Here’s a polished podcast blurb suitable for LinkedIn, BlueSky, or Apple Podcasts listings — written in the JIMD Podcast tone and style:
⸻
It’s one of the most talked-about breakthroughs of 2025, a first-in-human demonstration of in vivo gene editing to treat an inherited metabolic disease.
In this episode, Kiran Musunuru and Rebecca Ahrens-Nicklas are joined by Julien Baruteau to unpack what this means for the field. They explore the science behind gene editing, the importance of ethical design, and the emotional weight of stopping therapy once enzyme function is restored.
The conversation bridges the NEJM landmark paper (Musunuru et al., 2025) and the accompanying JIMD editorial (Rahman & Baruteau, 2025), reflecting on what this moment tells us about the future of metabolic medicine and how ready we are for it.
First in Human Gene Editing for an Inherited Metabolic Disease
Shamima Rahman, Julien Baruteau
https://doi.org/10.1002/jimd.70056
Patient-Specific In Vivo Gene Editing to Treat a Rare Genetic Disease
Kiran Musunuru, et al
https://www.nejm.org/doi/10.1056/NEJMoa2504747
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Here’s a polished podcast blurb suitable for LinkedIn, BlueSky, or Apple Podcasts listings — written in the JIMD Podcast tone and style:
⸻
It’s one of the most talked-about breakthroughs of 2025, a first-in-human demonstration of in vivo gene editing to treat an inherited metabolic disease.
In this episode, Kiran Musunuru and Rebecca Ahrens-Nicklas are joined by Julien Baruteau to unpack what this means for the field. They explore the science behind gene editing, the importance of ethical design, and the emotional weight of stopping therapy once enzyme function is restored.
The conversation bridges the NEJM landmark paper (Musunuru et al., 2025) and the accompanying JIMD editorial (Rahman & Baruteau, 2025), reflecting on what this moment tells us about the future of metabolic medicine and how ready we are for it.
First in Human Gene Editing for an Inherited Metabolic Disease
Shamima Rahman, Julien Baruteau
https://doi.org/10.1002/jimd.70056
Patient-Specific In Vivo Gene Editing to Treat a Rare Genetic Disease
Kiran Musunuru, et al
https://www.nejm.org/doi/10.1056/NEJMoa2504747
Penetrance, expressivity, and outcomes in classic galactosemia
JIMD Podcasts
26 minutes 57 seconds
1 month ago
Penetrance, expressivity, and outcomes in classic galactosemia
In this episode we discuss new insights into the variability of long-term outcomes in classic galactosemia. Joining me are Nikki Smith, Olivia Garrett, and Judy Fridovich-Keil, who together explore how complications in cognitive, motor, and speech domains emerge, cluster, and vary in severity across patients. Their study highlights both patterns and unanswered questions, illustrating the challenges families face and the importance of refining prognostic tools.
Patterns of Penetrance and Expressivity of Long-Term Outcomes in Classic Galactosemia
Nicole H. Smith et al.
https://doi.org/10.1002/jimd.70020
JIMD Podcasts
Here’s a polished podcast blurb suitable for LinkedIn, BlueSky, or Apple Podcasts listings — written in the JIMD Podcast tone and style:
⸻
It’s one of the most talked-about breakthroughs of 2025, a first-in-human demonstration of in vivo gene editing to treat an inherited metabolic disease.
In this episode, Kiran Musunuru and Rebecca Ahrens-Nicklas are joined by Julien Baruteau to unpack what this means for the field. They explore the science behind gene editing, the importance of ethical design, and the emotional weight of stopping therapy once enzyme function is restored.
The conversation bridges the NEJM landmark paper (Musunuru et al., 2025) and the accompanying JIMD editorial (Rahman & Baruteau, 2025), reflecting on what this moment tells us about the future of metabolic medicine and how ready we are for it.
First in Human Gene Editing for an Inherited Metabolic Disease
Shamima Rahman, Julien Baruteau
https://doi.org/10.1002/jimd.70056
Patient-Specific In Vivo Gene Editing to Treat a Rare Genetic Disease
Kiran Musunuru, et al
https://www.nejm.org/doi/10.1056/NEJMoa2504747