An ex vivo approach to gene therapy for familial hypercholesterolaemia (FH) has been developed in which the recipient is transplanted with autologous hepatocytes that are genetically corrected with recombinant retroviruses carrying the LDL receptor. We describe the treatment of a 29 year old woman with homozygous FH by ex vivo gene therapy directed to liver. She tolerated the procedures well and in situ hybridization of liver tissue four months after therapy revealed evidence for engraftment of transgene expressing cells. The patient's LDL/HDL ratio declined from 10-13 before gene therapy to 5-8 following gene therapy, improvements which have remained stable for the duration of the treatment (18 months). This represents the first report of human gene therapy in which stable correction of a therapeutic endpoint has been achieved.
To determine whether complex cardiovascular interventional procedures (including coronary stent implantation, directional atherectomy, aortic valvuloplasty, and the use of an intraaortic balloon pump or cardiopulmonary bypass support) are associated with an increased likelihood of vascular access site complications, 2,400 consecutive cardiac catheterization procedures were prospectively screened over a 12-month study period. Complications occurred in 35 patients after 39 procedures (1.6%) and included the need for vascular surgical repair (17 patients), blood transfusion (28 patients) and systemic antibiotic therapy (7 patients). The incidence of complications after 1,519 diagnostic studies was 0.6%, after 698 conventional coronary balloon angioplasties 2.6%, and after 183 complex interventions 6.0% (p less than 0.0001); 43% of the complications occurred after procedures of greater than 2 hours' duration and 14% occurred in patients in whom arterial sheaths remained in situ for greater than 24 hours. Detailed demographic and procedural characteristics were compared between the 35 patients with vascular complications and 150 patients randomly drawn from a computerized database of the uncomplicated procedures performed during the screening period. By univariate analysis with correction for multiple comparisons, variables predicting the likelihood of vascular complications included: periprocedural use of heparin (p less than 0.001) or fibrinolytic therapy (p less than 0.001), arterial sheath size greater than or equal to 8Fr (p less than 0.001), patient age greater than or equal to 65 years (p = 0.01), and the presence of peripheral vascular disease (p = 0.03). The results of this study suggest that the overall incidence of access site complications is low but increases with the use of complex cardiovascular interventional procedures.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Results of recent studies have suggested that routine cardiac catheterization may be unnecessary after reperfusion therapy for acute myocardial infarction. Therefore to better define the short-term prognostic value of early coronary angiography, and specifically the prognostic significance of multivessel coronary artery disease, the angiographic findings of 855 patients consecutively enrolled in five phases of the TAMI study were correlated with their in-hospital outcome. All patients received intravenous thrombolytic therapy (tissue plasminogen activator, urokinase, or both agents) and underwent cardiac catheterization within 90 minutes of the initiation of therapy. Multivessel disease, defined as the presence of greater than or equal to 75% luminal diameter stenosis in two or more major epicardial arteries, was documented in 236 patients. When compared with the group of patients without multivessel disease, this group had a higher prevalence of coronary risk factors and more frequently had a history of antecedent ischemic chest pain. Although the severity of the infarct zone dysfunction was similar in the two groups (-2.77 +/- 1.00 vs -2.50 +/- 1.09 SD/chord, p = NS), global left ventricular ejection fraction was lower in the group with multivessel disease (48.6 +/- 12.4% vs 51.8 +/- 10.6%, p less than 0.01). This was associated with a significant difference in the function of the noninfarct zone. Whereas this region was hyperkinetic in the group with minimal or single-vessel disease, it was hypocontractile or dyskinetic in those with multivessel disease (+0.66 +/- 1.53 vs -0.52 +/- 1.73 SD/chord, p = 0.0001).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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