Long-term follow-up of gene-marked CD34+ cells after autologous stem cell transplantation for multiple myeloma

E Alici, B Björkstrand, A Treschow, A Aints… - Cancer Gene …, 2007 - nature.com
E Alici, B Björkstrand, A Treschow, A Aints, CIE Smith, G Gahrton, MS Dilber
Cancer Gene Therapy, 2007nature.com
Gene marking can be used to investigate if progenitor cells harvested from patients are
contaminated with tumorigenic cells. It can also provide information about the contribution of
hematopoietic stem cells to long-term engraftment and about long-term transgene
expression from integrated retroviral vectors. In order to study autologous-infused cell
contribution to relapse as well as the long-term persistence of the transgene in
hematopoietic cells following autologous bone marrow (BM) transplantation for multiple …
Abstract
Gene marking can be used to investigate if progenitor cells harvested from patients are contaminated with tumorigenic cells. It can also provide information about the contribution of hematopoietic stem cells to long-term engraftment and about long-term transgene expression from integrated retroviral vectors. In order to study autologous-infused cell contribution to relapse as well as the long-term persistence of the transgene in hematopoietic cells following autologous bone marrow (BM) transplantation for multiple myeloma, we genetically marked autologous CD34+ enriched BM or peripheral blood cell grafts of eight myeloma patients using retroviral vectors. Six patients were subsequently transplanted with the marked graft and followed with regular time points of analysis. Briefly, mononuclear cells were harvested by leukapheresis during 2–4 consecutive days following priming with granulocyte–macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) or G-CSF. The CD34+ cells separated on Cellpro ceprate avidin-biotin columns were exposed to the G1Na vector coding for neomycin resistance gene at a ratio of five vector particles per cell at three consecutive time points achieving an average transduction efficacy of 2%(0.43–5.1%). The patients were transplanted with a mixture of transduced cells and un-manipulated graft. Vector integration and transgene expression were analyzed by colony assays and polymerase chain reaction. The transgene could be detected for up to 5 years post-transplant in normal BM cells, even in remission following relapse and no side effects related to retroviral gene transfer were observed. There were no marked myeloma cells observed in the patients either in remission or in relapsing disease, which indicates that contribution of infused cells to relapse is unlikely.
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