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Dive into the research topics where Andre Larochelle is active.

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Featured researches published by Andre Larochelle.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2017

Eltrombopag Added to Standard Immunosuppression for Aplastic Anemia

Danielle M. Townsley; Phillip Scheinberg; Thomas Winkler; Ronan Desmond; Bogdan Dumitriu; Olga Rios; Barbara Weinstein; Janet Valdez; Jennifer Lotter; Xingmin Feng; Marie J. Desierto; Harshraj Leuva; Margaret Bevans; Colin O. Wu; Andre Larochelle; Katherine R. Calvo; Cynthia E. Dunbar; Neal S. Young

BACKGROUND Acquired aplastic anemia results from immune‐mediated destruction of bone marrow. Immunosuppressive therapies are effective, but reduced numbers of residual stem cells may limit their efficacy. In patients with aplastic anemia that was refractory to immunosuppression, eltrombopag, a synthetic thrombopoietin‐receptor agonist, led to clinically significant increases in blood counts in almost half the patients. We combined standard immunosuppressive therapy with eltrombopag in previously untreated patients with severe aplastic anemia. METHODS We enrolled 92 consecutive patients in a prospective phase 1–2 study of immunosuppressive therapy plus eltrombopag. The three consecutively enrolled cohorts differed with regard to the timing of initiation and the duration of the eltrombopag regimen (cohort 1 received eltrombopag from day 14 to 6 months, cohort 2 from day 14 to 3 months, and cohort 3 from day 1 to 6 months). The cohorts were analyzed separately. The primary outcome was complete hematologic response at 6 months. Secondary end points included overall response, survival, relapse, and clonal evolution to myeloid cancer. RESULTS The rate of complete response at 6 months was 33% in cohort 1, 26% in cohort 2, and 58% in cohort 3. The overall response rates at 6 months were 80%, 87%, and 94%, respectively. The complete and overall response rates in the combined cohorts were higher than in our historical cohort, in which the rate of complete response was 10% and the overall response rate was 66%. At a median follow‐up of 2 years, the survival rate was 97%; one patient died during the study from a nonhematologic cause. Marked increases in bone marrow cellularity, CD34+ cell number, and frequency of early hematopoietic progenitors were noted. Rates of relapse and clonal evolution were similar to our historical experience. Severe rashes occurred in two patients, resulting in the early discontinuation of eltrombopag. CONCLUSIONS The addition of eltrombopag to immunosuppressive therapy was associated with markedly higher rates of hematologic response among patients with severe aplastic anemia than in a historical cohort. (Funded by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute; ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT01623167.)


Molecular Therapy | 2010

Ex vivo expansion of retrovirally transduced primate CD34+ cells results in overrepresentation of clones with MDS1/EVI1 insertion sites in the myeloid lineage after transplantation.

Stephanie Sellers; Theotonius J. Gomes; Andre Larochelle; Rebecca Lopez; Rima Adler; Allen Krouse; Robert E. Donahue; Richard Childs; Cynthia E. Dunbar

Activation of proto-oncogenes by retroviral insertion is an important issue delaying clinical development of gene therapy. We have reported the nonrandom persistence of hematopoietic clones with vector insertions within the MDS1/EVI1 locus following transplantation of rhesus macaques. We now ask whether prolonged culture of transduced CD34(+) cells before transplantation selects for clones with insertions in the MDS1/EVI11 or other proto-oncogene loci. CD34(+) cells were transduced with standard retroviral vectors for 4 days and then continued in culture for an additional 6 days before transplantation. A 15% of insertions identified in granulocytes 6 months post-transplant were in MDS1/EVI11, significantly increased compared to the frequency in animals transplanted with cells immediately following transduction. MDS1/EVI1 clones became more dominant over time post-transplantation in one animal that was followed long term, accompanied by an increased overall copy number of vector-containing granulocytes, with one MDS1/EVI1 clone eventually accounting for 100% of transduced granulocytes and marrow colony-forming unit (CFU). This vector insertion increased the expression of Evi1 mRNA. There was no overrepresentation of MDS1/EVI1 insertions contributing to lymphoid lineages. Strategies involving prolonged ex vivo expansion of transduced cells may increase the risk of genotoxicity.


