Vol. 4 No. 10 (2024): October
Horizon Scans

CRISPR Technologies for In Vivo and Ex Vivo Gene Editing

decorative image of the issue cover

Published October 16, 2024

Key Messages

What Is the Issue?

The first therapeutics based on clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR) technologies are entering the market. These gene-editing technologies have the potential to change treatment paradigms and may be used to treat conditions that cannot be treated or cured with current methods. This report aims to provide an overview of these technologies and their current and potential roles in health care.

What Is the Technology?

CRISPR is a novel and emerging technology, first discovered in bacterial immune systems, that can cut DNA strands and be used as a gene-editing tool. A guide ribonucleic acid (RNA) sequence leads the CRISPR-associated nuclease to the target DNA sequence where the cut is made. These edits change the function of the gene, making genes nonfunctional or replacing the coding sequence for 1 gene with another. CRISPR can also be used to increase or decrease the expression of specific genes.

What Is the Potential Impact?

CRISPR-based technologies have a variety of potential applications in health care, including:

  • treating genetic diseases
  • understanding the genetic mechanisms of diseases and investigating the relevance of potential drug treatments
  • managing infectious diseases through detection, treatment, and elimination.

What Else Do We Need to Know?

The long-term effects of CRISPR-based therapies are currently unknown. While the first of these therapies, exagamglogene autotemcel (exa-cel) (Casgevy), is the first and only CRISPR-based therapy to receive regulatory approval anywhere internationally (e.g., US, UK), as well as in Canada in September 2024, the next viable CRISPR-based therapies are still in development, with the pivotal clinical trials not expected to be completed until at least 2027. Several ethical considerations related to the use of CRISPR-based therapies have been identified, including the implications of off-target gene modifications, a need for robust informed consent processes, and a need for ethical and legal guidelines.