USA TODAY US Edition

Medical advances thrilled in 2017

- Kim Painter

Organs from geneticall­y altered pigs, gene therapy, gene editing and do-it-yourself home genetic testing. If there’s a theme for the most exciting medical advances of 2017, it’s that genetic science took new steps into or toward the real world — even as questions of cost, safety, efficacy and ethics remained. While genetics broke scientific boundaries, the medical community celebrated other milestones, including important new drugs for neurologic­al diseases, progress in the treatment of HIV and a baby born in Dallas in a most unusual way.

Here are 10 medical advances that raised hopes this year:

1 Gene therapies for cancer Some leukemia and lymphoma patients got new hope from the first U.S. approvals of gene therapies that harness the immune system to fight cancer. These CAR T-cell therapies are extremely expensive — from $373,000 to $475,000 per patient. But when they work, they can work very well, leading to sustained remissions. The treatments are likely to be approved for additional forms of cancer.

2 The end of hemophilia?

Gene therapies for hemophilia remain in the testing phase, but results released late this year were so promising that The New England Jour

nal of Medicine ran an editorial with the headline “A Cure for Hemophilia Within Reach.” In preliminar­y studies, patients with the inherited bleeding disorder were able to stop regular blood-clotting treatments for many months after a single gene-therapy infusion. Questions remain over longer-term safety and how many patients will benefit.

3 The promise of pig organs

The idea of using pig organs for human transplant — relieving organ shortages that lead to about 20 U.S. deaths each day — gained momentum after researcher­s reported good results in primates transplant­ed with a kidney and a heart from geneticall­y engineered pigs. Researcher­s need to do more work in animals before trying pig organs in humans.

4 Gene editing of embryos

Scientists are not ready to make “designer babies,” but one Oregon-based team announced it had successful­ly used gene editing technology to rid human embryos of a disease-causing gene. The controvers­ial experiment was a first in the USA, and it improved upon some attempts in China while raising new technical and ethical questions. No one has used altered embryos to create a pregnancy — something that remains illegal in the USA.

5 Uterus transplant

A woman born without a uterus gave birth to a boy in Dallas, thanks to a transplant­ed womb. It was the first such success outside Sweden and gives renewed hope to women who lack a uterus or have lost it because of cancer or another illness. The transplant procedure can be risky and has failed in some other U.S. attempts.

6 Gene testing for the masses

Sales of home DNA testing kits took off as millions of consumers sent spit samples to companies such as Ancestry and 23andMe, mostly to learn about their heritage. Thanks to an approval granted by the Food and Drug Administra­tion this year, 23andMe customers could learn about risks for conditions including Parkinson’s and late-onset Alzheimer’s disease. Despite concerns about potential harm, including privacy breaches and emotional fallout, proponents say the tests give peo- ple informatio­n they want and give researcher­s valuable new DNA databases.

7 A new drug for ALS

For the first time in 22 years, the FDA approved a new medication for amyotrophi­c lateral sclerosis (ALS), also known as Lou Gehrig’s Disease. The drug, Radicava, slows but does not stop the decline in physical functionin­g in people with ALS. That might mean people with the disease can walk, speak, swallow and breathe on their own a bit longer.

8 A new drug for MS

The FDA approved the first drug for people who have aggressive, steadily worsening multiple sclerosis. The drug, Ocrevus, also was approved for the more common relapsing form of MS, in which symptoms, such as pain, tremors, slurred speech and blurry vision, come and go over months and years. Many patients have fewer flareups and develop fewer brain lesions while taking the drug.

9 Progress on HIV

The long, slow global fight against HIV and AIDS reached a promising milestone — more than half of the 36.7 million people living with HIV worldwide receive anti-viral treatment, according to the Joint United Nations Program on HIV/AIDS. In the USA, about 85% of people with HIV know they are infected, 62% get treatment and 49% have the virus suppressed, according to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

10 Hope for Huntington’s

In preliminar­y research, scientists used spinal injections of an experiment­al drug to lower the levels of toxic proteins in the brains of people with Huntington’s. There is no treatment for the fatal inherited neurologic­al condition, which causes profound physical and mental deteriorat­ion in midlife. A drug that had any impact on the course of the disease would be a big deal.

 ??  ?? Human T cells from cancer patients arrive at Novartis Pharmaceut­icals’ facility in Morris Plains, N.J., in 2015. This year, T-cell therapies have shown promising results in driving cancer into remission. BRENT STIRTON/AP
Human T cells from cancer patients arrive at Novartis Pharmaceut­icals’ facility in Morris Plains, N.J., in 2015. This year, T-cell therapies have shown promising results in driving cancer into remission. BRENT STIRTON/AP

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