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The World Ahead | Medicine in 2024

New medical treatments will use genetic scissors, and other clever tricks

From sickle-cell disease to glaucoma, these are the drugs to look out for

Repeating head silhouettes that reveal more and more cells, DNAs, molecules
Illustration: Shira Inbar

By Natasha Loder

New medicines to treat sickle-cell disease and beta thalassaemia, two genetic blood disorders, will make headlines in 2024. Most notable of these is the first CRISPR-gene-edited drug, which made its historic arrival in late 2023. Gene editing uses molecular scissors to edit DNA. It is a more precise form of modification than gene therapy, an older technology that uses a viral vector to inject a working gene into a cell. Gene editing has moved astonishingly quickly through drug pipelines—much faster than gene therapies, which have been slow and difficult to develop.

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This article appeared in the Science and technology section of the print edition of The World Ahead 2024 under the headline “Medical marvels”

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