Fetal therapy has evolved into a rapidly advancing field with the potential to alter the natural history of many severe congenital and genetic disorders before irreversible injury occurs. Progress in prenatal imaging, molecular diagnostics, and fetal intervention techniques now enables the earlier identification of disease and, in select settings, targeted prenatal treatment. This review synthesizes the current landscape of fetal therapies, spanning established surgical interventions for structural anomalies and emerging biologic and molecular approaches, including enzyme replacement therapy, stem cell-based strategies, gene therapy, and gene editing. The intrauterine environment provides a distinct therapeutic context, with developmental plasticity, immune immaturity, enhanced tissue accessibility, and relatively permissive central nervous system exposure that together define a time-sensitive window for intervention. Preclinical studies and early clinical experience across both structural anomalies and genetic disorders, including lysosomal storage disorders, osteogenesis imperfecta, and spinal muscular atrophy, support the premise that prenatal treatment can preserve organ development and improve pediatric outcomes. However, translation remains constrained by procedural risks, uncertainty regarding long-term safety and durability, ethical and regulatory complexities, and challenges with equitable access, alongside the need for robust comparative evidence versus early postnatal therapy. As the field advances, multidisciplinary collaboration, rigorous trial design with meaningful developmental endpoints, and ethically grounded implementation frameworks will be essential to guide responsible clinical adoption and maximize benefit for children and families.
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Berna Şeker Yılmaz
M J Hill
Giovanni Baranello
Biologics
University College London
Great Ormond Street Hospital
Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Yılmaz et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69df2cf7e4eeef8a2a6b2100 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/biologics6020011