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The First Crispr Treatment Is Making Its Way to Patients

Simon Osuji by Simon Osuji
November 17, 2024
in Artificial Intelligence
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The First Crispr Treatment Is Making Its Way to Patients
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Nearly a year after its approval, the first medical treatment that uses the Nobel Prize–winning technology Crispr is now being given to patients.

Called Casgevy, the gene-editing treatment is for people with sickle cell disease and a related blood disorder called beta thalassemia. UK regulators approved the treatment in November 2023, followed by the US and Europe in December. Vertex, the pharmaceutical company that markets Casgevy, announced in a November 5 earnings call that the first person to receive Casgevy outside of a clinical trial was dosed in the third quarter of this year. The company reported $2 million in revenue from that patient. (Casgevy debuted with a price tag of $2.2 million in the US.)

“Cagevy has been enthusiastically received by patients, physicians, and policymakers, and the launch is gathering momentum across all regions,” Stuart Arbuckle, Vertex’s chief operating officer, said on the earnings call. He added that additional patients are accessing the treatment commercially.

When WIRED followed up with Vertex via email, spokesperson Eleanor Celeste declined to provide the exact number of patients that have received Casgevy. However, the company says 40 patients have undergone cell collections in anticipation of receiving the treatment, up from 20 patients last quarter.

In sickle cell disease and beta thalassemia, patients don’t produce healthy hemoglobin, the substance in red blood cells responsible for carrying oxygen throughout the body. Errors in the hemoglobin gene are to blame. As a result, people with sickle cell have hard, crescent-shaped red blood cells that stick together and block blood flow, causing extreme bouts of pain. These pain crises can last for hours or days and can land patients in the hospital. In beta thalassemia, the body doesn’t make enough hemoglobin, which leads to anemia. People with severe beta thalassemia need regular blood transfusions every several weeks throughout their lifetime.

Casgevy works by using Crispr to modify a person’s own cells so that they produce a healthy type of hemoglobin.

The delay in patients receiving Casgevy is not necessarily unexpected, as the treatment is complex to administer and only certain hospitals are able to perform the procedure. On last week’s earnings call, Arbuckle said 45 treatment centers are now authorized to administer Casgevy, and Vertex expects that number to grow to approximately 75 around the world.



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