TY - JOUR
T1 - Retroviral integration site analysis and the fate of transduced clones in an MDR1 gene therapy protocol targeting metastatic breast cancer
AU - Mitsuhashi, Junko
AU - Tsukahara, Satomi
AU - Suzuki, Rieko
AU - Oh-Hara, Yumiko
AU - Nishi, Saori
AU - Hosoyama, Hiroyo
AU - Katayama, Kazuhiro
AU - Noguchi, Kohji
AU - Minowa, Sayuri
AU - Shibata, Harumi
AU - Ito, Yoshinori
AU - Hatake, Kiyohiko
AU - Aiba, Keisuke
AU - Takahashi, Shunji
AU - Sugimoto, Yoshikazu
PY - 2007/10/1
Y1 - 2007/10/1
N2 - A clinical study of an MDR1 gene therapy protocol targeting metastatic breast cancer has been conducted in which the patients received high-dose chemotherapy, a transplant of MDR1-transduced autologous CD34+ cells, and docetaxel. We herein report the molecular results of a 6-year follow-up of an individual in this study (patient 1). HaMDR-transduced cells, which had been initially detected in the peripheral blood of this individual, were found to have gradually decreased. After 10 cycles of docetaxel (days 71-316), MDR1 transgene levels were found to have increased, and then decreased to undetectable levels by day 1461. Thirty-eight MDR1-transduced clones were identified in patient 1, of which 11 showed a retroviral integration in close proximity to genes listed in the Retrovirus Tagged Cancer Gene Database (RTCGD). Four short-life clones in this group were found to harbor retroviral integrations close to the ZFHX1B, NOTCH1, BMI1, or HHEX gene; these genes have been frequently reported in the RTCGD. In addition, a long-lived RTCGD-hit clone, L-34, had a retroviral integration at a position 179 kb upstream of the EVI1 gene. L-34 was detectable on days 327-1154, but became undetectable 3 years after the docetaxel treatments had ceased. An additional three docetaxel-induced long-life clones showed comparable polymerase chain reaction profiles, which were also similar to that of the total MDR1-transduced cells. Our results thus show that docetaxel may have been effective in promoting the expansion of several MDR1-transduced clones in patient 1, but that they persist in the peripheral blood for only a few years.
AB - A clinical study of an MDR1 gene therapy protocol targeting metastatic breast cancer has been conducted in which the patients received high-dose chemotherapy, a transplant of MDR1-transduced autologous CD34+ cells, and docetaxel. We herein report the molecular results of a 6-year follow-up of an individual in this study (patient 1). HaMDR-transduced cells, which had been initially detected in the peripheral blood of this individual, were found to have gradually decreased. After 10 cycles of docetaxel (days 71-316), MDR1 transgene levels were found to have increased, and then decreased to undetectable levels by day 1461. Thirty-eight MDR1-transduced clones were identified in patient 1, of which 11 showed a retroviral integration in close proximity to genes listed in the Retrovirus Tagged Cancer Gene Database (RTCGD). Four short-life clones in this group were found to harbor retroviral integrations close to the ZFHX1B, NOTCH1, BMI1, or HHEX gene; these genes have been frequently reported in the RTCGD. In addition, a long-lived RTCGD-hit clone, L-34, had a retroviral integration at a position 179 kb upstream of the EVI1 gene. L-34 was detectable on days 327-1154, but became undetectable 3 years after the docetaxel treatments had ceased. An additional three docetaxel-induced long-life clones showed comparable polymerase chain reaction profiles, which were also similar to that of the total MDR1-transduced cells. Our results thus show that docetaxel may have been effective in promoting the expansion of several MDR1-transduced clones in patient 1, but that they persist in the peripheral blood for only a few years.
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U2 - 10.1089/hum.2007.075
DO - 10.1089/hum.2007.075
M3 - Article
C2 - 17907967
AN - SCOPUS:35348878723
SN - 1043-0342
VL - 18
SP - 895
EP - 906
JO - Human Gene Therapy
JF - Human Gene Therapy
IS - 10
ER -