Gene therapy restores hearing in five of six deaf children in trial
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[January 25, 2024]
By Nancy Lapid
(Reuters) - An experimental gene therapy being developed by a Chinese
company restored hearing in children with congenital deafness,
researchers working on a clinical trial reported on Wednesday, adding to
growing evidence of the efficacy of such treatments.
Five of six young children with profound deafness experienced hearing
recovery and improvements in speech recognition six months after
treatment with the therapy from Refreshgene Therapeutics, according to
the report published in The Lancet.
“The results from this study are truly remarkable. We saw the hearing
ability of children improve dramatically week by week, as well as the
regaining of their speech,” Zheng-Yi Chen of Mass Eye and Ear and
Harvard Medical School, who worked on the trial, said in a statement.
All of the children had profound deafness caused by mutations of the
OTOF (otoferlin) gene. A functioning otoferlin protein is necessary for
the transmission of the sound signals from the ear to the brain.
OTOF mutations account for 2% to 8% of cases of congenital deafness,
earlier research suggests. One out of every 1,000 children born in the
U.S. has moderate to profound hearing loss.
In surgical procedures performed at the Eye & ENT Hospital of Fudan
University, researchers used a harmless virus to carry a version of the
human OTOF gene into patients’ inner ears.
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After 26 weeks, five of the six
children demonstrated hearing recovery, with dramatic improvements
in speech perception and the ability to conduct conversation, the
researchers reported.
Most side effects were minor and none had long-term impact, they
said.
The researchers are not sure why the sixth child
did not respond. One possible explanation is that some of the gene
therapy solution leaked from the inner ear during or after surgery.
Refreshgene is also working with OBiO Technology Shanghai on a gene
therapy for the eye disease neovascular age-related macular
degeneration.
On Tuesday, a separate team of researchers announced hearing
restoration in an 11-year-old who was the first patient to receive
Eli Lilly's OTOF gene therapy.
In October, Regeneron Pharmaceuticals announced positive safety and
efficacy results in the first child with profound OTOF-related
hearing loss to receive its otoferlin gene therapy.
Updated results from these trials will be presented at the
Association for Research in Otolaryngology MidWinter Meeting in
February.
“Not since cochlear implants were invented 60 years ago, has there
been an effective treatment for deafness,” said Chen. “This is a
huge milestone that symbolizes a new era in the fight against all
types of hearing loss.”
(Reporting by Nancy Lapid; Editing by Caroline Humer and Bill
Berkrot)
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