• Home
  • Politics
  • Health
  • World
  • Business
  • Finance
  • Tech
  • More
    • Sports
    • Entertainment
    • Lifestyle
What's Hot

Jared Kushner’s net worth grew 1,440% since 2009 — 9 times more than the average US household. Here’s what drove the gap

July 4, 2026

The First Congress Enshrined Warrants Into Law — But This Congress Continues To Push Warrantless Spying Tool

July 4, 2026

20 Killed, City Zoo Tortoises Injured in Russian ‘Revenge’ Strike on Kyiv

July 4, 2026
Facebook Twitter Instagram
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
Saturday, July 4
Patriot Now NewsPatriot Now News
  • Home
  • Politics

    The First Congress Enshrined Warrants Into Law — But This Congress Continues To Push Warrantless Spying Tool

    July 4, 2026

    New York girds for a weekend of Taylor Swift, salutes and soccer

    July 4, 2026

    The populist trick that turned a soccer shirt into a campaign uniform

    July 4, 2026

    Is a fan march better than a Super Bowl parade?

    July 4, 2026

    Here’s How Democratic Socialists Of America Has Evolved Over The Decades

    July 3, 2026
  • Health

    Busy Philipps On Her ADHD. How Women Can Face Additional Challenges

    July 4, 2026

    Hydration Breaks At 2026 World Cup Raise Controversy For FIFA

    July 3, 2026

    Poop Parasite Causes Hundreds Of Cases Of Explosive Diarrhea

    July 3, 2026

    Trump Administration To Close Loophole And Codify Drug Price Rules

    July 3, 2026

    Will AI Replace Healthcare Jobs? Not How You May Think

    July 3, 2026
  • World

    20 Killed, City Zoo Tortoises Injured in Russian ‘Revenge’ Strike on Kyiv

    July 4, 2026

    Critics Spot 1 Odd Detail In Karoline Leavitt’s Air Force One Pic

    July 4, 2026

    Mexico Demands Proof After U.S. Treasury Sanctions Cartel Businesses Funding Mexican Political Campaigns

    July 4, 2026

    Jeanine Pirro Torched By Critics Over ‘Total Bulls**t’ Reflecting Pool Indictment

    July 4, 2026

    Ukraine Opens ‘Transparent’ Wartime Arms Export Drive

    July 4, 2026
  • Business

    Companies Find Out AI Robots Can’t Replace All Humans Just Yet

    July 3, 2026

    EXCLUSIVE: New Report Warns Of Foreign Stranglehold On American Beer Market

    July 3, 2026

    Former Tricolor CEO Pleads Not Guilty To Alleged $800 Million Plot Handing Out Car Loans To Illegal Aliens

    July 2, 2026

    Ford Discovers Humans Can’t Be Replaced After All

    June 30, 2026

    Paul Krugman Suddenly Admits Tariffs May Be ‘Necessary’ After Years Of Globalist Dogma

    June 30, 2026
  • Finance

    Jared Kushner’s net worth grew 1,440% since 2009 — 9 times more than the average US household. Here’s what drove the gap

    July 4, 2026

    Rates are mixed this July 4 holiday

    July 4, 2026

    ‘Green’ July off to a solid start

    July 4, 2026

    Rates mostly higher again today

    July 4, 2026

    Nike Beat Wall Street Estimates by a Mile. Why Investors Are Still Not Convinced.

    July 4, 2026
  • Tech

    Married Couple Dies in First Fatal Tesla Semi Crash

    July 3, 2026

    Wikipedia Editors Mock, Denigrate Co-Founder Larry Sanger Following Ban

    July 3, 2026

    Google Loses Fight Against EU’s $4.7 Billion Android Fine

    July 3, 2026

    ‘Magnificent 7’ Tech Giants Lost $2.3 Trillion in Value in June as AI Concerns Mount

    July 3, 2026

    Elton John Sells His Image for Millions So He Can Perform After Death

    July 2, 2026
  • More
    • Sports
    • Entertainment
    • Lifestyle
Patriot Now NewsPatriot Now News
Home»Health»FDA Approves First-Ever Gene Therapy For Deafness, Opening Door To New Era
Health

FDA Approves First-Ever Gene Therapy For Deafness, Opening Door To New Era

May 19, 2026No Comments7 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
FDA Approves First-Ever Gene Therapy For Deafness, Opening Door To New Era
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Miles, age 2, is one of the first patients at Boston Children’s hospital to receive gene therapy for hereditary hearing loss. He is now responding to his parents’ voices.

