Know about nonviral human hepatocyte growth factor gene therapy injections to treat diabetic neuropathy


Know about nonviral human hepatocyte growth factor gene therapy injections to treat diabetic neuropathy
Know about nonviral human hepatocyte growth factor gene therapy injections to treat diabetic neuropathy
Learn about nonviral human hepatocyte growth factor gene therapy injections for diabetic neuropathy.
Courtesy of Northwestern University (A Britannica Publishing Partner)
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News

Gene therapy advances as scientists guide jumping DNA to target faulty genes Dec. 18, 2025, 3:18 AM ET (Medical Xpress)

Transcript

NARRATOR: It's been more than one year since Keith Wenckowski experienced intense foot pain, a common symptom of painful diabetic neuropathy. His pain was so severe, going barefoot was out of the question.

KEITH WENCKOWSKI: I can now go to a beach and walk on the sand without feeling like I'm walking on glass.

NARRATOR: The reduction of his pain came after taking part in a Northwestern Medicine study. He received two rounds of human hepatocyte growth factor gene therapy injections in his legs.

DR. JACK KESSLER: We inject the patients with a non-viral-- this has nothing to do with a virus-- way of having muscle cells start producing this growth factor and secreting it in the leg.

NARRATOR: Patients like Keith who received a low dose of the therapy reported a 50% reduction of pain versus those who received a placebo.

DR. SENDA AJROUD-DRISS: We didn't just reduce the pain then. The reduction in pain was found at three months, at six months, at nine months, and then the pain now-- the patient is almost more than a year out, he still has reduction of pain. So the effect of the treatment stayed for longer than we expected it to stay. Which is really amazing.

NARRATOR: Keith was diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes more than two decades ago, but the numbness in his feet and fingertips were fairly new symptoms for which there is no effective treatment.

KESSLER: Currently the things we do right now are just treat symptoms and we hope the body can heal itself. This would actually be helping the body heal itself. If we can show that this is a very real phenomena, that in fact with more patients we reliably reproduce that we can do that, then what we've shown is that we've not only reduced the symptoms of the disease-- namely the pain-- but we've actually improved function that is regenerating a previously lost function.

NARRATOR: A much larger phase three study is planned. In the meantime, Keith is hopeful that his participation in this study has a lasting effect on his condition.

WENCKOWSKI: I'm hoping that the effects that I'm feeling do not cease.

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