Therapies for galactosemia: a patent landscape.

2020 
Galactosemia is the inherited inability to metabolise galactose. The most common results from a lack of galactose 1-phosphate uridylyltransferase activity. The current treatment, removal of galactose from the diet, is inadequate and often fails to prevent long-term complications. Since 2015, three patents have been filed describing novel therapies. These are: the use of aldose reductase inhibitors to reduce cataracts and, possibly, other symptoms; salubrinal to stimulate cellular stress responses; mRNA therapy to increase cellular galactose 1-phosphate uridylyltransferase activity. The viability of all three is supported by academic studies. The potential and drawbacks of all three are discussed and evaluated.
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