Gene therapy involves supplying a
functional gene to cells lacking that function, with the aim of correcting a
genetic disorder or acquired disease. Gene therapy can be broadly divided into
two categories. The first is alteration of germ cells, that is, sperm or eggs,
which results in a permanent genetic change for the whole organism and
subsequent generations. This “germ line gene therapy” is considered by many to
be unethical in human beings. The second type of gene therapy, “somatic cell
gene therapy”, is analogous to an organ transplant. In this case, one or more
specific tissues are targeted by direct treatment or by removal of the tissue,
addition of the therapeutic gene or genes in the laboratory, and return of the
treated cells to the patient. Clinical trials of somatic cell gene therapy
began in the late 1990s, mostly for the treatment of cancers and blood, liver,
and lung disorders.
Despite a great deal of publicity
and promises, the history of human gene therapy has been characterized by
relatively limited success. The effect of introducing a gene into cells
often promotes only partial and/or transient relief from the symptoms of the
disease being treated. Some gene therapy trial patients have suffered adverse
consequences of the treatment itself, including deaths. In some cases, the
adverse effects result from disruption of essential genes within the patient's
genome by insertional inactivation. In others, viral vectors used for gene
therapy have been contaminated with infectious virus. Nevertheless, gene
therapy is still held to be a promising future area of medicine, and is an area
where there is a significant level of research and development activity.
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