4.8 Review

Therapeutic approaches for Duchenne muscular dystrophy

Journal

NATURE REVIEWS DRUG DISCOVERY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41573-023-00775-6

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Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is a genetic muscle-wasting disease caused by mutations in the dystrophin gene. Various therapeutic approaches, including exon skipping, gene replacement, cell therapy, and gene editing, are being developed to restore dystrophin function. Recent clinical approvals for exon skipping antisense oligonucleotides, stop codon readthrough drugs, and gene therapy are discussed in this review.
Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is a monogenic muscle-wasting disorder and a priority candidate for molecular and cellular therapeutics. Although rare, it is the most common inherited myopathy affecting children and so has been the focus of intense research activity. It is caused by mutations that disrupt production of the dystrophin protein, and a plethora of drug development approaches are under way that aim to restore dystrophin function, including exon skipping, stop codon readthrough, gene replacement, cell therapy and gene editing. These efforts have led to the clinical approval of four exon skipping antisense oligonucleotides, one stop codon readthrough drug and one gene therapy product, with other approvals likely soon. Here, we discuss the latest therapeutic strategies that are under development and being deployed to treat DMD. Lessons from these drug development programmes are likely to have a major impact on the DMD field, but also on molecular and cellular medicine more generally. Thus, DMD is a pioneer disease at the forefront of future drug discovery efforts, with these experimental treatments paving the way for therapies using similar mechanisms of action being developed for other genetic diseases. Duchenne muscular dystrophy is an inherited muscle-wasting disease caused by mutations that disrupt production of dystrophin protein. This Review discusses the plethora of therapeutic approaches being developed to restore dystrophin function, such as exon skipping, gene replacement, cell therapy and gene editing, and highlights recent clinical approvals.

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