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US FDA approves Vertex’s gene therapy for sickle cell disease in children as young as two

By Thomson Reuters Jul 1, 2026 | 5:44 PM

July 1 (Reuters) – The U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved expanded use of Vertex Pharmaceuticals’ gene therapy in children as young as ​two with inherited blood disorders, including sickle ‌cell disease, the first such treatment cleared for this age group.

Casgevy, a one-time treatment made from a patient’s own blood stem cells, was previously approved for patients aged 12 ‌and ​older with sickle cell disease or ⁠transfusion-dependent beta thalassemia.

Here ⁠are further details: –

• Sickle cell disease is a painful, inherited blood disorder in which the body makes sickle-shaped hemoglobin, preventing red blood cells from ​properly carrying oxygen to the body’s tissues.

• In a trial of children aged five to under ⁠12 with sickle cell disease, ⁠all eight evaluable patients had no ​severe vaso-occlusive crises or painful episodes for at least ​12 straight months within the first 24 months ‌of infusion.

• In beta thalassemia, eight of nine evaluable children achieved transfusion independence for 12 consecutive months, with a median duration of 20.1 months.

• The ⁠FDA granted approval to Vertex in 53 days after filing under the Commissioner’s National Priority Voucher, its new fast-track ⁠program designed ‌to shorten review time for a ⁠drug application.

• In 2023, the FDA approved ​Vertex’s ‌and Genetix Biotherapeutics’ gene therapies for ​sickle cell ⁠disease in patients 12 years and older.

• Other long-term treatment options for sickle cell disease include bone marrow transplant, which requires matching donors, and the chemotherapy drug hydroxyurea.

(Reporting by Puyaan Singh in Bengaluru; Editing ​by Vijay Kishore)