Positron Emission Tomography Quantitative Assessment of Off-Target Whole-Body Biodistribution of I-124-labeled Adeno-associated Virus Capsids Administered to Cerebral Spinal Fluid. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Based on studies in experimental animals demonstrating that administration of adeno-associated virus (AAV) vectors to the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) is an effective route to transfer genes to the nervous system, there are increasing number of clinical trials using the CSF route to treat nervous system disorders. With the knowledge that the CSF turns over 4 to 5 times daily, and evidence in experimental animals that at least some of CSF administered AAV vectors are distributed to systemic organs, we asked: with AAV administration to the CSF, what fraction of the total dose remains in the nervous system and what fraction goes off target and is delivered systemically? To quantify the biodistribution of AAV capsids immediately after administration, we covalently labeled AAV capsids with iodine 124 (I-124), a cyclotron generated positron emitter, enabling quantitative positron tomography (PET) scanning of capsid distribution for up to 96 hours after AAV vector administration. We assessed the biodistribution to nonhuman primates of I-124-labeled capsids from different AAV clades, including 9 (clade F), rh.10 (E), PHP.eB (F), hu68 (F) and rh91(A). The analysis demonstrated that 60 to 90% of AAV vectors administered to the CSF via either the intracisternal or intrathecal (lumbar) routes distributed systemically to major organs. These observations have potentially significant clinical implications regarding accuracy of AAV vector dosing to the nervous system, evoking systemic immunity at levels similar to that with systemic administration, and potential toxicity of genes designed to treat nervous system disorders being expressed in non-nervous system organs. Based on these data, individuals in clinical trials using AAV vectors administered to the CSF should be monitored for systemic as well as nervous system adverse events and CNS dosing considerations should account for a significant AAV systemic distribution.

publication date

  • August 25, 2023

Research

keywords

  • Dependovirus
  • Nervous System Diseases

Identity

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1089/hum.2023.060

PubMed ID

  • 37624734