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CRISPR‑Engineered Universal CAR T‑Cells: A Scalable Solution for Rapid Cancer Treatment
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1  Faculty of Pharmacy, Noble University, Junagadh, Gujarat, 362310, India
Academic Editor: Roger Narayan

Abstract:

CAR T-cell therapy has been a massive win against some of the toughest blood cancers. But there is a real sticking point. Every single treatment is a one-off, handcrafted from a patient's own cells. That process takes too long, costs far too much, and frankly, depends on the patient having T-cells strong enough for the job after they have already been through punishing therapies.

So, our goal has been to move from making these one-by-one to having them ready on the shelf. The intention with allogeneic therapy is to use cells from healthy donors to build a stockpile of a standardized, reliable treatment. This makes a powerful therapy available to patients in days, not weeks, at a fraction of the cost. Of course, the big question is safety—how do you stop the donor cells from attacking the patient? That is where the elegant part comes in. Using CRISPR gene-editing, we make one tiny, precise tweak: we just snip out the T-cell receptor. By removing that one piece, the new cells no longer see the patient's body as foreign, solving the graft-versus-host disease problem and making a universal therapy a reality.

This paper involves allogeneic CRISPR-engineered CAR T-cells that provide standardized, affordable, and ready-to-use cancer immunotherapy, overcoming delays, costs, and graft-versus-host limitations.

Keywords: CAR T-Cell Therapy, Allogeneic Therapy, "Off-the-Shelf" Therapeutics, Gene Editing, Graft-versus-Host Disease (GVHD)
Comments on this paper
MOHAMMADSAHIR BELIM
“Excellent, concise overview of CRISPR‑engineered UCAR‑T platforms with very clear clinical outcome metrics.”

Yash Sidapara
This marks an important step in immunotherapy. Moving from autologous to allogeneic 'off-the-shelf' CAR T-cells is exactly what we need to increase access to this life-saving treatment for more patients. Using CRISPR to cut down GVHD by removing the T-cell receptor presents a smart way to tackle the safety concerns tied to donor cells. Great job highlighting a scalable strategy for cancer therapy. Very clear story from CRISPR engineering to clinical outcome.

Purva Dave
"CRISPR-engineered universal CAR-T cells and their potential role in enhancing cancer therapy are clearly and informatively summarized in the poster." The explanation of the gene-editing techniques and their clinical significance was clear to me and interesting from a scientific standpoint. It draws attention to a significant and quickly evolving field of immunotherapy.

Sarah Gadavala
Amazing work ! Keep it up ?
Sarah Gadavala
Amazing work , keep it up



 
 
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