
December 10, 1999
UCSD Alzheimers Gene Therapy
Trial
To Proceed With Recruitment
Patient trials of an experimental gene therapy for early stage Alzheimers disease will move forward, following review by the Recombinant DNA Advisory Committee (RAC), which met this week in Bethesda, Maryland. The stage is now set for the first patients to be treated in spring 2000.
RAC, an advisory board to the National Institutes of Health, today
reviewed a proposal submitted by Mark Tuszynski, M.D., Ph.D.,
associate professor of neurosciences at the UCSD School of Medicine
and neurologist with the Veterans Affairs San Diego Health Care
system. As an advisory board, RAC does not take action, but their
review is an important step in the process of launching a patient
trial involving the transfer of genes to humans.
Based on successful studies in rhesus monkeys, Tuszynski plans
to insert genetically altered tissue into the brains of individuals
diagnosed with early Alzheimers disease, with memory loss
as their primary symptom. The first phase of this study, approved
by the Food and Drug Administration in October, will enroll only
eight patients, and will focus on the safety of this approach.
Tuszynski and a team of UCSD, Salk Institute and UC Davis scientists
reported in September the dramatic restoration of atrophied brain
cells in aged rhesus monkeys after insertion of tissue genetically
altered to produce nerve growth factor directly into the subcortical
region of the brain. With the elevated levels of nerve growth
factor, cells that had shrunk and ceased functioning by 43 percent
of normal levels due to normal aging were restored to within 92
percent of normal function. These results were published in the
September 14 Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
We have shown in monkeys that this procedure has a measurable
impact on the normal older brain, restoring cells that are important
in mental functioning, said Tuszynski. In order to
study whether this procedure actually slows or reverses the mental
decline associated with Alzheimers disease, which involves
the same brain cells studied in monkeys, we have to now study
human patients, since no animals actually suffer from Alzheimers
disease.
With this review complete, Tuszynski and his team, which in includes
Hoi-Sang U, M.D., professor of surgery at UCSD and chief of neurosurgery
at the VA San Diego Medical Center, will now begin screening patient
volunteers to participate in this study.
According to Tuszynski, screening will be rigorous. Only patients
with a firm diagnosis of Alzheimers disease, but still in
the early stages of the disease and able to understand the experimental
procedure and give their consent, will be enrolled in this first
phase.
For this trial, skin cells altered to contain the gene for nerve
growth factor will be inserted through a needle into the part
of the brain that regulates memory, attention, and other important
brain functions. The patients will be monitored closely over time,
primarily to ensure the safety of this procedure. It is possible
that the patients will demonstrate some beneficial response to
the therapy in their cognitive function as well, Tuszynski said,
although such results are not a specific goal of this phase of
the clinical trial.
RAC was established in 1974 to advise the NIH on the safety and
risks of using recombinant DNA techniques. About one-third of
the 15-member board consists of non-scientist members, with the
other two-thirds of the members representing scientific institutions
and universities from throughout the country. The committees
major role is to evaluate clinical trials that involve the transfer
of recombinant DNA into humans. UCSDs own institutional
review board, the Human Subjects Committee, also has approved
the protocol and will be responsible for day-to-day oversight
of the trial.
Media Contact: Leslie Franz
Health Sciences Communications (619) 543-6163
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