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Gene therapy for inherited immunodeficiency.
[wiskott-aldrich syndrome]
During
the
last
decade
,
gene
therapy
has
emerged
as
a
convincing
therapy
for
primary
immunodeficiencies
(
PIDs
)
.
Ex
vivo
gene
transfer
into
autologous
hematopoietic
stem
cells
(
HSCs
)
via
viral
vectors
permits
sustained
correction
of
T
cell
immunodeficiency
in
two
forms
of
severe
combined
immunodeficiency
:
X-
linked
SCID
(
SCID
-X
1
)
(
γ
chain
[
γc
]
deficiency
)
and
adenosine
deaminase
deficiency
.
However
,
this
success
has
been
balanced
by
the
occurrence
of
genotoxicity
generated
by
the
integration
of
first
-generation
retroviral
vectors
.
Recently
,
the
development
of
safer
self-inactivating
vectors
has
led
to
the
initiation
of
new
studies
with
the
hope
of
equivalent
efficacy
and
a
better
safety
profile
.
This
review
article
focuses
on
the
updated
results
of
gene
therapy
trials
for
PIDs
-
from
early
studies
to
ongoing
clinical
trials
.
We
detail
the
major
advances
made
in
gene
transfer
and
repair
technologies
,
and
discuss
the
many
ways
to
extend
our
present
experience
.
With
optimization
in
terms
of
safety
and
efficacy
,
gene
therapy
by
lentiviral
transduction
could
become
a
compelling
alternative
to
allogeneic
HSC
transplantation
,
and
thus
may
take
center
stage
in
the
management
of
PIDs
in
coming
years
.
Diseases
Validation
Diseases presenting
"immunodeficiency"
symptom
adrenal incidentaloma
allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis
cushing syndrome
dracunculiasis
hirschsprung disease
hodgkin lymphoma, classical
homocystinuria without methylmalonic aciduria
kabuki syndrome
legionellosis
malignant atrophic papulosis
oculocutaneous albinism
omenn syndrome
papillon-lefèvre syndrome
primary effusion lymphoma
primary hyperoxaluria type 1
pyomyositis
severe combined immunodeficiency
sneddon syndrome
werner syndrome
wiskott-aldrich syndrome
wolf-hirschhorn syndrome
x-linked adrenoleukodystrophy
This symptom has already been validated