Joseph Piselli, Boston Children’s Hospital

Every 13 minutes, a baby in the United States is born deaf. Some of those babies have a rare genetic form of deafness in which the cells of their inner ear are normal but aren’t transmitting the signal to the brain.

“It’s like the phone is working, but the cable isn’t connected,” says Dr. Jeffrey Holt, a professor at Harvard Medical School and leading researcher in inner-ear gene therapies.

Now, after 25 years of research, that cable can finally be made to work: The first gene therapy anywhere in the world for any form of deafness has been approved by the Food and Drug Administration. In the pivotal clinical trial of 20 infants, children, and teens, 80% of participants achieved improved hearing sensitivity around six months after receiving the therapy, and upon longer follow-up, 42% of those treated achieved normal hearing. The therapy was safe and well-tolerated, with only transient minor side effects like ear infections.

“This is the first time in history that a brand-new gene therapy has been used as a treatment to restore hearing in children born profoundly deaf,” says Dr. Zheng-Yi Chen, an associate professor of otolaryngology at Harvard Medical School and a leader of other gene therapy trials for hearing loss in China. “They can hear whispers and they can speak. As a result, their life will be totally transformed. This sets the stage as a really good example for other gene therapies that can be developed and applied to humans.”

How it Works

The target of the therapy is a mutated gene called otoferlin, or OTOF, which blocks transmission of sound signals from the inner-ear hair cells to the brain.

A single injection delivers a working copy of the OTOF gene via an AAV (adeno-associated virus) vector directly into the inner ear (through the ear canal or behind the ear into the cochlea). But the OTOF gene is too large to fit inside the viral vector, so researchers cleverly split it across two vectors. Remarkably, once the gene is shuttled inside the cell, its two halves recombine around 90% of the time and produce a functional copy of the gene. The cells then start using the new working gene in place of the mutated one.

This dual-vector innovation is a new strategy, validated for the first time in a human disease. Researchers estimate that about 50 to 60 patients have received a form of this therapy across a handful of similar clinical trials to date worldwide. The newly approved therapy comes from Regeneron, which plans to provide the therapy for free to eligible patients, while Eli Lilly and several international groups are targeting the same mutation, including at the Karolinska Institute in Sweden and in China.

“We see children start hearing within three weeks,” says Dr. Chen. “They were completely deaf before. Initially it’s not so good, but it gets better for six months to one year, when they reach the best outcome, then maintain. We think the hearing gets better because the gene produces more of the right product.”

The longest follow-up so far is three years of hearing recovered with no decline. “That’s truly remarkable,” says Dr. Chen.

The Clock Is Ticking

The age of the child at treatment matters greatly, says Dr. Daniel Choo, director of pediatric otolaryngology at University of Cincinnati College of Medicine. He also serves as principal investigator for Eli Lilly’s OTOF gene therapy trial.

The ideal treatment is before age three, or even younger, when the brain is most primed to develop auditory and language processing.

The first two children that were treated at Cincinnati Children’s last fall went from profoundly deaf to the “bottom edge of normal” in three to four months, he says. They are siblings with the same mutation. The younger child, who was just over one year at the time of treatment, is now picking up speech faster. The older child, who was three and a half upon receipt, is still significantly speech delayed.

“Even if you bring back hearing, the language processing is not automatic,” Choo says.

For therapy to be given in the earliest ideal window, genetic diagnosis must happen first. Newborn screening can identify children born with hearing loss. Then the goal is to determine the cause and match the child to a therapy, if one exists.

Gene Therapy vs. Cochlear Implants

The current state-of-the-art treatment for hearing loss in children is a cochlear implant, which is typically given to children at around nine to 12 months old.

Cochlear implants convert sound to an electrical signal, which is effective but fundamentally different from natural hearing. Still, children can learn how to talk and hear if they receive the implant young enough. A teenager, for example, who was born deaf and receives the implant at age 15 may gain sound awareness but still struggle with speech and language recognition.

Gene therapy, on the other hand, restores native hearing through the ear’s own biology, which is closer to natural sound perception and therefore enables potentially better outcomes for speech and language development.

Both options have a role; since the approved gene therapy only covers a tiny fraction of the types of hereditary deafness, cochlear implants remain the standard of care for many patients. But there is a downside.

“Once you put in the cochlear implant, you burn a bridge,” Choo says. “With the current technologies and therapeutics, you can’t go back to a gene therapy. You have probably traumatized inside of the cochlea and developed scar tissue so natural, native hearing would never come back.”

