Nature Communications (Apr 2024)

A case of T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia in retroviral gene therapy for ADA-SCID

  • Daniela Cesana,
  • Maria Pia Cicalese,
  • Andrea Calabria,
  • Pietro Merli,
  • Roberta Caruso,
  • Monica Volpin,
  • Laura Rudilosso,
  • Maddalena Migliavacca,
  • Federica Barzaghi,
  • Claudia Fossati,
  • Francesco Gazzo,
  • Simone Pizzi,
  • Andrea Ciolfi,
  • Alessandro Bruselles,
  • Francesca Tucci,
  • Giulio Spinozzi,
  • Giulia Pais,
  • Fabrizio Benedicenti,
  • Matteo Barcella,
  • Ivan Merelli,
  • Pierangela Gallina,
  • Stefania Giannelli,
  • Francesca Dionisio,
  • Serena Scala,
  • Miriam Casiraghi,
  • Luisa Strocchio,
  • Luciana Vinti,
  • Lucia Pacillo,
  • Eleonora Draghi,
  • Marcella Cesana,
  • Sara Riccardo,
  • Chiara Colantuono,
  • Emmanuelle Six,
  • Marina Cavazzana,
  • Filippo Carlucci,
  • Manfred Schmidt,
  • Caterina Cancrini,
  • Fabio Ciceri,
  • Luca Vago,
  • Davide Cacchiarelli,
  • Bernhard Gentner,
  • Luigi Naldini,
  • Marco Tartaglia,
  • Eugenio Montini,
  • Franco Locatelli,
  • Alessandro Aiuti

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-47866-5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 18

Abstract

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Abstract Hematopoietic stem cell gene therapy (GT) using a γ-retroviral vector (γ-RV) is an effective treatment for Severe Combined Immunodeficiency due to Adenosine Deaminase deficiency. Here, we describe a case of GT-related T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) that developed 4.7 years after treatment. The patient underwent chemotherapy and haploidentical transplantation and is currently in remission. Blast cells contain a single vector insertion activating the LIM-only protein 2 (LMO2) proto-oncogene, confirmed by physical interaction, and low Adenosine Deaminase (ADA) activity resulting from methylation of viral promoter. The insertion is detected years before T-ALL in multiple lineages, suggesting that further hits occurred in a thymic progenitor. Blast cells contain known and novel somatic mutations as well as germline mutations which may have contributed to transformation. Before T-ALL onset, the insertion profile is similar to those of other ADA-deficient patients. The limited incidence of vector-related adverse events in ADA-deficiency compared to other γ-RV GT trials could be explained by differences in transgenes, background disease and patient’s specific factors.