July 13, 2026 —
Genethon released its latest newsletter highlighting progress across its gene therapy pipeline, including clinical updates in Duchenne muscular dystrophy, limb-girdle muscular dystrophy, and Crigler-Najjar syndrome, as well as advances in next-generation AAV vector engineering.
Genethon is a nonprofit gene therapy research and development organization founded by the French Muscular Dystrophy Association, or AFM-Telethon. The organization focuses on translating genetic medicine into treatments for rare diseases, particularly neuromuscular disorders with high unmet need.
A key highlight is Genethon’s collaboration with Ampersand Biosciences in Boston to engineer a new generation of AAV capsids with improved tissue specificity. The collaboration aims to enhance precision targeting for AAV-based gene therapies, potentially improving efficacy while reducing off-target exposure.
The newsletter also reports long-term efficacy and safety confirmation for GNT0004, Genethon’s low-dose microdystrophin gene therapy for Duchenne muscular dystrophy. GNT0004 is currently being evaluated in Phase 3 trials and is designed to deliver a shortened but functional microdystrophin gene to muscle cells.
In limb-girdle muscular dystrophy R5, Genethon highlighted promising early efficacy and safety data from the first patients treated with ATA-200, an investigational gene therapy designed for this rare neuromuscular disease.
The newsletter also includes updates related to Crigler-Najjar syndrome, a rare inherited metabolic disorder, and broader discussions on how genetic medicine can address both rare and more common diseases.
Additional highlights include a scientific publication describing the use of basket clinical trials to accelerate treatment development for rare diseases. Basket trial designs may allow multiple related diseases or genetic subtypes to be studied under a shared clinical framework, potentially improving efficiency in areas where patient populations are very small.
Genethon also reported on the second summit of GenoTher, France’s government-backed biocluster dedicated to accelerating genetic medicine development. The event brought together leaders from academia, clinical research, industry, investment, and regulatory agencies.
In his commentary, Genethon CEO Frédéric Revah, Ph.D., noted that genetic medicine has demonstrated its potential across rare and more common diseases, while emphasizing that broader patient access will require overcoming major scientific, manufacturing, regulatory, and access-related challenges.
Together, the updates reflect Genethon’s continued focus on advancing AAV-based gene therapies and building the broader infrastructure needed to translate genetic medicine into accessible treatments for patients with rare diseases.