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The University of Tennessee Health
Science Center
Communications and Marketing
Sheila Champlin – (901) 448-4957 or
Dena Owens – (901) 448-4072
John DeVincenzo,
MD, at
The University of
Tennessee Health Science Center
Discovers First
Evidence that RNA-interference Drugs Reduce Human Disease
____________________________________________________
Memphis, Tenn. (May
28, 2010) – John DeVincenzo,
MD, professor and researcher in the Departments of Pediatrics and Molecular
Sciences at the University of Tennessee Health Science Center (UTHSC), has proven
for the first time that a totally new concept in drug design can be used to treat
human disease. Dr. Devincenzo, who also serves as a children’s infectious
diseases specialist at Le Bonheur Children’s Hospital, conducted his study at
the Children’s Foundation Research Center, a UT Health Science Center partner
located at Le Bonheur.
The new drug design
concept is that a simple chain of sugars called RNA (Ribonucleic Acid*) can be easily designed on laptop
computers and then synthesized into powerful disease-fighting therapies. The therapies work by shutting down
disease-causing genes through a process known as RNA interference (RNAi). The discovery of this natural process of RNAi
was awarded the Nobel Prize in 2006.
RNAi drugs had shown promise in test tube studies and in animals, but
had never been shown to work in humans.
Realizing the potential power of the new discovery, Dr.
DeVincenzo and his team tackled the virus called RSV (Respiratory Syncytial
Virus), the most common cause of hospitalization of infants and an infection
with no therapy or vaccine. Healthy
adults contract only rare, mild RSV infections that disappear without medical
intervention. The investigator’s team
infected 88 healthy adults with RSV cultures that he collected and grew from
his patients at Le Bonheur Children’s Hospital.
He then administered RNAi drug therapy to half the study participants in
the form of a nasal spray and a placebo to the other half. Findings from Dr. DeVincenzo’s study proved
that the RNAi therapy shut down a gene critical to RSV, thus preventing the
virus from replicating itself. Patients
who received the RNAi drug had significantly less infection than those
receiving the placebo. The findings pave
the way for this new type of drug therapy to treat a large variety of human
diseases including cancers, genetic diseases and viral infections. In April, the study was published in the
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences announcing the potential of the
RNAi drug therapy.
“The
next step in this discovery is already being undertaken,” said Dr.
DeVincenzo. “We are in the midst of a
clinical trial to test the RNA interference drug in lung-transplant recipients who
have become naturally infected with Respiratory Syncytial Virus, which can be
deadly for these patients.” The researcher
added that the aerosol form of the RNAi drug was proven to be safe in the
previous phase of study and the safety is being tested again in the current
phase of the clinical trial. His
long-term goal is to test RNAi drug therapies to reduce RSV infections in
infants.
Regarding the possibility of marketing the RNAi
drug treatment, Dr. DeVincenzo emphasizes that the drug’s commercialization
cannot be predicted, but could receive approval as an orphan drug (a treatment
for rare conditions) as early as 2013 if the current phase of clinical trials
proves to be very successful. Approval
for using RNAi treatment on children who suffer from RSV would take longer.
About the University of Tennessee Health Science Center
As the flagship
statewide academic health system, the mission of the University of Tennessee
Health Science Center is to bring the benefits of the health sciences to the
achievement and maintenance of human health, with a focus on the citizens of
Tennessee and the region, by pursuing an integrated program of education,
research, clinical care, and public service. Offering a broad range of
postgraduate training opportunities, the main campus
is located in Memphis and includes six colleges: Allied Health Sciences,
Dentistry, Graduate Health Sciences, Medicine, Nursing and Pharmacy.
UTHSC has additional colleges of Medicine and Pharmacy plus an Allied
Health Sciences unit in Knoxville, as well as a College of Medicine campus in
Chattanooga. For more information, visit www.uthsc.edu.
About Le Bonheur Children’s Hospital
Founded in 1952, Le
Bonheur Children’s Hospital is the Mid-South’s first and only comprehensive
pediatric medical facility. Every year
Le Bonheur treats almost 140,000 children from throughout the U.S. and the
world. Le Bonheur is home to one of the
nation’s 10 busiest pediatric emergency departments and hosts one of the
largest pediatric surgical brain tumor programs. Le Bonheur is building a new state-of-the art
hospital. The $340-million facility is
scheduled to open in 2010 and will significantly increase the space for patient
care, research and teaching. For more information, please call (901) 287-6030
or visit www.lebonheur.org.
About the Children’s Foundation Research
Center
The Children's
Foundation Research Center is a non-profit laboratory-based and clinical
research organization created to promote
###
*Ribonucleic Acid
(RNA) is one of the two main types of nucleic acid
(the other being DNA
or deoxyribonucleic acid) which functions in cellular protein
synthesis in all living cells and replaces DNA as the carrier of genetic
information in some viruses.
This study
quantifies the economic impact of the UTHSC on the economy of the state of Tennessee for FY2010.
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