Immune Toxicities in AAV Gene Therapy: Overview for Clinicians

Authors: Parajuli, S; Gallagher, T; Flotte, TR

Affiliations: Virginia Tech Carilion Sch Med, Roanoke, VA 24016, USA; UMass Chan Med Sch, Dept Genet & Cellular Med, Worcester, MA 01655, USA

Publication: International journal of molecular sciences ; 2026 ; 27

ABSTRACT: Gene therapy using recombinant adeno-associated virus (rAAV) vectors has emerged as a transformative therapeutic modality for genetic disorders, demonstrating high transduction efficiency and a generally favorable safety profile during pre-clinical development. However, serious adverse

events, including thrombotic microangiopathy, acute respiratory distress syndrome, hepatotoxicity, myocarditis, cytokine storm, and hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis, have been observed across multiple gene therapy clinical trials. Significant efforts have been made to understand the toxicities that cause these adverse events and clinical care for patients receiving gene therapies has evolved to mitigate their effects. These toxicities arise from a complex interplay between the innate and adaptive immune responses directed against the viral capsid and transgene products and are often compounded by pre-existing anti-AAV immunity. Immunomodulatory strategies have been developed to combat these responses to improve the long-term success of gene therapies, and this review provides clinicians managing gene therapy patients with an overview of mechanisms underlying AAV-associated immunotoxicities and a discussion of syndromes and mitigation strategies that have been reported in the clinical care of patients.