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1st gene therapy for deafness approved by FDA

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 · 3h · on MSN
FDA approves first gene therapy for inherited deafness, shown to restore hearing for children with rare condition
The US Food and Drug Administration on Thursday approved the first gene therapy for inherited hearing loss, a one-time treatment that proved to be life-changing for a small number of children in a clinical trial who were born without hearing.

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 · 4h
New Gene Therapy Enables Children With a Rare Form of Deafness to Hear
 · 4h · on MSN
FDA approves first-ever gene therapy to restore hearing
Boise State Public Radio · 3h
The FDA gives the green light to the first gene therapy for deafness
The Food and Drug Administration approved the first gene therapy to restore hearing for people who were born deaf.

Continue reading

STAT · 1d
Gene therapy trial for deafness adds evidence to drug’s efficacy
KUOW · 1d
Gene therapy for a rare type of deafness shows lasting results
14h

Salamander gene could hold the key to regrowing human limbs

The skin over a fresh wound might not look like much. In some animals, though, that thin covering becomes command central for rebuilding what was lost.
Managed Healthcare Executive
5h

FDA approves the first gene therapy for genetic hearing loss

The FDA has granted an accelerated approval for Otarmeni (lunsotogene parvec-cwha), the first gene therapy to treat patients with biallelic variants in the OTOF gene. The gene therapy will be made available to eligible patients at no cost, according to a news release from Regeneron, the therapy’s developer.
3h

Gene-screen strategy separates Parkinson's promoters from protectors, revealing new drug targets

A novel strategy that combines computational and experimental approaches has allowed researchers at Baylor College of Medicine and the Duncan Neurological Research Institute (Duncan NRI) at Texas Children's Hospital to distinguish alterations in gene function that contribute to Parkinson's disease from those that protect from the condition.
10h

Gene-sharing view challenged as bacteria shown to police DNA exchange

A new study finds that bacteria can actively block the transfer of beneficial genes to neighboring cells, using specialized proteins to specifically destroy shared DNA before it spreads. This challenges the long-held view that bacteria freely exchange genetic material and reveals a more competitive system in which microbes tightly control who gets access to valuable traits,
2d

A Gene Therapy That Can Reverse Blindness Just Won a $3 Million Prize

Molecular biologist Jean Bennett and ophthalmologist Albert Maguire were awarded the $3 million Breakthrough Prize in Life Sciences alongside physician Katherine High for developi
Hosted on MSN
8h

Bacteria found to block gene sharing to control resistance spread

Researchers have discovered that some bacteria use a protein called YokF to actively block plasmid DNA transfer through nanotubes, preventing neighboring cells from acquiring potentially beneficial traits like antibiotic resistance. The study, published in ...
1don MSN

Chicken gene-editing advance opens path to drug-producing eggs

Chicken eggs are already used to harvest helpful proteins called antibodies to protect humans from viruses such as influenza. Now, a breakthrough at the University of Missouri could one day lead to chickens that produce other useful medical proteins in their eggs.
1don MSN

One-off gene therapy gives girl, 6, her sight back

Saffie's mum says Luxturna therapy at Great Ormond Street has been like "someone waved a magic wand".
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