Human Gene Therapy | 2010

Repetitive Busulfan Administration After Hematopoietic Stem Cell Gene Therapy Associated with a Dominant HDAC7 Clone in a Nonhuman Primate

Jianjun Xie; Andre Larochelle; Irina Maric; Marion Faulhaber; Robert E. Donahue; Cynthia E. Dunbar

The risk of genotoxicity of retroviral vector-delivered gene therapy targeting hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) has been highlighted by the development of clonal dominance and malignancies in human and animal gene therapy trials. Large-animal models have proven invaluable to test the safety of retroviral vectors, but the detection of clonal dominance may require years of follow-up. We hypothesized that hematopoietic stress may accelerate the proliferation and therefore the detection of abnormal clones in these models. We administered four monthly busulfan (Bu) infusions to induce hematopoietic stress in a healthy rhesus macaque previously transplanted with CD34+ cells transduced with retroviral vectors carrying a simple marker gene. Busulfan administration resulted in significant cytopenias with each cycle, and prolonged pancytopenia after the final cycle with eventual recovery. Before busulfan treatment there was highly polyclonal marking in all lineages. After Bu administration clonal diversity was markedly decreased in all lineages. Unexpectedly, we found no evidence of selection of the MDS1/EVI1 clones present before Bu administration, but a clone with a vector integration in intron 1 of the histone deacetylase-7 (HDAC7) gene became dominant in granulocytes over time after Bu administration. The overall marking level in the animal was increased significantly after Bu treatment and coincident with expansion of the HDAC7 clone, suggesting an in vivo advantage for this clone under stress. HDAC7 expression was upregulated in marrow progenitors containing the vector. Almost 5 years after Bu administration, the animal developed progressive cytopenias, and at autopsy the marrow showed complete lack of neutrophil or platelet maturation, with a new population of approximately 20% undifferentiated blasts. These data suggest that chemotherapeutic stress may accelerate vector-related clonal dominance, even in the absence of drug resistance genes expressed by the vector. This model may both accelerate the detection of abnormal clones to facilitate analysis of genotoxicity for human gene therapy, and help assess the safety of administering myelotoxic chemotherapeutic agents in patients previously engrafted with vector-containing cells.


Blood | 2011

CD9 up-regulation on CD34+ cells with ingenol 3,20-dibenzoate does not improve homing in NSG mice

Ronan Desmond; Ashley Dunfee; Frederick Racke; Cynthia E. Dunbar; Andre Larochelle

To the editor: Leung et al demonstrated the potential importance of the tetraspanin CD9[1][1] in regulating migration, adhesion, and homing of human umbilical cord blood (UCB) CD34+ hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells.[2][2] Using a neutralizing antibody to CD9 they inhibited marrow and splenic


Nature Medicine | 1996

Identification of primitive human hematopoietic cells capable of repopulating NOD/SCID mouse bone marrow: Implications for gene therapy

Andre Larochelle; Josef Vormoor; Helmut Hanenberg; Jean C.Y. Wang; Mickie Bhatia; Tsvee Lapidot; Thomas Moritz; Barbara Murdoch; Xiang Li Xiao; Ikunoshin Kato; David A. Williams; John E. Dick


Blood | 2006

AMD3100 mobilizes hematopoietic stem cells with long-term repopulating capacity in nonhuman primates

Andre Larochelle; Allen Krouse; Mark E. Metzger; Donald Orlic; Robert E. Donahue; Simon P. Fricker; Gary J. Bridger; Cynthia E. Dunbar; Peiman Hematti


Blood | 1997

Differential Maintenance of Primitive Human SCID-Repopulating Cells, Clonogenic Progenitors, and Long-Term Culture-Initiating Cells After Incubation on Human Bone Marrow Stromal Cells

Olga I. Gan; Barbara Murdoch; Andre Larochelle; John E. Dick


Human Molecular Genetics | 1995

Engraftment of immune-deficient mice with primitive hematopoietic cells from β-thalassemia and sickle cell anemia patients: implications for evaluating human gene therapy protocols

Andre Larochelle; Josef Vormoor; Tsvee Lapidot; Graham D. Sher; Tatsuo Furukawa; Qiliang Li; Leonard D. Shultz; Nancy F. Olivieri; George Stamatoyannopoulos; John E. Dick


Human Gene Therapy | 2007

Transduction of Rhesus Macaque Hematopoietic Stem and Progenitor Cells with Avian Sarcoma and Leukosis Virus Vectors

Jingqiong Hu; Andrea L. Ferris; Andre Larochelle; Allen Krouse; Mark E. Metzger; Robert E. Donahue; Stephen H. Hughes; Cynthia E. Dunbar


Archive | 1995

HUMAN HEMATOPOIESIS IN SCID MICE

Josef Vormoor; Tsvee Lapidot; Andre Larochelle; John E. Dick

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Cynthia E. Dunbar

National Institutes of Health

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Robert E. Donahue

National Institutes of Health

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Allen Krouse

National Institutes of Health

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John E. Dick

Princess Margaret Cancer Centre

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Mark E. Metzger

National Institutes of Health

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Donald Orlic

National Institutes of Health

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Marion Faulhaber

National Institutes of Health

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Ronan Desmond

National Institutes of Health

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