CRISPR therapy cures first genetic disorder inside the body

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For the first time, researchers appear to have effectively treated a genetic disorder by directly injecting a CRISPR therapy into patients' bloodstreams — overcoming one of the biggest hurdles to curing diseases with the gene editing technology.

The therapy appears to be astonishingly effective, editing nearly every cell in the liver to stop a disease-causing mutation.

The challenge: CRISPR gives us the ability to correct genetic mutations, and given that such mutations are responsible for more than 6,000 human diseases, the tech has the potential to dramatically improve human health.

One way to use CRISPR to treat diseases is to remove affected cells from a patient, edit out the mutation in the lab, and place the cells back in the body to replicate — that's how one team functionally cured people with the blood disorder sickle cell anemia, editing and then infusing bone marrow cells.

Bone marrow is a special case, though, and many mutations cause disease in organs that are harder to fix.

Another option is to insert the CRISPR system itself into the body so that it can make edits directly in the affected organs (that's only been attempted once, in an ongoing study in which people had a CRISPR therapy injected into their eyes to treat a rare vision disorder).

Injecting a CRISPR therapy right into the bloodstream has been a problem, though, because the therapy has to find the right cells to edit. An inherited mutation will be in the DNA of every cell of your body, but if it only causes disease in the liver, you don't want your therapy being used up in the pancreas or kidneys.

A new CRISPR therapy: Now, researchers from Intellia Therapeutics and Regeneron Pharmaceuticals have demonstrated for the first time that a CRISPR therapy delivered into the bloodstream can travel to desired tissues to make edits.

"This is a major milestone for patients," Jennifer Doudna, co-developer of CRISPR, who wasn't involved in the trial, told NPR.

"While these are early data, they show us that we can overcome one of the biggest challenges with applying CRISPR clinically so far, which is being able to deliver it systemically and get it to the right place," she continued.

What they did: During a phase 1 clinical trial, Intellia researchers injected a CRISPR therapy dubbed NTLA-2001 into the bloodstreams of six people with a rare, potentially fatal genetic disorder called transthyretin amyloidosis.

The livers of people with transthyretin amyloidosis produce a destructive protein, and the CRISPR therapy was designed to target the gene that makes the protein and halt its production. After just one injection of NTLA-2001, the three patients given a higher dose saw their levels of the protein drop by 80% to 96%.

A better option: The CRISPR therapy produced only mild adverse effects and did lower the protein levels, but we don't know yet if the effect will be permanent. It'll also be a few months before we know if the therapy can alleviate the symptoms of transthyretin amyloidosis.

If everything goes as hoped, though, NTLA-2001 could one day offer a better treatment option for transthyretin amyloidosis than a currently approved medication, patisiran, which only reduces toxic protein levels by 81% and must be injected regularly.

Looking ahead: Even more exciting than NTLA-2001's potential impact on transthyretin amyloidosis, though, is the knowledge that we may be able to use CRISPR injections to treat other genetic disorders that are difficult to target directly, such as heart or brain diseases.

"This is a wonderful day for the future of gene-editing as a medicine," Fyodor Urnov, a UC Berkeley professor of genetics, who wasn't involved in the trial, told NPR. "We as a species are watching this remarkable new show called: our gene-edited future."
 
How long before retarded munchie moms start protesting this because it's "exterminating people with this illness" not caring that it could allow their sick child to finally live a normal life?
 
Didn't the chink scientist that created this thing get arrested by the CCP for something? Can't recall what for, but I remember thinking that it was the start of some chink supervillan origin story.
I think (officially) it was for allowing some children to be born after he used CRISPR to edit the zygotes to be immune to a disease. I might be mixing him up with another scientist but in the end when dealing with the CCP the truth is always muddy.

edit:I think he made them immune to HIV.
 
I think (officially) it was for allowing some children to be born after he used CRISPR to edit the zygotes to be immune to a disease. I might be mixing him up with another scientist but in the end when dealing with the CCP the truth is always muddy.

edit:I think he made them immune to HIV.
Yeah but in doing so he erased a protein in the embryos called CCR5 (the receptor HIV binds to), which has actual function in the body and people who naturally don’t have it tend to have shorter lives. Completely different than correcting a mutation and restoring function.

This is really good technology but an unfortunate side effect may be that people who carry mutations might live a lot more often and go on to have kids and shit up the human gene pool more than it already is. Ideally you’d correct the mutation in the gametes as well.
 
Didn't the chink scientist that created this thing get arrested by the CCP for something? Can't recall what for, but I remember thinking that it was the start of some chink supervillan origin story.
Oh you just know they'll use it to make Xi Jinping immortal or something by the rate things are going.

The country is already a cheap Chinese knockoff of the Imperium from Warhammer 40,000.
 
This is really good technology but an unfortunate side effect may be that people who carry mutations might live a lot more often and go on to have kids and shit up the human gene pool more than it already is. Ideally you’d correct the mutation in the gametes as well.
I think that's part of the point of such "cures" to make sure there are future patients who will either pay out of pocket or get their treatment via subsidies, either way good o'l pharma gets some cash.

Medical/Pharmaceutical Industries are not in the business of curing diseases and disorders or they would be in the business of putting themselves out of business, their business is life extension and symptom mitigation/suppression, preferably with drugs that a patient needs to take for life, a dead person doesn't pay for treatment but neither does a healthy one.
 
Super jews? Oh shit...
So... regular people?
Oh you just know they'll use it to make Xi Jinping immortal or something by the rate things are going.

The country is already a cheap Chinese knockoff of the Imperium from Warhammer 40,000.
If that were to ever happen, they'd just kill him, either on purpose or by accident.
 
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One way to use CRISPR to treat diseases is to remove affected cells from a patient, edit out the mutation in the lab, and place the cells back in the body to replicate — that's how one team functionally cured people with the blood disorder sickle cell anemia, editing and then infusing bone marrow cells.
They actually cured people of sickle cells? Please feel free to give me a reason to not be excited.
 
For the first time, researchers appear to have effectively treated a genetic disorder by directly injecting a CRISPR therapy into patients' bloodstreams — overcoming one of the biggest hurdles to curing diseases with the gene editing technology.

Now I'm even more suspicious of the vaccine than I was after seeing this.
 
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