A new study
co-led by investigators from Mass Eye and Ear, a member of Mass General
Brigham, demonstrated the effectiveness of a gene therapy in restoring hearing
function for children suffering from hereditary deafness.
In a trial of six children taking place at the Eye & ENT Hospital of Fudan University in
Shanghai, China, the researchers found the novel gene therapy to be an
effective treatment for patients with a specific form of autosomal recessive
deafness caused by mutations of the OTOF (otoferlin) gene, called DFNB9.
With its first patient treated in December 2022, this
research represents the first human clinical trial to administer gene therapy
for treating this condition, with the most patients treated and the longest
follow-up to date. Their results were published January 24 in The Lancet.
"If children are unable to hear, their brains can
develop abnormally without intervention," said Zheng-Yi Chen, DPhil, an
associate scientist in the Eaton-Peabody Laboratories at Mass Eye and Ear and
associate professor of Otolaryngology–Head and Neck Surgery at Harvard Medical
School. "The results from this study are truly remarkable. We saw the hearing ability of children improve dramatically week by week, as well as
the regaining of their speech."
Representative speech communication of
participant 3, 13 weeks post-treatment, is presented. Credit: The Eye & ENT
Hospital of Fudan University / The Lancet.
Hearing loss affects more than 1.5 billion people worldwide, with
congenital deafness making up about 26 million of those individuals. For
hearing loss in children, more than 60% have a genetic cause.
DFNB9 for example, is a hereditary disease caused by mutations of the OTOF
gene and a failure to produce a functioning otoferlin protein, which is
necessary for the transmission of the sound signals from the ear to the brain.
There are currently no FDA-approved drugs to help with hereditary deafness,
which has opened the door for new solutions like gene therapies.
In order to test this novel treatment, six children with DFNB9 were
observed over a 26-week period at the Eye & ENT Hospital of Fudan
University. The Mass Eye and Ear collaborators utilized an adeno-associated
virus (AAV) carrying a version of the human OTOF gene to carefully introduce
the gene into the inner ears of the patients through a special surgical
procedure. Differing doses of the single injection of the viral vector were
used.
Participant 5 shown six weeks after injection
with cochlear implant off, then at 26 weeks able to communicate. Credit: The
Eye & ENT Hospital of Fudan University / The Lancet
All six children in the study had total deafness, as indicated by an
average auditory brainstem response (ABR) threshold of more than 95 decibels.
After 26 weeks, five children demonstrated hearing recovery, showing a 40–57
decibel reduction in ABR testing, dramatic improvements in speech perception
and the restored ability to conduct normal conversation. Overall, no
dose-limiting toxicity was observed. While following up on the patients, 48
adverse events were observed, with a significant majority (96%) being low
grade, and the rest being transitory with no long-term impact.
Trial findings will also be presented February 3 at the Association for Research in Otolaryngology
Annual Meeting.
This study provides evidence of the safety and effectiveness of gene
therapies in treating DFNB9, as well as their potential for other forms of
genetic hearing loss. Moreover, the results contribute to an understanding of
the safety of AAV insertion into the human inner ear.
In regard to the usage of AAVs, the success of a dual-AAV vector carrying
two pieces of the OTOF gene is notable. Typically, AAVs have a gene size limit,
and so for a gene like OTOF that exceeds that limit, the achievement with a
dual viral vector opens the door for AAV's use with other large genes that are typically too big
for the vector.
"We are the first to initiate the clinical trial of OTOF gene therapy. It is
thrilling that our team translated the work from basic research in animal model
of DFNB9 to hearing restoration in children with DFNB9," said lead study
author Yilai Shu, MD, of the Eye & ENT Hospital of Fudan University at
Fudan University.
Shu previously served as a postdoctoral fellow in Chen's lab at Mass Eye
and Ear. "I am truly excited about our future work on other forms of
genetic hearing loss to bring treatments to more patients."
The researchers plan to expand the trial to a larger sample size as well as
track their outcomes over a longer timeline.
"Not since cochlear implants were invented 60 years ago, has there been an effective treatment for deafness," said Chen. "This is a huge milestone that symbolizes a new era in the fight against all types of hearing loss."
by Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary
Source: Gene therapy restores hearing in children with hereditary deafness (medicalxpress.com)
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