First gene therapy for heart failure offered at NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia
Could injecting a gene into a patient with severe heart failure reverse their disabling and life-threatening condition? Physician-scientists are setting out to answer that question in a first-ever clinical trial of gene therapy to treat severe heart failure. NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia University Medical Center is the only center in the New York City area where the therapy is currently available.
Patients enrolled in the multicenter CUPID trial (Calcium Up-Regulation by Percutaneous Administration of Gene Therapy in Cardiac Disease) will undergo a minimally invasive cardiac catheterization procedure that will introduce a specially engineered gene that stimulates production of an enzyme necessary for the heart to pump more efficiently.
"This new therapy seeks to replenish the levels of this enzyme by introducing the gene for SERCA2a, which is depressed in these patients. If proven effective, this approach could be an alternative to heart transplant for patients without any other options," says Dr. Donna Mancini, the study's principal investigator at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia University Medical Center, where she is medical director of cardiac transplantation. She also is professor of medicine at Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons.
Gene therapy is a technique for correcting defective genes responsible for disease development by inserting genes into a patient's cells and tissues. In most gene therapy studies, a "normal" gene is inserted into the genome to replace an "abnormal" disease-causing gene. A carrier molecule called a vector must be used to deliver the therapeutic gene to the patient's target cells. Currently, the most common vector is a non-pathogenic virus most people have been exposed to in adolescence that has been genetically altered to carry normal human DNA.
More than five million people in the U.S. have heart failure. Patients with severe form of the disease have trouble breathing because the heart cannot pump fluid out of their lungs. Seventy percent die of the disease within 10 years, and the five-year survival rate is less than 50 percent. Heart failure is the only cardiovascular disease whose incidence has been increasing rather than decreasing.
Source: New York- Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia University Medical Center
Related
- First trial of gene therapy for advanced heart failure shows promising resultsMon, 10 Nov 2008, 17:43:44 EST
- Gene therapy reversed heart damage in heart failureMon, 29 Dec 2008, 16:56:37 EST
- Exercise is safe, improves quality of life in patients with chronic heart failureTue, 7 Apr 2009, 17:22:49 EDT
- Surgery to reshape ventricle in heart failure patients offers no added benefit over bypassMon, 30 Mar 2009, 10:36:40 EDT
- Using heart biomarker levels to guide therapy does not improve outcomes for heart failure patientsTue, 27 Jan 2009, 16:22:25 EST
Learn more about
Other sources
- First Gene Therapy For Heart Failure Offered In Clinical Trialsfrom Science DailyWed, 18 Jun 2008, 20:28:04 EDT
- Starting - MYDICAR SERCA2a Gene Therapy Trial For Heart Failurefrom Scientific BloggingWed, 18 Jun 2008, 17:49:24 EDT
- Cholesterol genes 'protect heart'from BBC News: Science & NatureWed, 18 Jun 2008, 16:42:10 EDT
- First gene therapy for heart failure offered at NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbiafrom PhysorgWed, 18 Jun 2008, 15:21:08 EDT
- Fever May Trigger Heart Failure In Patients With The Genetic Disease LQT-2from Science DailyMon, 16 Jun 2008, 12:28:21 EDT
Sponsored links
Latest Science Newsletter
Get the latest and most popular science news articles of the week in your Inbox!Breaking science news
- Climate change and the mystery of the shrinking sheepThu, 2 Jul 2009, 14:31:49 EDT
- Rare sheep could be key to better diagnostic tests in developing world, says Stanford studySat, 4 Jul 2009, 4:22:05 EDT
- 'Jumping gene' diminishes the effect of a new type 2 diabetes risk geneFri, 3 Jul 2009, 3:09:05 EDT
Popular science news articles
- What really prompts the dog's 'guilty look'
- Red giant star Betelgeuse is mysteriously shrinking
- Green tea may affect prostate cancer progression
- Study finds that tobacco companies changed design of cigarettes without alerting smokers
- Got ear plugs? You may want to sport them on the subway and other mass transit, researchers say
No popular news yet
- Magic ingredient in breast milk protects babies' intestines
- Lack of sleep could be more dangerous for women than men
- OJ worse for teeth than whitening says Eastman Institute researchers
- For women with PCOS, acupuncture and exercise may bring relief, reduce risks
- UNC study: Aerobic activity may keep the brain young