For example, one viral technique involves introducing a changed gene that can infect all cells in the body, not just targeted organs.
In men, this kind of virus could reach the testis and lead to "germ-line transmission," an effect which the National Institute of Health has deemed negative, said White.
White said Roth's findings are important in both the fields of hemophilia and gene therapy research.
He said after the therapy some of the patients in the study had higher levels of the needed Factor VIII, which is necessary for blood clotting, than before receiving the gene therapy.
"His study did achieve Factor VIII to levels of 2 to 4 percent in some patients," White said. "These people progressed from severe hemophiliacs to moderately severe hemophiliacs."
Currently, hemophiliacs can use bio-engineered Factor VIII to treat themselves, but at very high cost, White said.
The other traditional method for treatment involves blood products containing concentrates of plasma proteins. But this treatment has also carried viruses such as HIV and hepatitis.
Read more in News
Wharton To Open San Francisco BranchRecommended Articles
-
Will She Be a Boy?F OLK MEDICINE always had many different ways to determine what the new baby was going to "be like." If
-
The Best GiftMICK JAGGER may say, "Too much blood," but the Red Cross doesn't. The holiday season is traditionally a low blood-donation
-
Radcliffe Volunteers Do Theraputic Work at Massachusetts HospitalsPatients in the Boston Psychopathic, Metropolitan State, and Boston Children's Hospitals find their hospitalization easier to bear because of the
-
Lowering Cholesterol Is Futile After a PointDue to the "lousy American diet, the American way of life leads to high cholesterol," said Dr. Frank M. Sacks,
-
Research Finds Therapy Fights AIDS, CancerA research project at a Harvard teaching hospital has produced a form of gene therapy that shows promise in fighting
-
Harvard Researchers Make Eye Surgery SaferIn an advance that could help boxers and fighting children suffering from eye trauma, Harvard researchers have found a new