Earlier this year the Innovative Genomics Institute and the life sciences tools conglomerate Danaher launched a collaborative center to develop genome-editing therapies for rare and other diseases. The Danaher-IGI Beacon for CRISPR Cures seeks to address hundreds of diseases with a unified research, development, and regulatory approach. Their goal is to create a new model for the development of genomic medicines. We spoke to Fyodor Urnov, IGI’s director of technology and translation and director of the new Beacon center, about the evolution of gene editing technology, the challenges of a platform approach, and how the organization plans to share what it learns.
A Rare Disease Drug Developer Tries to Earn Its Stripes
Using Plasma to Treat Rare Diseases
Differentiating Gene Therapies through Regulatory Elements
How One Patient Organization Leverages Research Investments
Charging into the Storm
A Gene Therapy Developer that Embraces Different Models for Reaching Patients
Using Directed Evolution to Develop New Vectors for Genetic Medicines
Addressing a Shortage of Genetic Counselors with AI
A Small Molecule Therapy to Regenerate Muscle in People with DMD
Forging a Faster Path for Gene Therapies
Determining the Value of Rare Disease Therapies
Buying and Building a Gene Therapy Presence
A Clinical Trial Failure Derails a Promising Technology
Helping People with Undiagnosed Rare Diseases Find Answers
Getting a Next-Generation Genome Editing Therapy for Sickle Cell Disease Back on Track
Trying to Break a Leg in a Wheelchair
A Drug Developer that Makes Pediatric Cancers a Priority
Harnessing the Body’s Natural RNA Machinery to Treat Diseases
Targeting the Leading Cause of Death in Friedreich’s Ataxia with a Gene Therapy
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