This invention establishes a new approach to treating liver fibrosis using gene therapy.
Liver fibrosis is a common complication of highly prevalent chronic liver diseases like hepatitis B and C, alcoholic liver disease and fatty liver disease. Liver fibrosis is a scar-like form of wound healing characterized by collagen deposition by myofibroblasts, a cell type absent from the normal liver. Although liver fibrosis progresses slowly, it eventually leads to liver cirrhosis, the main cause of liver failure, portal hypertension and liver cancer worldwide. In the US alone, liver cirrhosis affects approximately 400,000 patients (10 million worldwide) and accounts for more than 35,000 deaths annually. Because liver transplantation is limited by a donor organ shortage and effective drugs are lacking, new approaches to treating liver fibrosis are needed. The inventors developed a gene therapy approach that targets myofibroblasts in the liver and addresses the main outcome–determining factors of liver fibrosis, lack of functional hepatocytes and excess collagen.
This novel invention provides the following advantages:
· Repurposing of myofibroblasts restores the functional hepatocyte mass and reduces liver fibrosis.
· Potential for rapid clinical translation because of use of nonintegrating, nontoxic adenoassociated viral vectors.
· High efficiency and safety because of specific targeting of hepatic myofibroblasts.
Liver researchers at UCSF have developed a method for treating liver fibrosis by simple intravenous injection of adenoassociated viral vectors. The technology entails targeting adenoassociated viral vectors to myofibroblasts in the liver for transient expression of a combination of hepatic transcription factors in these cells. The approach generates new hepatocytes and at the same time reduces collagen deposition into the liver, thereby improving liver function and reversing liver fibrosis. Because adenoassociated viral vectors proved to be effective and safe in recent clinical trials of liver-directed gene therapy for hemophilia B, the technology lends itself well to clinical translation.
Therapy for liver fibrosis
To develop and commercialize this technology as a therapy for liver fibrosis
Preclinical
Under NDA/CDA
INVENTORS PROFILE
Holger Willenbring, MD, PhD; http://profiles.ucsf.edu/holger.willenbring
Country | Type | Number | Dated | Case |
Austria | Issued Patent | 3224362 | 09/25/2024 | 2015-044 |
Belgium | Issued Patent | 3224362 | 09/25/2024 | 2015-044 |
Bulgaria | Issued Patent | 3224362 | 09/25/2024 | 2015-044 |
Switzerland | Issued Patent | 3224362 | 09/25/2024 | 2015-044 |
Germany | Issued Patent | 3224362 | 09/25/2024 | 2015-044 |
Denmark | Issued Patent | 3224362 | 09/25/2024 | 2015-044 |
Estonia | Issued Patent | 3224362 | 09/25/2024 | 2015-044 |
European Patent Office | Issued Patent | 3224362 | 09/25/2024 | 2015-044 |
Finland | Issued Patent | 3224362 | 09/25/2024 | 2015-044 |
France | Issued Patent | 3224362 | 09/25/2024 | 2015-044 |
United Kingdom | Issued Patent | 3224362 | 09/25/2024 | 2015-044 |
Ireland | Issued Patent | 3224362 | 09/25/2024 | 2015-044 |
Italy | Issued Patent | 3224362 | 09/25/2024 | 2015-044 |
Lithuania | Issued Patent | 3224362 | 09/25/2024 | 2015-044 |
Luxembourg | Issued Patent | 3224362 | 09/25/2024 | 2015-044 |
Latvia | Issued Patent | 3224362 | 09/25/2024 | 2015-044 |
Malta | Issued Patent | 3224362 | 09/25/2024 | 2015-044 |
Netherlands (Holland) | Issued Patent | 3224362 | 09/25/2024 | 2015-044 |
Portugal | Issued Patent | 3224362 | 09/25/2024 | 2015-044 |
Romania | Issued Patent | 3224362 | 09/25/2024 | 2015-044 |
Sweden | Issued Patent | 3224362 | 09/25/2024 | 2015-044 |
Slovenia | Issued Patent | 3224362 | 09/25/2024 | 2015-044 |
Unitary Patent | Issued Patent | 3224362 | 09/25/2024 | 2015-044 |
United States Of America | Published Application | 20210238257 | 08/05/2021 | 2018-158 |
European Patent Office | Published Application | 3 784 224 | 03/03/2021 | 2018-158 |
Additional Patents Pending
Liver Disease, Liver Fibrosis, Liver Cirrhosis, Gene Therapy, Adenoassociated Viral Vectors, AAV