Molecular genetics and emerging therapies for retinitis pigmentosa: Basic research and clinical perspectives

MF Dias, K Joo, JA Kemp, SL Fialho… - Progress in retinal and …, 2018 - Elsevier
MF Dias, K Joo, JA Kemp, SL Fialho, A da Silva Cunha Jr, SJ Woo, YJ Kwon
Progress in retinal and eye research, 2018Elsevier
Retinitis Pigmentosa (RP) is a hereditary retinopathy that affects about 2.5 million people
worldwide. It is characterized with progressive loss of rods and cones and causes severe
visual dysfunction and eventual blindness in bilateral eyes. In addition to more than 3000
genetic mutations from about 70 genes, a wide genetic overlap with other types of retinal
dystrophies has been reported with RP. This diversity of genetic pathophysiology makes
treatment extremely challenging. Although therapeutic attempts have been made using …
Abstract
Retinitis Pigmentosa (RP) is a hereditary retinopathy that affects about 2.5 million people worldwide. It is characterized with progressive loss of rods and cones and causes severe visual dysfunction and eventual blindness in bilateral eyes. In addition to more than 3000 genetic mutations from about 70 genes, a wide genetic overlap with other types of retinal dystrophies has been reported with RP. This diversity of genetic pathophysiology makes treatment extremely challenging. Although therapeutic attempts have been made using various pharmacologic agents (neurotrophic factors, antioxidants, and anti-apoptotic agents), most are not targeted to the fundamental cause of RP, and their clinical efficacy has not been clearly proven. Current therapies for RP in ongoing or completed clinical trials include gene therapy, cell therapy, and retinal prostheses. Gene therapy, a strategy to correct the genetic defects using viral or non-viral vectors, has the potential to achieve definitive treatment by replacing or silencing a causative gene. Among many clinical trials of gene therapy for hereditary retinal diseases, a phase 3 clinical trial of voretigene neparvovec (AAV2-hRPE65v2, Luxturna) recently showed significant efficacy for RPE65-mediated inherited retinal dystrophy including Leber congenital amaurosis and RP. It is about to be approved as the first ocular gene therapy biologic product. Despite current limitations such as limited target genes and indicated patients, modest efficacy, and the invasive administration method, development in gene editing technology and novel gene delivery carriers make gene therapy a promising therapeutic modality for RP and other hereditary retinal dystrophies in the future.
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