The lesson of little Adam: gene therapy and cancer risk

Four years after an experimental treatment for a rare disease, the child underwent surgery for cancer, the first case caused by a virus widely used as a vector, but he is now doing well.

The question of whether gene therapy using adeno-associated viruses (AAVs) can cause tumors has been the subject of intense debate over recent decades. Until now, our understanding of their mechanisms and the data collected over the years from thousands of patients had appeared reassuring. In fact, AAVs are the most commonly used vectors for “in vivo” therapies precisely because they usually deliver their package, containing the therapeutic gene, near the patient’s DNA without integrating into it, thereby avoiding disruptions. Will the risk-benefit balance now change, after the first documented case of a tumor linked to their use in a clinical trial?

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Zinc fingers grab CRISPR for once

sangamo tweetThe first patient edited “in vivo” last week is a breaking news story, and zinc finger nuclease ZFN must be credited for the accomplishment. A putatively outdated system stealing the scene from the most celebrated technique for gene editing is a bit like Carl Lewis beating Usain Bolt at the Rio Olympics. Any wonder that tweets by some biotech-enthusiasts had something of a derby atmosphere, while many inattentive readers thought it was CRISPR stuff, as lay people never heard of ZFN before. Continue reading