Beyond OTOF

Since the field now has clinical proof of concept for a gene therapy, the door is open to future treatments. Each kind requires a tailored therapy, but shared AAV platforms could lower costs and accelerate timelines.

“Now the big question is which other forms of genetic hearing loss are amenable for gene therapy?” says Dr. Holt.

Researchers know of at least 150 genes that, if mutated, cause hearing loss. One of the next targets is GJB2, which occurs in 21% of all people who are born deaf. Over the next five to 10 years, Choo estimates we will probably have trials for gene therapies that may cover 40% of all genetic causes of deafness.

Age-Related and Noise-Induced Hearing Loss

Another big question is whether gene therapy could ever treat the forms of hearing loss that many older adults commonly experience: Around one-third of U.S. adults between 65 and 75 have hearing loss, according to the American Academy of Audiology. Most of these cases are environmentally driven, rather than genetic. Loud music, high volumes in earbuds, and certain drugs can all dampen hearing.

Unlike the OTOF patients, these individuals have lost functional hair cells in the ear, and these unfortunately do not regenerate. Everyone is born with 12,000 to 16,000 cochlear hair cells—and that’s all you get. So instead of gene therapy, researchers are exploring how to regenerate the hair cells that die off. There have been promising preclinical studies in birds and mice, but not yet in primates or humans.

“You can likely lose 3,000 to 4,000 hair cells before a hearing loss manifests,” Choo says. “Then every hair cell that you knock off starts showing up with hearing loss. That’s the regeneration challenge.”

To be sure, many hurdles lie ahead, but the prospects have never sounded so clear.

Thank you to Kira Peikoff for additional research and reporting on this article

See also  EXCLUSIVE: ‘Earliest Opportunity’ — Gov Opens Door To Redrawing Maps After SCOTUS Nukes Race-Based Districting
Approves Deafness Door era FDA FirstEver Gene Opening Therapy
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

Busy Philipps On Her ADHD. How Women Can Face Additional Challenges

July 4, 2026

Hydration Breaks At 2026 World Cup Raise Controversy For FIFA

July 3, 2026

Poop Parasite Causes Hundreds Of Cases Of Explosive Diarrhea

July 3, 2026

Trump Administration To Close Loophole And Codify Drug Price Rules

July 3, 2026
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Top Posts

How Josh Groban Transformed Into Disney’s Beast 

June 4, 2023

WATCH: Things Get Awkward When Karine Jean-Pierre Gets Asked About Hunter Biden’s Baby With a Stripper

May 3, 2023

Video Shows Person Struck By Frontier Airlines Plane At Denver Airport

May 12, 2026

Rep. Jamaal Bowman’s office literally accuses GOP of harboring ‘Nazi members’ to distract from fire alarm scandal

October 2, 2023
Don't Miss

Jared Kushner’s net worth grew 1,440% since 2009 — 9 times more than the average US household. Here’s what drove the gap

Finance July 4, 2026

Mandel Ngan/AFP via Getty Images Moneywise and Yahoo Finance LLC may earn commission or revenue…

The First Congress Enshrined Warrants Into Law — But This Congress Continues To Push Warrantless Spying Tool

July 4, 2026

20 Killed, City Zoo Tortoises Injured in Russian ‘Revenge’ Strike on Kyiv

July 4, 2026

Busy Philipps On Her ADHD. How Women Can Face Additional Challenges

July 4, 2026
About
About

This is your World, Tech, Health, Entertainment and Sports website. We provide the latest breaking news straight from the News industry.

We're social. Connect with us:

Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest
Categories
  • Business (4,393)
  • Entertainment (5,479)
  • Finance (4,052)
  • Health (2,402)
  • Lifestyle (1,896)
  • Politics (3,779)
  • Sports (4,761)
  • Tech (2,342)
  • Uncategorized (4)
  • World (5,423)
Our Picks

Learn How Successful Entrepreneurs Are Raised

September 25, 2024

US Teen Goes Missing, Drones, Bloodhounds Join Search Team

October 2, 2023

Digital World, Truth Social Extend Deadline for Merger

September 7, 2023
Popular Posts

Jared Kushner’s net worth grew 1,440% since 2009 — 9 times more than the average US household. Here’s what drove the gap

July 4, 2026

The First Congress Enshrined Warrants Into Law — But This Congress Continues To Push Warrantless Spying Tool

July 4, 2026

20 Killed, City Zoo Tortoises Injured in Russian ‘Revenge’ Strike on Kyiv

July 4, 2026
© 2026 Patriotnownews.com - All rights reserved.
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.