell infusion. Hematological/immunological reconstitution kinetics, levels of systemic detoxification, gene-marking levels, and proviral insertion sites in hematopoietic cells were assessed. RESULTS: Treatment was well tolerated, and no serious adverse events were observed. Engraftment of gene-modified repopulating cells was evidenced by the appearance and maintenance of peripheral lymphocytes expressing functional ADA. Systemic detoxification was moderately achieved, allowing temporary discontinuation of ERT for 6 and 10 years in pt 1 and pt 2, respectively. Recovery of immunity remained partial, with lymphocyte counts in pts 1 and 2, peaked at 408/mm(3) and 1248/mm(3), approximately 2 and 5 years after SCGT. Vector integration site analyses confirmed that hematopoiesis was reconstituted with a limited number of clones, some of which were shown to have myelo-lymphoid potential. CONCLUSIONS: Outcomes in SCGT for ADA-SCID are described in the context of a unique protocol, which used neither ERT nor cytoreductive conditioning. Although proven safe, immune reconstitution was partial and temporary. Our results reiterate the importance of cytoreductive conditioning to ensure greater benefits from SCGT.


Subject(s)
Adenosine Deaminase/deficiency , Adenosine Deaminase/genetics , Agammaglobulinemia/genetics , Agammaglobulinemia/therapy , Genetic Therapy , Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation , Severe Combined Immunodeficiency/genetics , Severe Combined Immunodeficiency/therapy , Adenosine Deaminase/immunology , Adenosine Deaminase/therapeutic use , Adolescent , Agammaglobulinemia/diagnosis , Agammaglobulinemia/immunology , Age of Onset , Cell Differentiation , Child, Preschool , Enzyme Activation , Enzyme Replacement Therapy , Gammaretrovirus/genetics , Gene Expression , Genetic Vectors/genetics , Hematopoiesis , Hematopoietic Stem Cells/cytology , Hematopoietic Stem Cells/metabolism , Humans , Immunity , Immunophenotyping , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Japan , Lymphocyte Subsets/immunology , Lymphocyte Subsets/metabolism , Mutation , Severe Combined Immunodeficiency/diagnosis , Severe Combined Immunodeficiency/immunology , Transduction, Genetic , Transgenes , Treatment Outcome
4.
J Allergy Clin Immunol ; 134(1): 155-9, 2014 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24767876

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Purine nucleoside phosphorylase (PNP) deficiency is a rare form of autosomal recessive combined primary immunodeficiency caused by a enzyme defect leading to the accumulation of inosine, 2'-deoxy-inosine (dIno), guanosine, and 2'-deoxy-guanosine (dGuo) in all cells, especially lymphocytes. Treatments are available and curative for PNP deficiency, but their efficacy depends on the early approach. PNP-combined immunodeficiency complies with the criteria for inclusion in a newborn screening program. OBJECTIVE: This study evaluate whether mass spectrometry can identify metabolite abnormalities in dried blood spots (DBSs) from affected patients, with the final goal of individuating the disease at birth during routine newborn screening. METHODS: DBS samples from 9 patients with genetically confirmed PNP-combined immunodeficiency, 10,000 DBS samples from healthy newborns, and 240 DBSs from healthy donors of different age ranges were examined. Inosine, dIno, guanosine, and dGuo were tested by using tandem mass spectrometry (TMS). T-cell receptor excision circle (TREC) and kappa-deleting recombination excision circle (KREC) levels were evaluated by using quantitative RT-PCR only for the 2 patients (patients 8 and 9) whose neonatal DBSs were available. RESULTS: Mean levels of guanosine, inosine, dGuo, and dIno were 4.4, 133.3, 3.6, and 3.8 µmol/L, respectively, in affected patients. No indeterminate or false-positive results were found. In patient 8 TREC levels were borderline and KREC levels were abnormal; in patient 9 TRECs were undetectable, whereas KREC levels were normal. CONCLUSION: TMS is a valid method for diagnosis of PNP deficiency on DBSs of affected patients at a negligible cost. TMS identifies newborns with PNP deficiency, whereas TREC or KREC measurement alone can fail.


Subject(s)
Immunologic Deficiency Syndromes/diagnosis , Mutation , Purine-Nucleoside Phosphorylase/deficiency , Purine-Nucleoside Phosphorylase/genetics , Purine-Pyrimidine Metabolism, Inborn Errors/diagnosis , Adolescent , Child, Preschool , DNA Repair , Deoxyguanosine/analysis , Deoxyguanosine/metabolism , Dried Blood Spot Testing , Female , Guanosine/analysis , Guanosine/metabolism , Humans , Immunologic Deficiency Syndromes/genetics , Immunologic Deficiency Syndromes/pathology , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Inosine/analogs & derivatives , Inosine/analysis , Inosine/metabolism , Lymphocytes/pathology , Male , Neonatal Screening , Primary Immunodeficiency Diseases , Purine-Pyrimidine Metabolism, Inborn Errors/genetics , Purine-Pyrimidine Metabolism, Inborn Errors/pathology , Tandem Mass Spectrometry
7.
Blood ; 118(10): 2688-94, 2011 Sep 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21725047

