A new sickle cell treatment
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Last Friday, The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved two gene therapies—one by Bluebird Bio, the other?by Vertex Pharmaceuticals—for sickle cell disease. The Vertex one, called exa-cel, is also the first approved therapy in the United States that uses the gene editing tool CRISPR.?
The US isn’t the first to take the plunge on Vertex.?Britain gave it the world’s first approval in November, followed by Bahrain earlier this month.
While exa-cel is not a cure, as NPR reports, the hope is that it “will be a one-time treatment that will alleviate symptoms for a lifetime.”
The backstory
Sickle cell disease is caused by a genetic mutation that prevents the production of a protein called hemoglobin, which carries oxygen throughout the body in our red blood cells. Without hemoglobin, the cells become “sickled,” like a crescent moon. These crescent-shaped cells don’t move well, blocking blood flow, and die too early, leaving the body essentially starving for oxygen.?
As a result, sickle cell disease causes fatigue, debilitating pain, stroke, infections, and even organ damage or failure. It affects an estimated 100,000 Americans and 20 million people worldwide, of which over 75 percent live in Africa. Scientists believe that the mutation developed as a protective mechanism against severe malaria.
Since it is inherited, sickle cell patients are commonly of?African, Hispanic, Southern European, Middle Eastern, or Indian heritage. In the US, over 90 percent are black Americans.
The current treatment options
In the early 1970s, the average lifespan of someone with sickle cell “was only 14 years,” according to the National Institutes of Health. These days people can live into their forties and?fifties, although those with the severe form of the disease can struggle to live a functional life.
For a time, sickle cell screening was mandatory only for black Americans, which led to the passage of state-level laws that allowed the denial of employment, insurance coverage, and other opportunities to anyone with the sickle cell trait—not the disease, but its genetic marker. In 1972, Congress passed the Sickle Cell Anemia Control Act, which set aside federal funding for research and other programs, with the caveat that screening must be voluntary. (As of 1987, it was recommended that screening be required and provided for all newborns in all states. As of 2006, this was finally the case.)
More devoted focus on the disease led to research discoveries and treatment advancements in the 80s, 90s, and early millennium. Some of these are specifically for sickle cell disease, while others aid sickle-cell caused complications.
For example, many more kids?now survive beyond their toddler years thanks to a 2000 vaccine that inoculates against pneumococcal disease, which children with sickle cell are susceptible to. (Sickle cell-related death among black children younger than four fell by 42 percent from 1999 through 2002, says the Center for Disease Control.)
Blood transfusions and hydroxyurea therapy are the?main treatment options for sickle cell. The only cure is a bone marrow transplant, but many people are not eligible for one or don’t have a donor who is a close enough genetic match. Transplants?are mostly performed on children.
How exa-cel works
All babies, even those who will develop?sickle cell disease, are born with working fetal hemoglobin. “It’s the adult form that’s defective,” explains The Associated Press. The CRISPR-based therapy works like this: bone marrow stem cells are collected from the patient. CRISPR cuts out a piece of DNA, which allows the gene that produces fetal hemoglobin to turn back on.?These new stem cells are reinjected into the patient.
It's not a pleasant process, requiring many hospital visits as well as chemotherapy to ready the body for reinjection. But the treatment worked for 29 of 31 patients in Vertex’s clinical trial, with zero pain episodes over the ensuing year. One of the patients in the trial, Jimi Olaghere, wrote that since the treatment, he has “escaped from the clutch of fear that comes from thinking every occasion could be my last.”?
The risk and the reward
CRISPR can accidentally cut parts of DNA it wasn’t meant to, resulting in “off-target edits.” The risk these pose were the focus of the FDA meeting prior to exa-cel’s approval last week. Even when they occur, off-target edits could be harmless, if they are?in the 98 percent of our DNA that doesn't encode proteins. But they could also be harmful, if they are?in the other two percent.
Per notes from the meeting done by BioPharma Dive, Vertex claims “their work shows no detectable off-target editing.” They performed off-target analysis on only?three people, a choice some FDA advisors in the meeting questioned. No hard guidelines yet exist for what qualifies as an appropriate analysis for off-target edits, however. Vertex will be tracking general long-term safety via two 15-year studies.
Since the approval went through, the FDA felt that the potential benefit was too big to ignore. “We want to be careful to not let the perfect be the enemy of the good,” FDA advisor Scot Wolfe, whose research programs at the University of Massachusetts focus on gene editing technologies, said at the meeting. “You want to do as good a job as you possibly can, but at some point, you have to try things in patients. I think in this case, there is a huge unmet need.”
The downside
The treatment will be expensive. In-the-millions expensive, although The New York Times reports that Medicaid and private insurers have “suggested a willingness to pay” to Vertex, as they do for gene therapies for other diseases.
For both men and women, since chemotherapy is part of the process, it leaves them with a high chance of becoming infertile?(as does a bone marrow transplant). While Vertex's trial included access to sperm banking and egg freezing in order to preserve patients' options, whether that would be?available for future patients will depend on their individual insurance plans.?
The upside
Sickle cell is yet another disease that hasn’t been given the benefit of enough attention; the data around it is still not robust. It's commonly pointed out that cystic fibrosis, which affects a third fewer Americans, receives 10 times the research funding as sickle cell. There are almost 10?times the number of treatment centers for it, too.
So any progress to meet the “huge unmet need” both in the US and in low-income countries is a win in my book, even if it’s unlikely gene therapies are going to be broadly available in Africa—or the US—anytime soon. These things take time. Research on gene editing began in the 90s. The FDA approved its first gene therapy in 2017, and has greenlit 14 others since then. Only more will come in the future.
—Emma Varvaloucas
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