Improvement and Decline in Vision with Gene Therapy in Childhood Blindness

Samuel G. Jacobson(University of Pennsylvania), Artur V. Cideciyan(University of Pennsylvania), Alejandro J. Román(University of Pennsylvania), Alexander Sumaroka(Penn Presbyterian Medical Center), Sharon Schwartz(Penn Presbyterian Medical Center), Elise Héon(Hospital for Sick Children), William W. Hauswirth(University of Florida)
New England Journal of Medicine
May 3, 2015
Cited by 376Open Access
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Abstract

Retinal gene therapy for Leber's congenital amaurosis, an autosomal recessive childhood blindness, has been widely considered to be safe and efficacious. Three years after therapy, improvement in vision was maintained, but the rate of loss of photoreceptors in the treated retina was the same as that in the untreated retina. Here we describe long-term follow-up data from three treated patients. Topographic maps of visual sensitivity in treated regions, nearly 6 years after therapy for two of the patients and 4.5 years after therapy for the third patient, indicate progressive diminution of the areas of improved vision. (Funded by the National Eye Institute; ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT00481546.).


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