Abstract
Exvivo autologous hematopoietic stem cell lentiviral-based gene therapy with betibeglogene autotemcel has been studied in patients with transfusion-dependent β-thalassemia in Phase III clinical trials (HGB-207 and HGB-212), with 90% of patients reaching transfusion independence (TI). Here, we explore manufacturing parameters, drug product quality attributes, and limited patient characteristics that had an impact on clinical efficacy in HGB-207 and HGB-212. Retrospective analysis revealed that the peripheral blood vector copy number (VCN) was related to TI, with a strong correlation between peripheral blood VCN at 6months and gene therapy-derived therapeutic protein (HbAT87Q) expression at 6months (correlation coefficient, 0.8681; p<0.0001; R2= 0.7536). A peripheral blood VCN threshold of ≥0.75 copies per diploid genome at 6months post betibeglogene autotemcel infusion provided a stringent surrogate biomarker for TI and was used as the outcome variable for multivariate analysis using a random forest classifier. The top predictive feature of clinical efficacy was found to be the percentage of lentiviral vector-positive cells in the drug product. This retrospective analysis is critical to understanding the key product quality attributes that can predict clinical efficacy in lentiviral vector gene therapy within this clinical trial population.
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