"U.S. Approves Groundbreaking Gene-Editing Treatment for Sickle Cell Patients"

The U.S. is expected to approve exa-cel, a gene-editing treatment for sickle cell disease, by the end of this week. Developed by Vertex Pharmaceuticals and CRISPR Therapeutics, exa-cel uses CRISPR technology to edit a patient's DNA and alleviate the symptoms of sickle cell disease. The treatment has shown promising results in clinical trials, significantly reducing pain crises for patients. However, the lengthy treatment timeline, potential infertility risks, limited availability, and high cost (estimated at $2 million per patient) pose challenges for widespread adoption. Despite these obstacles, patients like Joe Tsogbe, who received exa-cel, have experienced life-changing improvements and are hopeful for a better future.
- U.S. poised to approve first gene-editing treatment in breakthrough for sickle cell patients CNBC
- Life changing treatment for Sickle Cell Disease near approval CGTN America
- This Newly Discovered Risk Could Be a Big Headache for Vertex Pharmaceuticals and CRISPR Therapeutics The Motley Fool
- For sickle cell patients, a CRISPR cure could mean infertility - STAT STAT
- CASGEVY becomes world's first approved CRISPR-based therapy Labiotech.eu
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