Background::
Osteoarthritis (OA) is a highly debilitating, degenerative pathology of cartilaginous
joints affecting over 500 million people worldwide. The global economic burden of OA
is estimated at $260-519 billion and growing, driven by aging global population and increasing
rates of obesity. To date, only the multi-injection chondroanabolic treatment regimen of Fibroblast
Growth Factor 18 (FGF18) has demonstrated clinically meaningful disease-modifying efficacy in
placebo-controlled human trials. Our work focuses on the development of a novel single injection
disease-modifying gene therapy, based on FGF18’s chondroanabolic activity.
Methods::
OA was induced in Sprague-Dawley rats using destabilization of the medial meniscus
(DMM) (3 weeks), followed by intra-articular treatment with 3 dose levels of AAV2-FGF18, rh-
FGF18 protein, and PBS. Durability, redosability, and biodistribution were measured by quantifying
nLuc reporter bioluminescence. Transcriptomic analysis was performed by RNA-seq on cultured
human chondrocytes and rat knee joints. Morphological analysis was performed on knee
joints stained with Safranin O/Fast Green and anti-PRG antibody.
Results::
Dose-dependent reductions in cartilage defect size were observed in the AAV2-FGF18-
treated joints relative to the vehicle control. Total defect width was reduced by up to 76% and cartilage
thickness in the thinnest zone was increased by up to 106%. Morphologically, the vehicle-
treated joints exhibited pronounced degeneration, ranging from severe cartilage erosion and
bone void formation, to subchondral bone remodeling and near-complete subchondral bone collapse.
In contrast, AAV2-FGF18-treated joints appeared more anatomically normal, with only regional
glycosaminoglycan loss and marginal cartilage erosion. While effective at reducing cartilage
lesions, treatment with rhFGF18 injections resulted in significant joint swelling (19% increase
in diameter), as well as a decrease in PRG4 staining uniformity and intensity. In contrast to
early-timepoint in vitro RNA-seq analysis, which showed a high degree of concordance between
protein- and gene therapy-treated chondrocytes, in vivo transcriptomic analysis, revealed few gene
expression changes following protein treatment. On the other hand, the gene therapy treatment exhibited
a high degree of durability and localization over the study period, upregulating several
chondroanabolic genes while downregulating OA- and fibrocartilage-associated markers.
Conclusion::
FGF18 gene therapy treatment of OA joints can provide benefits to both cartilage
and subchondral bone, with a high degree of localization and durability.