Background: Congenital afibrinogenemia is a rare inherited autosomal recessive disorder in which a mutation in one of three genes coding for the fibrinogen polypeptide chains Aα, Bβ and γ results in the absence of a functional coagulation protein. A patient with congenital afibrinogenemia, resulting from an FGA homozygous gene deletion, underwent an orthotopic liver transplant that resulted in complete restoration of normal hemostasis. The patient's explanted liver provided a unique opportunity to further investigate a potential novel treatment modality. Objective: To explore a targeted gene therapy approach for patients with congenital afibrinogenemia. Methods and Results: At the time of transplant, the patient's FGA-deficient hepatocytes were isolated and transduced with lentiviral vectors encoding the human fibrinogen Aα-chain. FGA-transduced hepatocytes produced fully functional fibrinogen in vitro. Conclusions: Orthotopic liver transplantation is a possible rescue treatment for failure of on-demand fibrinogen replacement therapy. In addition, we provide evidence that hepatocytes homozygous for a large FGA deletion can be genetically modified to restore Aα-chain protein expression and secrete a functional fibrinogen hexamer.
CITATION STYLE
Stroka, D., Keogh, A., Vu, D., Fort, A., Stoffel, M. H., Kühni-Boghenbor, K., … Neerman-Arbez, M. (2014). In vitro rescue of FGA deletion by lentiviral transduction of an afibrinogenemic patient’s hepatocytes. Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis, 12(11), 1874–1879. https://doi.org/10.1111/jth.12714
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