Saudi Arabia Approves New Drug to Treat Hereditary Loss of Sight

The Saudi Food and Drug Authority has approved registration of a genetic medicine for the treatment of hereditary loss of sight. (AP)
The Saudi Food and Drug Authority has approved registration of a genetic medicine for the treatment of hereditary loss of sight. (AP)
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Saudi Arabia Approves New Drug to Treat Hereditary Loss of Sight

The Saudi Food and Drug Authority has approved registration of a genetic medicine for the treatment of hereditary loss of sight. (AP)
The Saudi Food and Drug Authority has approved registration of a genetic medicine for the treatment of hereditary loss of sight. (AP)

The Saudi Food and Drug Authority (SFDA) has approved registration of a genetic medicine for the treatment of hereditary loss of sight that could lead to blindness.

Luxturna (voretigene neparvovec), the revolutionary new treatment, is deemed the first genetic treatment in Saudi Arabia that targets mutations in a specific gene.

Luxturna has been approved for the treatment of adults and children suffering from sight loss due to inherited retinal disorder caused by genetic mutation of the gene "RPE65". The genetic mutation prevents the body from producing a protein that is necessary for vision, hence, leading to sight loss and ultimately to entire loss of vision and blindness.

The SFDA said that the effective substance in the drug is a modified virus containing an active replica of the gene "RPE65". After injecting the substance, this gene is transferred to the retina cells, the layer in the rear part of the eye that identifies light. This enables the retina to produce the protein necessary for vision. The virus used for transferring the gene does not cause any disease to humans.

The SFDA has confirmed that tests have been conducted on the efficacy and safety of Luxturna, based on a third degree clinical study conducted on 31 volunteers. It measured the rate of change and improvement in the patient's ability to track and move in a specific path in different degrees of light. It was noticed that the vision of the patients, who used Luxturna, improved as seen from their ability to move from one place to another and follow a specific route fitted with dim lights.

The most common side effects of Luxturna are eye redness, cataracts, hypertension and sub-retinal residues. Still, the potential benefits of Luxturna outweigh the potential risks.

Luxturna was registered in the US and EU regulatory authorities in late 2018. Accordingly, the SFDA has given it the registration priority through the documentation and bridging program aimed at accelerating the approval of human medicines.



Engineers Seek to Save 150-year-old Lighthouse from Crumbling into Hudson River

The lighthouse was built in the river 100 miles (161 kilometers) north of Manhattan to keep boats from running aground on mud flats. AP
The lighthouse was built in the river 100 miles (161 kilometers) north of Manhattan to keep boats from running aground on mud flats. AP
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Engineers Seek to Save 150-year-old Lighthouse from Crumbling into Hudson River

The lighthouse was built in the river 100 miles (161 kilometers) north of Manhattan to keep boats from running aground on mud flats. AP
The lighthouse was built in the river 100 miles (161 kilometers) north of Manhattan to keep boats from running aground on mud flats. AP

Federal engineers will begin the process of preserving a functioning 150-year-old lighthouse that sits precariously on a mudflat in the middle of the Hudson River in New York, officials announced this week.
US Sen. Chuck Schumer and the Army Corps of Engineers said that $50,000 has been allocated to study how to protect the Hudson-Athens Lighthouse, which began operating in 1874 and was this year placed on the National Trust for Historic Preservation's list of the country’s 11 most endangered historic places.
Schumer, a New York Democrat, said he believes the development is the next step to securing all the money needed to save the structure, which is only years away from starting to crumble into the river due to ongoing erosion, according to preliminary studies by a historic preservation group.
“This is a landmark, it’s sort of like the Statue of Liberty in a certain sense, of the Hudson River,” Schumer told The Associated Press by phone after announcing the new funding at a riverfront park in Athens, New York, which has a view of the lighthouse. “When people see the lighthouse and learn its history, they learn the history of the country."
The Corps of Engineers will now meet with the Hudson-Athens Lighthouse Preservation Society, which owns the building and maintains it as a museum, and agree on a plan to fix the property, Schumer said.
He said the millions of dollars needed to ultimately rebuild the small island and preserve it are “virtually certain” because it has been listed as a top priority for preservation.
The lighthouse was built in the river 100 miles (161 kilometers) north of Manhattan to keep boats from running aground on mud flats between Athens, on the west side of the Hudson River, and the city of Hudson, on the east side. The lighthouse is still in use, though now with an automated LED beacon.
It sits on roughly 200 wood pilings packed in mud beneath the water. Turbulence from passing commercial ships is washing away that mud and exposing the pilings to river water, accelerating decay.
The society has proposed expanding the foundation the lighthouse is built on so that events can be held there and more visitors can walk on the island at once. It has been raising money to build a ring of corrugated steel designed to shield the structure from river turbulence.