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Home » Vertex’s gene therapy shows promise in younger children with blood disorders
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Vertex’s gene therapy shows promise in younger children with blood disorders

IQ TIMES MEDIABy IQ TIMES MEDIADecember 6, 2025No Comments2 Mins Read
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Dec 6 (Reuters) – Vertex Pharmaceuticals said on Saturday its gene therapy helped children aged between 5 and 11 years with sickle cell disease to ​be free of painful events and allowed those with another blood disorder ‌that requires frequent blood transfusions to be transfusion-free for at least 12 consecutive months.

This supports the potential ‌for the therapy to treat the blood disorders in a younger patient population and will help Vertex expand the use of Casgevy, which is currently approved for patients 12 years and older with sickle cell disease or transfusion-dependent beta thalassemia (TDT).

“These results — the first clinical ⁠data ever presented on any ‌genetic therapy for children ages 5-11 years with SCD — again demonstrate the transformative potential of Casgevy,” said Vertex Chief Medical Officer Carmen ‍Bozic.

Casgevy is based on the Nobel Prize-winning CRISPR gene editing technology, which uses molecular “scissors” to trim faulty parts of genes that can then be disabled or replaced with new strands of normal ​DNA.

The company will begin filing to global regulators in the first half of ‌next year. It has received a Commissioner’s National Priority Voucher for Casgevy in the 5-11 year age group, which will accelerate the health regulator’s review.

In a late-stage trial, four children with SCD who were dosed with Casgevy with sufficient follow-up were free from vaso-occlusive crises for at least 12 consecutive months. The longest period without these ⁠events reached about two years, the company ​said.

Vaso-occlusive crises, a key hallmark of the inherited blood ​disorder, are caused by blockages of blood vessels by sickled red blood cells and result in severe and debilitating pain.

After infusion with Casgevy, ‍12 patients with ⁠TDT were transfusion free, with the longest duration being just under two years.

A patient with TDT died from pneumonia and multi-organ failure due to severe veno-occlusive ⁠disease, a liver condition, related to a pre-transplant treatment that uses the chemotherapy drug busulfan.

The results ‌were presented at the American Society of Hematology Annual Meeting.

(Reporting by Sriparna ‌Roy in Bengaluru; Editing by Alan Barona)



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