AI Article Synopsis

  • Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of illness and death worldwide, with genetics playing a significant role in its development.
  • Recent advancements in gene therapy target both single-gene disorders and more complex genetic influences, aiming to fix genetic mutations causing heart conditions.
  • Despite promising breakthroughs, challenges like effective delivery methods, potential side effects, and the need for further research persist, highlighting the ongoing development of gene therapies for cardiovascular issues.

Article Abstract

Cardiovascular disease remains the foremost cause of morbidity and mortality globally, affecting millions of individuals. Recent discoveries illuminate the substantial role of genetics in cardiovascular disease pathogenesis, encompassing both monogenic and polygenic mechanisms and identifying tangible targets for gene therapies. Innovative strategies have emerged to rectify pathogenic variants that cause monogenic disorders such as hypertrophic, dilated, and arrhythmogenic cardiomyopathies and hypercholesterolemia. These include delivery of exogenous genes to supplement insufficient protein levels caused by pathogenic variants or genome editing to correct, delete, or modify mutant sequences to restore protein function. However, effective delivery of gene therapy to specified cells presents formidable challenges. Viral vectors, notably adeno-associated viruses and nonviral vectors such as lipid and engineered nanoparticles, offer distinct advantages and limitations. Additional risks and obstacles remain, including treatment durability, tissue-specific targeting, vector-associated adverse events, and off-target effects. Addressing these challenges is an ongoing imperative; several clinical gene therapy trials are underway, and many more first-in-human studies are anticipated. This science advisory reviews core concepts of gene therapy, key obstacles, patient risks, and ongoing research endeavors to enable clinicians to understand the complex landscape of this emerging therapy and its remarkable therapeutic potential to benefit cardiovascular disease.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/CIR.0000000000001296DOI Listing

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