City
Epaper

India achieves breakthrough in gene therapy for haemophilia: Minister

By IANS | Updated: April 24, 2025 17:22 IST

New Delhi, April 24 Union Minister Dr Jitendra Singh on Thursday inspected various facilities at the BRIC-inStem facility ...

Open in App

New Delhi, April 24 Union Minister Dr Jitendra Singh on Thursday inspected various facilities at the BRIC-inStem facility and reviewed ongoing clinical trials in collaboration with premier medical institutes and hospitals, including the landmark first-in-human gene therapy trial for Haemophilia conducted with CMC Vellore.

Calling it a “milestone in India’s scientific journey,” the minister hailed the institute’s contributions to preventive and regenerative healthcare.

During his visit, Dr Singh underscored the strategic importance of biotechnology in shaping India’s future economy and public health infrastructure.

“This is not just about science—it’s about nation-building,” he said, commending the Department of Biotechnology’s (DBT) recent successes and its emergence from relative obscurity into national relevance.

India’s biotechnology sector has seen an extraordinary leap, growing 16-fold in the past decade to reach $165.7 billion in 2024, with a vision to touch $300 billion by 2030.

The minister credited this growth to enabling policy reforms, including the recently approved BIO-E3 Policy that aims to boost economy, employment, and environment through biotechnology. “We now have over 10,000 biotech startups compared to just 50 a decade ago,” he pointed out.

He praised the creation of the Biotechnology Research and Innovation Council (BRIC) that unified 14 autonomous institutions under one umbrella.

“BRIC-inStem is at the cutting edge of fundamental and translational science,” he said, highlighting innovations like the germicidal anti-viral mask during the pandemic and the ‘Kisan Kavach’ that protects farmers from neurotoxic pesticides.

“The recent pandemic taught us that we must always be prepared. Facilities like this will help us stay a step ahead,” Dr Singh stated.

The minister also praised the newly launched Centre for Research Application and Training in Embryology (CReATE), which addresses birth defects and infertility by advancing developmental biology research. “With about 3 to 4 percent of babies born with some form of defect, this centre is vital for improving maternal and neonatal health outcomes,” he said.

Calling for greater collaboration between scientific and medical institutions, he suggested that BRIC-inStem explore MD-PhD programmes, integrate more with clinical research, and enhance visibility through coordinated communication strategies.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

CricketIND vs AUS 4th T20I: Mitchell Marsh Wins Toss, Opts to Bowl First Against India; Glenn Maxwell in Australia’s Playing XI

InternationalEcuador's President declares new state of emergency in seven regions

InternationalDelay in South Korea-US summit fact sheet suggests prolonged coordination on Washington's end

TechnologyIndia's solar module manufacturing capacity set to touch 165 GW by March 2027

BusinessIndia's solar module manufacturing capacity set to touch 165 GW by March 2027

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologyAI tops workplace priorities in India, surpasses pay and burnout issues: Report

TechnologyCentre throws open booth bookings for startups in 'Waves Bazaar' at IFFI Goa 2025

TechnologyIndia’s warehousing growth sees 16 pc growth in July-Sep, manufacturing leads

TechnologyOla Electric posts Rs 418 crore net profit loss in Q2, revenue slips 43 pc

TechnologyHyundai Motor CEO outlines 2026 strategy focused on product quality, employee growth