Rewriting the Immune Code episode artwork

EPISODE · Mar 17, 2026 · 28 MIN

Rewriting the Immune Code

from The Allergist · host CSACI

"So the future is one IV infusion, likely no chemotherapy, and that'll cure our IEIs." — Dr. Nicola WrightFor children born with inborn errors of immunity, bone marrow transplant has long been the closest thing medicine had to a cure. It works — but it comes with chemotherapy, graft-versus-host disease, and a donor search that doesn't always end well. Gene therapy is changing that calculus. Dr. Mariam Hanna speaks with Dr. Nicola Wright, a pediatric hematologist and clinical immunologist at the Alberta Children's Hospital and holder of the Barb Ibbotson Chair of Pediatric Hematology, whose research focuses on developing gene editing platforms for blood and immune disorders.On this episode, they discuss:Why bone marrow transplant is, in Dr. Wright's words, "almost a poor man's gene therapy" and what gene therapy offers insteadThe spectrum of technologies: lentiviral insertion, CRISPR, base editing, and prime editing. What each does, and where each falls shortImmune reconstitution outcomes across diseases, including over 90% good immune reconstitution in ADA-deficient SCID treated with lentiviral therapyHow to counsel a family when gene therapy might be an option and why most patients still can't access itThe "valley of death": why therapies that work in trials are failing to reach patients, and what it will take to cross itCAR T-cell therapy in IEI, including a Canadian trial underway for refractory autoimmune diseaseWhat long-term follow-up looks like and why 15-year post-trial monitoring is now an FDA requirementThe science is outpacing the infrastructure. Dr. Wright's vision of shipping cells instead of patients, in vivo delivery via lipid nanoparticle, no chemotherapy required isn't speculative. The runway is being built. The plane is already flying.Have an idea for the show or a comment, send us a text!Visit the Canadian Society of Allergy and Clinical ImmunologyFind an allergist using our helpful toolFind Dr. Hanna on X, previously Twitter, @PedsAllergyDoc or CSACI @CSACI_caThe Allergist is produced for CSACI by PodCraft Productions

"So the future is one IV infusion, likely no chemotherapy, and that'll cure our IEIs." — Dr. Nicola Wright For children born with inborn errors of immunity, bone marrow transplant has long been the closest thing medicine had to a cure. It works — but it comes with chemotherapy, graft-versus-host disease, and a donor search that doesn't always end well. Gene therapy is changing that calculus. Dr. Mariam Hanna speaks with Dr. Nicola Wright, a pediatric hematologist and clinical immunologist at ...

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Rewriting the Immune Code

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This episode was published on March 17, 2026.

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"So the future is one IV infusion, likely no chemotherapy, and that'll cure our IEIs." — Dr. Nicola WrightFor children born with inborn errors of immunity, bone marrow transplant has long been the closest thing medicine had to a cure. It works — but...

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