<code id='EFBB7E0EEB'></code><style id='EFBB7E0EEB'></style>
    • <acronym id='EFBB7E0EEB'></acronym>
      <center id='EFBB7E0EEB'><center id='EFBB7E0EEB'><tfoot id='EFBB7E0EEB'></tfoot></center><abbr id='EFBB7E0EEB'><dir id='EFBB7E0EEB'><tfoot id='EFBB7E0EEB'></tfoot><noframes id='EFBB7E0EEB'>

    • <optgroup id='EFBB7E0EEB'><strike id='EFBB7E0EEB'><sup id='EFBB7E0EEB'></sup></strike><code id='EFBB7E0EEB'></code></optgroup>
        1. <b id='EFBB7E0EEB'><label id='EFBB7E0EEB'><select id='EFBB7E0EEB'><dt id='EFBB7E0EEB'><span id='EFBB7E0EEB'></span></dt></select></label></b><u id='EFBB7E0EEB'></u>
          <i id='EFBB7E0EEB'><strike id='EFBB7E0EEB'><tt id='EFBB7E0EEB'><pre id='EFBB7E0EEB'></pre></tt></strike></i>

          leisure time

          leisure time

          author:hotspot    Page View:6249
          Verve Therapeutics CEO Sekar Kathiresan Verve

          SAN FRANCISCO — The promise of genome editing has given rise to potentially curative medicines for rare, life-threatening diseases that generally affect small numbers of patients. But since Verve Therapeutics was founded in 2018, it’s had a wider aperture: using the molecular tools of genome editing to go after the most common cause of death in the world.

          The plan, according to Verve CEO Sekar Kathiresan, is to edit out heart attacks for the millions of people at risk for severe cardiovascular disease. It’s a goal that’s more than a little audacious. There’s just one approved genome editing medicine, a treatment for sickle cell disease, and it only passed Food and Drug Administration review last month. Base editing, the CRISPR successor Verve uses to conduct its molecular surgery, is only a few years old.

          advertisement

          “When we started, there were so many things that we were kind of going against the grain on,” Kathiresan told STAT at the J.P. Morgan Healthcare Conference in San Francisco this week. “In 2018, it was all about platforms, not about specific diseases and products, or taking this kind of idea for a large indication as opposed to cancer or rare disease. But we’ve always been motivated by a deep conviction in one simple research insight, which is that if your blood cholesterol is really low, lifelong, it is very hard to get a heart attack.”

          Get unlimited access to award-winning journalism and exclusive events.

          Subscribe Log In

          explore

          Medical leaders decry Supreme Court decision on affirmative action
          Medical leaders decry Supreme Court decision on affirmative action

          STEFANIREYNOLDS/AFPviaGettyImagesMedicalleadersonThursdayreactedswiftlytotheSupremeCourt’sdecisionto

          read more
          More people are opting for early dinners since the pandemic, says OpenTable CEO Debby Soo
          More people are opting for early dinners since the pandemic, says OpenTable CEO Debby Soo

          (APIllustration/PeterHamlin)TheAssociatedPressWhenOpenTableCEODebbySoojoinedtherestaurantreservation

          read more
          In Memoriam: Notable people who died in 2023
          In Memoriam: Notable people who died in 2023

          1:29AlanArkinattendsthe26thAnnualScreenActorsGuildAwardsatTheShrineAuditoriumonJan.19,2020inLosAngel

          read more

          Judges halt a Biden rule offering student debt relief for those alleging colleges misled them

          FILE-Atasselwith2023onitrestsonagraduationcapasstudentswalkinaprocessionforHowardUniversity'scommenc