Engraftment of MDR1 and NeoR Gene-Transduced Hematopoietic Cells After Breast Cancer Chemotherapy

JA Moscow, H Huang, C Carter, K Hines… - Blood, The Journal …, 1999 - ashpublications.org
JA Moscow, H Huang, C Carter, K Hines, JA Zujewski, G Cusack, C Chow, D Venzon…
Blood, The Journal of the American Society of Hematology, 1999ashpublications.org
To determine whether the multidrug resistance gene MDR1 could act as a selectable marker
in human subjects, we studied engraftment of peripheral blood progenitor cells (PBPCs)
transduced with either MDR1 or the bacterial NeoR gene in six breast cancer patients. This
study differed from previous MDR1 gene therapy studies in that patients received only
PBPCs incubated in retroviral supernatants (no nonmanipulated PBPCs were infused),
transduction of PBPCs was supported with autologous bone marrow stroma without …
To determine whether the multidrug resistance gene MDR1could act as a selectable marker in human subjects, we studied engraftment of peripheral blood progenitor cells (PBPCs) transduced with either MDR1 or the bacterial NeoR gene in six breast cancer patients. This study differed from previous MDR1 gene therapy studies in that patients received only PBPCs incubated in retroviral supernatants (no nonmanipulated PBPCs were infused), transduction of PBPCs was supported with autologous bone marrow stroma without additional cytokines, and a control gene (NeoR) was used for comparison with MDR1. Transduced PBPCs were infused after high-dose alkylating agent therapy and before chemotherapy with MDR-substrate drugs. We found that hematopoietic reconstitution can occur using only PBPCs incubated ex vivo, that theMDR1 gene product may play a role in engraftment, and that chemotherapy may selectively expand MDR1 gene-transduced hematopoietic cells relative to NeoR transduced cells in some patients.
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