Key takeaways
- Casgevy, the first FDA-approved CRISPR therapy, edits the BCL11A gene to reactivate fetal hemoglobin — sickle cell patients are now living symptom-free.
- CRISPR fixes disease at the DNA level rather than managing symptoms, fundamentally changing the treatment paradigm for genetic disorders.
- The approved therapy costs over $2 million per patient, raising serious access and equity concerns for the populations most affected.
- Long-term safety data on off-target effects is still being collected; germline editing remains ethically and legally prohibited.
The Breakthrough
In late 2023, the FDA approved Casgevy, a CRISPR-based therapy for sickle cell disease developed by CRISPR Therapeutics and Vertex. It works by editing the BCL11A gene in a patient's own bone marrow cells, reactivating fetal hemoglobin production and effectively stopping the sickling of red blood cells. Patients who previously relied on regular blood transfusions to survive are now living symptom-free.
This was the first FDA-approved CRISPR therapy for any condition. It proved something a lot of people doubted: that gene editing could move from a powerful lab tool to an actual treatment administered to real patients with a real disease.
Since then, the field has expanded. Companies like Intellia and Beam Therapeutics are running trials for hereditary blindness, blood disorders, and certain cancers. The technology is moving fast.
Why It Matters
The difference between this and conventional treatments is fundamental. Existing therapies for genetic diseases manage symptoms; they don't address the underlying cause. CRISPR goes straight to the source: the DNA. If you fix the gene, you fix the disease at its root.
If you fix the gene, you fix the disease at its root.
Sickle cell disease is a clear example. The standard of care has been hydroxyurea, pain management, and blood transfusions. These keep people alive but don't stop the disease. Casgevy edits the genetic instruction that causes sickling in the first place. One treatment, not a lifetime of symptom management.
The Concerns
Off-target effects are the obvious safety concern. CRISPR is precise, but "precise" doesn't mean "perfect." The editing machinery can sometimes cut at unintended locations in the genome, and we don't always know what the consequences of those off-target edits will be. Long-term studies are still ongoing. These patients have been followed for years, but we need decades of data to be confident.
The bigger issue might be access. The approved sickle cell therapy costs over $2 million per patient before insurance. The patient population most affected by sickle cell disease in the US, Black Americans, is also the population least likely to have comprehensive insurance coverage. A cure that exists but isn't accessible to the people who need it most isn't really a cure. It's a proof of concept.
A cure that exists but isn't accessible to the people who need it most isn't really a cure. It's a proof of concept.
There are also questions about germline editing: changing DNA in embryos that would be inherited by future generations. No one is doing this clinically yet, and most countries ban it. But the technology doesn't inherently distinguish between somatic and germline editing. The ethical line has to be drawn intentionally.
My Take
The sickle cell approval was a genuine milestone. I don't think that gets said enough. For decades, sickle cell research was underfunded compared to diseases that affect smaller but wealthier populations. A CRISPR therapy specifically for sickle cell is a meaningful step toward addressing that disparity.
But the cost issue is where my optimism hits a wall. $2 million per patient is not a sustainable model for any healthcare system, let alone for a disease that disproportionately affects underinsured communities. If CRISPR therapies stay this expensive, they'll remain celebrity medicine: impressive in case studies, irrelevant at population scale. The manufacturing and delivery logistics need to get cheaper by orders of magnitude before this truly changes medicine for most people.
The germline editing conversation is important but feels premature given where the technology actually is. Right now, the real ethical priority is making sure somatic therapies, the ones that edit only the treated patient's cells, are safe, effective, and accessible. That's a big enough challenge without getting distracted by sci-fi germline scenarios.