Entering the era of prenatal gene therapies

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In February 2025, researchers at St Jude Children’s Research Hospital reported the first known in utero use of Roche’s spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) drug Evrysdi (risdiplam) in a human foetus.

The foetus was diagnosed with SMA type 1 through prenatal genetic testing, and treatment began during the final six weeks of gestation. Now, more than two years after birth, the child has shown no observable signs of SMA progression, based on clinical exams, nerve conduction studies, and biomarker testing.

This Evrysdi case represents one of the few real-world examples emerging in the world of prenatal interventions for genetic conditions. Certain forms of the blood disorder alpha thalassemia have also been treated with in utero blood transfusions. There was also a recent report of enzyme replacement therapy for a foetus with Pompe disease, conducted by a team at the University of California, San Francisco (NCT04532047), while foetal (or fetal) surgery to repair spina bifida has been done for over 20 years.

Advances in diagnostics and more successful case studies mean that foetal gene therapy “is going to happen,” says Anna David, professor of obstetrics and Maternal Foetal Medicine at University College London, UK.

For the pharma industry, cases like this may influence when and how companies approach therapies for genetic diseases, including potentially curative gene therapies. It also introduces regulatory and ethical challenges around testing, safety, diagnosis, and trial design in the prenatal setting.

Proof of concept

The Evrysdi intervention was part of a single-patient investigational new drug (IND) application led by Richard Finkel and the Pediatric Translational Neuroscience Initiative at St Jude in Memphis, Tennessee. Evrysdi, already FDA-approved for postnatal use in SMA, was administered off-label.

“She’s doing remarkably well from an SMA point of view…we’re really not seeing any SMA activity,” says Finkel, referencing two years of follow-up on the child. While the child was later diagnosed with other abnormalities not linked to drug exposure, the absence of SMA-related symptoms is being closely studied.

St Jude elected not to try a Compassionate Use approach to study this, but instead pursued a formal research protocol. Finkel says the team spoke to Roche extensively, and the company supplied scientific data and the drug, but did not sponsor the trial.

While the St Jude case has generated clinical interest, the pharmaceutical industry’s appetite for prenatal therapy remains limited. Roche confirmed to this news service that it is not currently initiating studies or investigator-led programmes in the prenatal setting.