Conexiant
Login
  • The Analytical Scientist
  • The Cannabis Scientist
  • The Medicine Maker
  • The Ophthalmologist
  • The Pathologist
  • The Traditional Scientist
The Medicine Maker
  • Explore

    Explore

    • Latest
    • Features
    • Interviews
    • Business & Trends
    • Technology & Manufacturing
    • Product Profiles
    • White Papers

    Featured Topics

    • Biopharma
    • Small Molecules
    • Cell & Gene
    • Future of Pharma

    Issues

    • Latest Issue
    • Archive
    • Cell and Gene Therapy Supplement
  • Topics

    Topics

    • Drug Discovery
    • Development & Clinical
    • Formulation
    • Drug Delivery
    • Bioprocessing
    • Small Molecules
    • Cell and Gene
    • Facilities & Equipment
    • Outsourcing
    • Packaging
    • Supply Chain
    • Regulation & Standards
  • News & Blogs

    News & Blogs

    • Industry News
    • Research News
    • Blogs
  • Events
    • Live Events
    • Webinars
  • Community & Awards

    Community & Awards

    • Power List
    • Sitting Down With
    • Innovation Awards
    • Company of the Year Awards
    • Authors & Contributors
  • Multimedia
    • Video
    • Podcasts
    • eBooks
Subscribe
Subscribe
The Medicine Maker / Issues / 2022 / Articles / Aug / An Eye on the Higher Branches
Business & Regulation Trends & Forecasts Advanced Medicine Cell & Gene

An Eye on the Higher Branches

Using advanced therapies to tackle the huge burden of inherited sight loss

By Angus Stewart 08/24/2022 4 min read Interview

Share

The Medicine Maker Power List 2022 featured Marianthi Psaha, Global Head Cell & Gene Therapy at Santen Pharmaceutical – a company focused on ophthalmic products. Here, Marianthi shares what progress is being made and why the field is so important. 

To date, why do you think oncology has been the primary focus for cell and gene therapy?  
 

As an often life-threatening condition, oncology is an obvious first target for cell and gene therapy. Ophthalmology may not have received quite as much initial attention, but in rare ophthalmic diseases in particular, there is a significant unmet need that cell and gene therapies can help address. 

How could advanced therapies help ophthalmology patients?
 

I believe it is important to focus on inherited retinal diseases – a group of diseases that cause progressive sight loss and an area that Santen is passionate about. For the majority of these diseases, there are currently no licensed treatments. Once diagnosed, patients must often “go home and go blind,” as nothing can be done for them from a medical point of view. The progressive and unpredictable nature of the sight loss associated with these diseases inflicts a huge burden on every aspect of patients’ lives: from education and employment to their ability to communicate with others and participate in sports or other leisure activities. The emotional impact is huge – often going beyond just the patient, and affecting entire families. Cell and gene therapies could help change that. 

Why are we now seeing more breakthrough cell and gene therapies for the eye? 
 

When compared with other organs, the eye offers certain unique advantages for cell and gene therapies. For example, it is one of the few sites in the body that possesses a certain degree of immune privilege. And that means the risk of immune rejection is relatively low (compared with other parts of the body). As a result, some technologies, such as allogeneic cell therapies, have significant potential in ophthalmology.

At Santen Cell & Gene, our current lead asset is an investigational human retinal progenitor cell (hRPC) allogeneic therapy targeting retinitis pigmentosa (RP) – one of the leading causes of inherited blindness (1). It offers a number of advantages, including the potential to be administered through intravitreal delivery, a minimally invasive procedure. Additionally, it is gene-agnostic – a significant benefit given that RP can be caused by over 100 different genes. For the same reason, our therapy could have applicability in additional retinal indications.

The global cell and gene therapy market is expected to reach $21.33 billion in 2026 at a CAGR of 25.6%. It’s clear that addressing previously unmet medical needs can lead to a significant growth opportunity (3). 

When it comes to cell and gene therapy commercialization, what ophthalmology-specific barriers do you face?
 

At Santen, we often refer to a line from the World Health Organization’s World Report on Vision: “The world is built on the ability to see,” (2). But, despite vision being a critical part of our daily lives, there is often a tendency to overlook eye health in favor of more “serious” or life-threatening conditions in the healthcare community beyond ophthalmology. Though it is true that most eye conditions are not life threatening, the potential impact that improved vision could have not only on patients’ quality of life but also on the economy and society as a whole is tremendous.

For example, inherited retinal diseases cost the US economy an estimated $4 billion in lost productivity (4, 5). Therefore, one of our challenges lies in highlighting the transformative potential of these types of therapies to regulators, payers, and other key stakeholders. Though they may not cure a life-threatening disease, they can significantly improve patients’ ability to live their lives.

Newsletters

Receive the latest analytical science news, personalities, education, and career development – weekly to your inbox.

Newsletter Signup Image

References

  1. K Boyd, “What Is Retinitis Pigmentosa?”, American Academy of Ophthalmology (2021). Available at: https://bit.ly/retpig.
  2. WHO, “World Report on Vision”, World Health Organization (2019). Available at: https://bit.ly/wrov-who.
  3. The Business Research Company, “Cell and Gene Therapy Global Market Report 2022: By Product, By Application, By End-User,” The Business Research Company (2022). Available at: https://bit.ly/3Jp2IKH
  4. Fighting Blindness, “Inherited Retinal Diseases Cost the US and Canadian Economies up to $33 Billion Annually”, Fighting Blindness (2020). Available at: https://bit.ly/ret33bill
  5. Retina International, “IRDCOUNTS: The Cost to Wellbeing when living with an IRD,” (2021). Available at: https://bit.ly/3Pe7lJu.

About the Author(s)

Angus Stewart

Between studying for my English undergrad and Publishing master's degrees I was out in Shanghai, teaching, learning, and getting extremely lost. Now I'm expanding my mind down a rather different rabbit hole: the pharmaceutical industry. Outside of this job I read mountains of fiction and philosophy, and I must say, it's very hard to tell who's sharper: the literati, or the medicine makers.

More Articles by Angus Stewart

False

Advertisement

Recommended

False

Related Content

What Trump’s Latest Moves Mean for the Industry
Business Practice Standards & Regulation Trends & Forecasts Bioprocessing - Upstream & Downstream
What Trump’s Latest Moves Mean for the Industry

May 27, 2025

6 min read

Audrey Greenberg’s latest insight on US-based manufacturing, Trump’s “Administration for A Healthy America”, and an ever-shifting regulatory environment.

Big Bad Pharma?
Business Practice Trends & Forecasts
Big Bad Pharma?

December 1, 2014

0 min read

The Ebola media frenzy has reminded the public how selfish our industry is. But, somehow, that doesn’t sound quite right...

Access All Areas
Business Practice Trends & Forecasts
Access All Areas

December 1, 2014

0 min read

The 2014 Access to Medicine index shows progress – but companies remain “conservative”

Care to ‘Patent Dance’?
Business Practice Trends & Forecasts
Care to ‘Patent Dance’?

December 1, 2014

0 min read

Amgen accuses Sandoz of snubbing its advances in a complex biosimilar dispute

The Medicine Maker
Subscribe

About

  • About Us
  • Work at Conexiant Europe
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Advertise With Us
  • Contact Us

Copyright © 2025 Texere Publishing Limited (trading as Conexiant), with registered number 08113419 whose registered office is at Booths No. 1, Booths Park, Chelford Road, Knutsford, England, WA16 8GS.