1. The steep uphill path leading to ex vivo gene therapy for genodermatoses
- Author
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Michele Palamenghi, Michele De Luca, and Laura De Rosa
- Subjects
Gene Editing ,Tissue Engineering ,Physiology ,Cell- and Tissue-Based Therapy ,Humans ,Genetic Therapy ,Cell Biology ,Regenerative Medicine - Abstract
Cell therapy, gene therapy, and tissue engineering have the potential to revolutionize the field of regenerative medicine. In particular, gene therapy is understood as the therapeutical correction of mutated genes by addition of a correct copy of the gene or site-specific gene modifications. Gene correction of somatic stem cells sustaining renewing tissues is critical to ensure long-term clinical success of ex vivo gene therapy. To date, remarkable clinical outcomes arose from combined ex vivo cell and gene therapy of different genetic diseases, such as immunodeficiencies and genodermatoses. Despite the efforts of researchers around the world, only a few of these advanced approaches have yet made it to routine therapy. In fact, gene therapy poses one of the greatest technical challenges in modern medicine, spanning safety and efficacy issues, regulatory constraints, registration and market access, all of which need to be addressed to make the therapy available to patients with rare disease. In this review, we survey some of the main challenges in the development of combined cell and gene therapy of genetic skin diseases.
- Published
- 2022