ECE2021 Oral Communications Oral Communications 6: Calcium and Bone (6 abstracts)
1Genethon, Université Paris-Saclay, Univ Evry, Inserm, Integrare research unit UMR_S951, Evry, France; 2Université de Paris, Laboratory Orofacial Pathologies, Imaging and Biotherapies URP2496 and FHU-DDS-Net, Dental School, and Plateforme dImagerie du Vivant (PIV), Montrouge, France; 3Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale, U1213, Lyon, F-69008, Lyon, France; 4Department of Rheumatology, Cochin Hospital, Université de Paris, Paris, France; 5Genethon, Evry, France; 6Paris Saclay University, Faculté de Médecine, Le Kremlin-Bicêtre, France; 7AP-HP, Department of Endocrinology and Diabetology for children and Department of Adolescent Medicine, Bicêtre Paris-Saclay Hospital, Le Kremlin-Bicêtre, France; 8AP-HP, Department of Odontology-Rare disorders, Hospital Bretonneau, and UR2496 Université de Paris, France
Adeno‐associated virus (AAV) gene therapy reached the maturity and a liver-targeting approach is currently used as a replacement treatment for rare hepatic and muscular diseases. X-linked hypophosphatemia (XLH) is a rare disease associated with hyperfunction of fibroblast growth factor 23 (FGF23) in bone and characterized by severe skeletal deformities and short stature. The current medical therapies for XLH requires life-long repeated treatment presenting major limitations as an inadequate treatment compliance due to i) multiple doses per day and severe long-term side effects for the conventional treatment (based on phosphate supplementation and active vitamin D analogs) or ii) an extremely expensive cost for the health care system for the monoclonal anti-FGF23 antibody therapeutic. Here we studied the hypothesis whether the liver-targeting approach could be used as a therapeutic modality for rare diseases associated with hyperfunction of growth factors as XLH, treating this bone pathology with a single injection. We elaborated a novel therapeutic approach for XLH based on a single injection of AAV gene therapy aiming to stimulate the production of a FGF23 neutralizing factor (cFGF23) in the liver in a murine model of XLH, the Hyp-Duk mouse. We demonstrated that one single injection of AAV-cFGF23 treatment led to restoration of impaired skeletal phenotype, and to significant reduction of osteomalacia, bone and joint alterations in Hyp-Duk mice. This provides a proof-of-concept that the liver-targeting approach represents an adequate modality to rescue the growth factors hyperfunction, thus opening the new perspectives on the treatment of skeletal diseases by gene therapy.