ABSTRACT

Genetic deficiency of adenosine deaminase (ADA) can cause profound lymphopenia and result in the clinical presentation of severe combined immune deficiency (SCID). However, because of the ubiquitous expression of ADA, ADA-deficient patients often present also with nonimmunologic clinical problems, affecting the skeletal, central nervous, endocrine, and gastrointestinal systems. We now report that myeloid dysplasia features and bone marrow hypocellularity are often found in patients with ADA-SCID. As a clinical correlate to this finding, we have observed vulnerability to antibiotic-induced myelotoxicity and prolonged neutropenia after nonmyeloablative chemotherapy. We have also noted that, in the absence of enzyme replacement therapy, absolute neutrophil counts of patients with ADA deficiency vary inversely with the accumulation of deoxynucleotides. These data have significant implications for the application of standard and investigational therapies to patients with ADA-SCID and support further studies to investigate the possibility that ADA deficiency is associated with a stem cell defect. These trials were registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT00018018 and #NCT00006319.


Subject(s)
Adenosine Deaminase/deficiency , Agammaglobulinemia/complications , Bone Marrow/pathology , Myelodysplastic Syndromes/etiology , Severe Combined Immunodeficiency/complications , Adenosine Deaminase/genetics , Adolescent , Adult , Agammaglobulinemia/therapy , Bone Marrow Transplantation , Child , Child, Preschool , Female , Genetic Therapy , Humans , Infant , Male , Myelodysplastic Syndromes/therapy , Severe Combined Immunodeficiency/therapy , Young Adult
8.
Clin Diagn Lab Immunol ; 12(7): 861-6, 2005 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16002636

ABSTRACT

We describe the effects of polyethylene glycol-conjugated adenosine deaminase (ADA) replacement therapy on lymphocyte counts, activation, apoptosis, proliferation, and cytokine secretion in a 14-month-old girl with "delayed-onset" ADA deficiency and marked immunodysregulation. Pretreatment lymphopenia affected T cells (CD4, 150/microl; CD8, 459/microl), B cells (16/microl), and NK cells (55/microl). T cells were uniformly activated and largely apoptotic (CD4, 59%; CD8, 82%); and T-cell-dependent cytokine levels in plasma were elevated, including the levels of interleukin 2 (IL-2; 26 pg/ml), IL-4 (81 pg/ml), IL-5 (46 pg/ml), gamma interferon (1,430 pg/ml), tumor necrosis factor alpha (210 pg/ml), and IL-10 (168 pg/ml). Mitogen-stimulated peripheral blood mononuclear cells show reduced IL-2 secretion and proliferation. During the first 5 months of therapy there was clinical improvement and partial immune reconstitution, with nearly normal lymphocyte subset numbers, reduced T-cell activation and CD4-cell apoptosis, and decreased plasma cytokine levels. In parallel, IL-2 secretion and the lymphocyte mitogenic response improved. Between 4 and 7 months, immunoglobulin G antibodies to bovine ADA developed and resulted in the complete reversal of immune recovery.


Subject(s)
Adenosine Deaminase/administration & dosage , Enzymes, Immobilized/administration & dosage , Polyethylene Glycols/administration & dosage , Purine-Pyrimidine Metabolism, Inborn Errors/drug therapy , Adenosine Deaminase/deficiency , Apoptosis/drug effects , CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes/metabolism , Cells, Cultured , Cytokines/blood , Female , Humans , Infant , Leukocyte Count , Lymphocyte Activation/drug effects , Purine-Pyrimidine Metabolism, Inborn Errors/blood , T-Lymphocyte Subsets/metabolism
9.
Blood ; 99(3): 1005-13, 2002 Feb 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11807006

ABSTRACT

Four patients from 3 Saudi Arabian families had delayed onset of immune deficiency due to homozygosity for a novel intronic mutation, g.31701T>A, in the last splice acceptor site of the adenosine deaminase (ADA) gene. Aberrant splicing mutated the last 4 ADA amino acids and added a 43-residue "tail" that rendered the protein unstable. Mutant complementary DNA (cDNA) expressed in Escherichia coli yielded 1% of the ADA activity obtained with wild-type cDNA. The oldest patient, 16 years old at diagnosis, had greater residual immune function and less elevated erythrocyte deoxyadenosine nucleotides than his 4-year-old affected sister. His T cells and Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) B cell line had 75% of normal ADA activity and ADA protein of normal size. DNA from these cells and his whole blood possessed 2 mutant ADA alleles. Both carried g.31701T>A, but one had acquired a deletion of the 11 adjacent base pair, g.31702-12, which suppressed aberrant splicing and excised an unusual purine-rich tract from the wild-type intron 11/exon 12 junction. During ADA replacement therapy, ADA activity in T cells and abundance of the "second-site" revertant allele decreased markedly. This finding raises an important issue relevant to stem cell gene therapy.


Subject(s)
Adenosine Deaminase/deficiency , Genes, Suppressor , Mosaicism/genetics , Mutation , RNA Splice Sites/genetics , Adenosine Deaminase/administration & dosage , Adenosine Deaminase/genetics , Adolescent , Base Sequence , Child, Preschool , DNA Mutational Analysis , Family Health , Female , Genotype , Humans , Infant , Male , Saudi Arabia , Severe Combined Immunodeficiency/etiology , Severe Combined Immunodeficiency/genetics , T-Lymphocytes/cytology , T-Lymphocytes/enzymology
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