Abstract
Manipulation of a patient's genome for therapeutic ends is being attempted through numerous methods, some of which have resulted in disease-modifying interventions. The much anticipated promise of somatic gene therapy is starting to pay off; however, there remain many scientific unknowns, including concerns about safety and durability. A significant ethical concern is that of access to these novel interventions, an issue that is normally framed in terms of the high costs of approved products. I describe how access issues permeate gene therapy long before there is any commercial product and how even upstream decisions - such as choices of indication to pursue, viral vector, and where to site a trial - have significant implications for access to resultant products in both the developmental and commercial stages.
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CITATION STYLE
Bateman-House, A. (2024, August 27). Somatic Gene Therapy: Ethics and Access. Annual Review of Genomics and Human Genetics. Annual Reviews Inc. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-genom-021623-104458
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