Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Biotech Medicine Science

Crispr Gene-Editing Drugs Show Promise In Preliminary Study 30

Intellia Therapeutics reported encouraging early-stage study results for its Crispr gene-editing treatments, the latest sign that the pathbreaking technology could result in commercially available drugs in the coming years. The Wall Street Journal reports: Intellia said Friday that one of its treatments, code-named NTLA-2002, significantly reduced levels of a protein that causes periodic attacks of swelling in six patients with a rare genetic disease called hereditary angioedema, or HAE. In a separate study building on previously released trial data, Intellia's treatment NTLA-2001 reduced a disease-causing protein by more than 90% in 12 people with transthyretin-mediated amyloidosis cardiomyopathy, or ATTR-CM, a genetic disease that can lead to heart failure.

Despite the positive results, questions remain about whether therapies based on Crispr will work safely and effectively, analysts said. Intellia's latest studies involved a small number of patients, and were disclosed in news releases and haven't been published in a peer-reviewed journal. The NTLA-2002 study results were presented at the Bradykinin Symposium in Berlin, a medical meeting focused on angioedema. The data came from small, so-called Phase 1 studies conducted in New Zealand and the U.K. that didn't include control groups. Results from such early studies can be unreliable predictors of a drug's safety and effectiveness once the compound is tested in larger numbers of patients. The findings, nevertheless, add to preliminary but promising evidence of the potential for drugs based on the gene-editing technology. Last year, Intellia said that NTLA-2001 reduced the disease-causing protein involved in ATTR patients.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Crispr Gene-Editing Drugs Show Promise In Preliminary Study

Comments Filter:
  • 5 replies so far.
    3 state clear nonsense, 1 is someone replying to point out stupidity and 1 is a swastika.

    What happened to Slashdot ?
    • Happened? It has always been like this..

      • Happened? It has always been like this..

        Twenty years ago, Slashdot had way more readers. Most stories had hundreds of posts, and some had thousands. Since then, many people have drifted away, and few new people have joined.

        • But "Tennis player quits" stories plus Swastika comments plus "Editors" never Editing haven't brought people back ?

          What gives ?!
    • 5 replies so far.
      3 state clear nonsense, 1 is someone replying to point out stupidity and 1 is a swastika.

      Now you see how the moderation system went to hell. And in society as a whole, Uncle Chuck is selecting the population. Those who won't vaccinate and those who refuse new medical treatments are being selected out of the population. Inevitably, sanity will return.

      • Hopefully your(*) correct, and there will come a time when the hateful woke have all grown out of it and the MAGAtards have died of Corona, Polio, lung cancer or even old age, and the world is a normal, happy paradise, with the Centre Left intelligently opposed by the Centre Right.

        (*) Based on your sig. Sorry.
  • by Gravis Zero ( 934156 ) on Saturday September 17, 2022 @07:31AM (#62889163)

    This is exactly the kind of development we need. Treating people today with genetic defects is one thing but I choose to look to it's potential where a pregnancy screening that identifies known genetic defects results in a simple prescription to correct the defects before the child is ever born. Would could radically reduce the number of people that have to live with a disability.

    On the amusing side, I look forward to the possibility of a white supremacist having their skin turn a nice shade of Mocha and their hair black and stiff as part of their sentence for committing a hate crime.

    • Repairing genes is (relatively) easy compared to replacing biological structures they've already built, so correcting a genetic issue when there are as few cells as possible so those structures are built correctly in the first place is ideal.

      What you really want to do is have prospective parents take a DNA test, identify any serious genetic problems, and then repair them in the gonads so any children the parents produce are protected against inheriting them.

      • This is an excellent point! Fixing the issue before it can even become an issue is an even better approach. However, there are still lots of unexpected pregnancies that would benefit from in vivo treatment as well.

        • And, you could end racism, by having all the babies come out the same blended skin color. Except, some governments will want a birthmark shaped like the letters GMO to come out in a contrasting color.
      • I think once we scientifically look into metamorphosis more closely, I suspect we find tools there that can be used to rearrange structure. But the horror of a bad or incomplete transformation is quite a deterrent in terms of gross-out factor. Even a successful transformation, if not in a closed off tube, which I would suspect would be necessary--a cocoon of sorts, would be quite disgusting to watch.

        In this future I see limbs regrown nerves refused or grown. All parts specific and general. I've heard of re
        • I think once we scientifically look into metamorphosis more closely

          You'd have to introduce the whole biochemical equipment of metamorphosis into the vertebrate genome. That's a huge project. It's probably be a lot easier to get people to grow a spare arm, leg and head each.

    • So you think it's punishing someone to give them dark skin and hair? Isn't *that* racist itself?

      • So you think it's punishing someone to give them dark skin and hair? Isn't *that* racist itself?

        Well there's a dumb hot take. The point is to make them live as the very thing they hate. It's not necessarily a punishment either as it could change their perspective.

    • Thanks, I am interested in this topic myself. I was studying to be a genetic engineer, I had to write research papers on the topic of DNA. I know that there is a lot of information on this topic, but in order to write something new and unique, I turned to https://www.nursingpaper.com/ [nursingpaper.com] this service helps with written works, which makes learning easier

Love may laugh at locksmiths, but he has a profound respect for money bags. -- Sidney Paternoster, "The Folly of the Wise"

Working...