notes on Gaucher disease treatment
2013-12-01azim58 - notes on Gaucher disease treatment
notes on Gaucher disease treatment
enzyme replacement therapy
q
Additional therapies include substrate reduction therapy and supportive
care measures to manage associated conditions.
q
Skeletal manifestations are associated with the greatest morbidity and,
once present, are among the least responsive to enzyme replacement
therapy (ERT).
q
recombinant glucocerebrosidases imiglucerase (Cerezyme) or velaglucerase
alfa (VPRIV) is the preferred treatment for patients with clinically
significant manifestations of nonneuronopathic GD (type 1 GD) and is also
considered in neuronopathic GD (type 3, but not type 2)
q
The advance that was critical to the success of this technique was
molecular targeting of the enzyme to tissue macrophages via mannose
receptors expressed by these cells.
^ quite impressive actually
q
The high cost of ERT (>$400,000 per year for a 70 kg patient who receives
60 U/kg every two weeks 1)
how the drugs are made
Preparation — Imiglucerase (Cerezyme) is produced by recombinant DNA
technology in a Chinese hamster ovary cell system and velaglucerase alfa
(VPRIV) is produced by gene activation technology in a human cell line
q
Major problems in the production and supply of imiglucerase (Cerezyme) in
2009 and 2010 led to a six month shortage resulting in interruption of
treatment and dose reduction.
q
Approximately one-quarter of patients still have thrombocytopenia
...
after four to five years of therapy
q
In some studies, ERT was found to reverse almost all of the systemic
manifestations and appeared to stabilize the neurologic disease (except
progressive myoclonic epilepsy) in some patients
side effects of treatment
q
The side effects are usually related to the IV infusion and include
fever, chills, and flu-like symptoms 68. The mechanism is thought to be
immune-related, but acute IgE-mediated reactions are very rare
patients develop antibody against the enzyme
q
Approximately 13 to 15 percent of treated patients develop IgG antibody
to the enzyme 18,68,70,71. Many of these patients stop producing
antibody after two to three years of therapy 70.
substrate reduction therapy
q
Substrate reduction therapy (SRT) is an option in patients with type 1 GD
who are unwilling or unable to receive ERT
side effects
q
— Side effects of treatment include diarrhea (79 percent of patients in
one study), weight loss, tremor, and peripheral neuropathy
q
Before ERT was available, splenectomy was performed to improve
thrombocytopenia and anemia.
^looks like there were a lot of problems with this approach
q
Hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) can provide a definitive cure
for GD 90-92. However, this procedure is associated with substantial
morbidity and mortality, and therefore has been effectively replaced by
ERT in clinical practice 93,94.
Gene therapy option
q
Future treatment of GD may include gene therapy. In an animal model, gene
therapy through retroviral transduction of bone marrow from mice with
type 1 GD both prevented the development of GD and corrected an
established GD phenotype
chemical chaperone with enzyme enhancement therapy
(unsuccessful so far)
q
Patients with GD have an increased risk of bleeding because of
thrombocytopenia, defective platelet function, and/or coagulation factor
abnormalities.
q
Patients with severe liver disease and hepatopulmonary syndrome may
require liver transplantation
q
• The availability and efficacy of ERT has limited the indications for
splenectomy and hematopoietic cell transplantation. Splenectomy is
indicated if other measures fail to control life-threatening
thrombocytopenia. Bone marrow transplantation may be an option in
patients known to be at-risk for neuronopathic disease who present early
in the disease course