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Featured researches published by William B. Guggino.


Human Gene Therapy | 2002

A Phase II, double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled clinical trial of tgAAVCF using maxillary sinus delivery in patients with cystic fibrosis with antrostomies

John A. Wagner; Ilynn B. Nepomuceno; Anna H. Messner; Mary Lynn Moran; Eric P. Batson; Sue Dimiceli; Byron W. Brown; Julie K. Desch; Alexander Norbash; Carol Conrad; William B. Guggino; Terence R. Flotte; Jeffrey J. Wine; Barrie J. Carter; Thomas C. Reynolds; Richard B. Moss; Phyllis Gardner

tgAAVCF, an adeno-associated cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) viral vector/gene construct, was administered to 23 patients in a Phase II, double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled clinical trial. For each patient, a dose of 100,000 replication units of tgAAVCF was administered to one maxillary sinus, while the contralateral maxillary sinus received a placebo treatment, thereby establishing an inpatient control. Neither the primary efficacy endpoint, defined as the rate of relapse of clinically defined, endoscopically diagnosed recurrent sinusitis, nor several secondary endpoints (sinus transepithelial potential difference [TEPD], histopathology, sinus fluid interleukin [IL]-8 measurements) achieved statistical significance when comparing treated to control sinuses within patients. One secondary endpoint, measurements of the anti-inflammatory cytokine IL-10 in sinus fluid, was significantly (p < 0.03) increased in the tgAAVCF-treated sinus relative to the placebo-treated sinus at day 90 after vector instillation. The tgAAVCF administration was well tolerated, without adverse respiratory events, and there was no evidence of enhanced inflammation in sinus histopathology or alterations in serum-neutralizing antibody titer to adeno-associated virus (AAV) capsid protein after vector administration. In summary, this Phase II trial confirms the safety of tgAAVCF but provides little support of its efficacy in the within-patient controlled sinus study. Various potentially confounding factors are discussed.


Human Gene Therapy | 2003

Phase I Trial of Intranasal and Endobronchial Administration of a Recombinant Adeno-Associated Virus Serotype 2 (rAAV2)-CFTR Vector in Adult Cystic Fibrosis Patients: A Two-Part Clinical Study

Terence R. Flotte; Pamela L. Zeitlin; Thomas C. Reynolds; Alison E. Heald; Patty Pedersen; Suzanne E. Beck; Carol Conrad; Lois Brass-Ernst; Margaret Humphries; Kevin J. Sullivan; Randall C. Wetzel; George A. Taylor; Barrie J. Carter; William B. Guggino

Recombinant adeno-associated serotype 2-based vectors (rAAV2) possess a number of theoretical advantages for cystic fibrosis (CF) gene therapy because they elicit little or no inflammatory response and generally result in stable expression. rAAV2 vectors expressing the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) gene have previously been shown to mediate stable correction of the CF defect in CF bronchial epithelial cells and stable expression of CFTR in rabbit and nonhuman primate models. Here we report the results of the first trial initiated with rAAV in humans, a phase I study in 25 adult and adolescent CF patients with mild to moderate lung disease. Doses of the rAAV-CFTR vector (tgAAVCF) ranging from 3 x 10(1) to 1 x 10(9) replication units (RU), which is equivalent to approximately 6 x 10(4) to 2 x 10(12) DNase resistant particles (DRP), were administered to one side of the nose and to the superior segment of the lower lobe of the right lung. Several adverse events were noted prior to and/or after vector delivery, but most of them appeared to be related to the endogenous CF lung disease or a result of the bronchoscopic procedures. Only one of the serious events was judged to be possibly vector-related (based on temporal association), and this event was a pulmonary exacerbation very similar to several others experienced by the same subject in the three months preceding vector delivery. Vector shedding was minimal throughout the study, and serum-neutralizing antibodies were detected after vector delivery to subjects in the highest dosage cohorts. Gene transfer as measured by DNA polymerase chain reaction (PCR) was not observed until cohort 10 in nasal and bronchial epithelia. Sporadic low-level copy numbers suggested gene transfer of anywhere from 0.002 copies per cell up to 0.5 copies per cell was possible; however, DNA PCR was positive in lungs prior to direct dosing suggesting aspiration from the nasal dosing. These data indicate the need for continued evaluation of rAAV-CFTR vectors in additional clinical trials.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1993

Expression of the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator from a novel adeno-associated virus promoter.

Terence R. Flotte; Sandra Afione; Rikki Solow; Mitchell L. Drumm; Diane Markakis; William B. Guggino; Pamela L. Zeitlin; Barrie J. Carter


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1991

Down-regulation of cystic fibrosis gene mRNA transcript levels and induction of the cystic fibrosis chloride secretory phenotype in epithelial cells by phorbol ester.

Bruce C. Trapnell; Pamela L. Zeitlin; Chin-Shyan Chu; K Yoshimura; H Nakamura; William B. Guggino; Joachim Bargon; T C Banks; Wilfried Dalemans; Andrea Pavirani


American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2004

Macromolecular Interactions and Ion Transport in Cystic Fibrosis

William B. Guggino; Susan Banks-Schlegel


Archive | 2003

Methods of identifying genomic and proteomic biomarkers for cystic fibrosis, arrays comprising the biomarkers and methods of using the arrays

Harvey B. Pollard; David Jacobwitz; Greg Mueller; Ofer Eidelman; Meera Srivastava; William B. Guggino; Pamela L. Zeitlin


Archive | 2016

kidneyregulates expression of ClC-5 chloride channel in the

Ian V. Silva; Carol J. Blaisdell; Sandra E. Guggino; William B. Guggino


Archive | 2016

respiratory epithelia ClC-5: ontogeny of an alternative chloride channel in

Carol J. Blaisdell; Rebecca D. Edmonds; Ian V. Silva; William B. Guggino; Robert B. Butler; L Pamela


Archive | 2015

secretion with sexual maturity in pigs Sex-specific changes in platelet aggregation and

P. McConnell; Virginia M. Miller; Muthuvel Jayachandran; Hiroya Okano; Ritu Chatrath; Whyte G. Owen; Sue Piper Duckles; Cara H. Olsen; Nima Adimi; Gregory P. Mueller; Harvey B. Pollard; M. Jacobowitz; Xiaoduo Ji; Xiuying Zhang; William B. Guggino; Jerry Wright; Jeffrey Kiefer; Ofer Eidelman; Catherine Jozwik; Wei Huang; Meera Srivastava; Stephen W. Rothwell; Jonathan Myers; Mohammad Assali; Akbar Hajizadeh Moghaddam


Archive | 1994

Die erzielung hoher titer des rekombinanten aav-vektors

Barrie J. Carter; Terence R. Flotte; William B. Guggino; Rikki Solow

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Barrie J. Carter

National Institutes of Health

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Terence R. Flotte

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Rikki Solow

National Institutes of Health

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Carol Conrad

Lucile Packard Children's Hospital

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Harvey B. Pollard

National Institutes of Health

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Meera Srivastava

National Institutes of Health

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Ofer Eidelman

Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences

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