New treatment for osteoarthr: pbad014itis: Gene therapy.
Xinyu LiLeyao ShenZhenghan DengYong Nie ZeYu HuangPublished in: Precision clinical medicine (2023)
Osteoarthritis is a complex degenerative disease that affects the entire joint tissue. Currently, non-surgical treatments for osteoarthritis focus on relieving pain. While end-stage osteoarthritis can be treated with arthroplasty, the health and financial costs associated with surgery have forced the search for alternative non-surgical treatments to delay the progression of osteoarthritis and promote cartilage repair. Unlike traditional treatment, the gene therapy approach allows for long-lasting expression of therapeutic proteins at specific sites. In this review, we summarize the history of gene therapy in osteoarthritis, outlining the common expression vectors (non-viral, viral), the genes delivered (transcription factors, growth factors, inflammation-associated cytokines, non-coding RNAs) and the mode of gene delivery (direct delivery, indirect delivery). We highlight the application and development prospects of the gene editing technology CRISPR/Cas9 in osteoarthritis. Finally, we identify the current problems and possible solutions in the clinical translation of gene therapy for osteoarthritis.
Keyphrases
- gene therapy
- rheumatoid arthritis
- knee osteoarthritis
- crispr cas
- poor prognosis
- mental health
- healthcare
- oxidative stress
- public health
- genome wide
- genome editing
- sars cov
- minimally invasive
- acute coronary syndrome
- coronary artery bypass
- dna methylation
- spinal cord
- extracellular matrix
- copy number
- dna binding
- genome wide identification
- current status