Gene Editing and Your Health: What CRISPR Could Mean for Families
For most Canadians, breakthroughs in medical science matter not because of the technology itself, but because of what they could mean for the health of their families. Gene‑editing tools like CRISPR are beginning to change how certain serious illnesses are treated - shifting conversations from lifelong management to the possibility of long‑term improvement or even cure. As this once‑experimental field becomes clinical reality, understanding where the science is headed helps Canadians better anticipate the future of care, treatment options, and the evolving landscape of life and health insurance.
Gene editing was once primarily viewed as a field full of promise, with CRISPR technology generating well-deserved excitement while durable clinical outcomes were just starting to appear. In recent years, however, the landscape has shifted significantly, revealing important advancements and real-world impacts.
CRISPR - Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats - has advanced from experimental promise to early clinical reality. The technology pioneered by Jennifer Doudna and Emmanuelle Charpentier, recognized with the 2020 Nobel Prize in Chemistry, has since undergone rapid refinement, improving both precision and safety (1). New generations of gene‑editing tools now allow for targeted DNA changes without creating double‑strand breaks, reducing unintended genetic effects and improving therapeutic consistency (2).
Perhaps the most consequential development has been the transition of CRISPR therapies from clinical trials to regulatory approval. In 2023 and 2024, the first CRISPR‑based treatments for sickle cell disease and beta‑thalassemia received regulatory approval in multiple jurisdictions, including the United Kingdom and the United States (3). These therapies work by editing hematopoietic stem cells to restore healthy hemoglobin production - addressing the disease at its genetic root rather than managing downstream complications.
This progress brings us back to Victoria Gray.
Ms. Gray was the first person in the world to receive CRISPR‑based therapy for sickle cell disease in 2019. Her initial outcome - more than a year free of painful Vaso‑occlusive crises - was remarkable but still early. Today, more than five years post‑treatment, she continues to do well, with sustained production of healthy hemoglobin and no recurrence of severe disease symptoms (4). Her case is now widely cited as proof‑of‑concept that CRISPR therapy can deliver durable, life‑altering benefit.
Beyond sickle cell disease, CRISPR research has expanded rapidly into oncology, inherited metabolic disorders, and rare monogenic diseases. Early trials are exploring in‑vivo gene editing, a step that could dramatically broaden access and reduce treatment complexity (5). At the same time, ethical oversight and long‑term surveillance remain essential, particularly as gene editing moves closer to mainstream clinical use.
From an insurance and underwriting perspective, these developments are both encouraging and challenging. Conditions once associated with markedly reduced survival - and historically viewed as uninsurable - may, over time, require reevaluation. As with insulin therapy following its discovery in the 1920s, initial breakthroughs do not immediately translate into insurable risk, but they do alter trajectories (6). The question is no longer whether gene editing can work, but how durable, scalable, and accessible these therapies will prove to be.
We are still early in this story. Long‑term data remain limited, costs are substantial, and access is uneven. Yet compared to where we stood merely a few years ago, the horizon is no longer theoretical. For patients like Victoria Gray - and for many who may follow - CRISPR has already moved from scientific breakthrough to lived reality.
Once more, there is genuine reason for hope.
References
1. The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 2020. NobelPrize.org. October 7, 2020. 2. National Institutes of Health. Base editing and prime editing: the next generation of CRISPR. NIH.gov. 2022. Published: Trends Biotechnol 2021 Jul: Zeballos and Gaj 3. U.S. Food and Drug Administration. FDA approves first gene-editing therapies for sickle cell disease. FDA.gov. December 2023. 4. National Institutes of Health. Five-year follow-up of the first CRISPR-treated sickle cell patient. NIH.gov. 2024. 5. New England Journal of Medicine. In vivo CRISPR gene editing for human disease. NEJM.org. 2023. 6. Bliss, M. The Discovery of Insulin. University of Chicago Press. (historical reference).
