RAAV-mediated cochlear gene therapy: Prospects and challenges for clinical application

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Abstract

Over the last decade, pioneering molecular gene therapy for inner-ear disorders have achieved experimental hearing improvements after a single local or systemic injection of adeno-associated, virus-derived vectors (rAAV for recombinant AAV) encoding an extra copy of a normal gene, or ribozymes used to modify a genome. These results hold promise for treating congenital or later-onset hearing loss resulting from monogenic disorders with gene therapy approaches in patients. In this review, we summarize the current state of rAAV-mediated inner-ear gene therapies including the choice of vectors and delivery routes, and discuss the prospects and obstacles for the future development of efficient clinical rAAV-mediated cochlear gene medicine therapy.

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Blanc, F., Mondain, M., Bemelmans, A. P., Affortit, C., Puel, J. L., & Wang, J. (2020). RAAV-mediated cochlear gene therapy: Prospects and challenges for clinical application. Journal of Clinical Medicine, 9(2). https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm9020589

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