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Updated Nov 19, 2025 · 18:37
Health News Updated Nov 19, 2025

India's CRISPR Breakthrough: First Indigenous Gene Therapy for Sickle Cell Disease

India has achieved a major medical milestone with its first indigenous CRISPR-based gene therapy. The treatment named BIRSA 101 offers hope for curing Sickle Cell Disease, which particularly affects tribal populations. Developed at CSIR-IGIB, this breakthrough represents precise genetic surgery at a fraction of global costs. The technology transfer to Serum Institute of India will make this advanced therapy accessible to all Indians.

India launches 1st indigenous CRISPR-based gene therapy for Sickle Cell Disease

New Delhi, Nov 19

Setting a new milestone in Atmanirbhar Bharat, the government on Wednesday launched an indigenous CRISPR-based gene therapy for Sickle Cell Disease, which particularly affects India's tribal population.

The world-class, low-cost gene editing solution named "BIRSA 101", in honour of Bhagwan Birsa Munda, remembered as a great tribal freedom fighter, was launched by Union Minister of State (Independent Charge) for Science and Technology Dr. Jitendra Singh.

The technology works like a “precise genetic surgery”, capable not only of curing Sickle Cell Disease but also transforming treatment pathways for several hereditary disorders, the Minister explained.

Sickle Cell Disease is a chronic, single-gene disorder that causes a debilitating systemic syndrome characterised by chronic anaemia, acute painful episodes, organ infarction, and chronic organ damage, significantly reducing life expectancy.

The genetic blood disorder affects the entire life of the patient, as it leads to various severe health complications.

"India has formally begun its decisive journey towards becoming a Sickle Cell Disease–free nation, marking a historic turning point in the country’s public health and genomic medicine landscape,” Singh said.

“With the development and transfer of India’s first indigenous CRISPR-based gene therapy, the nation has taken a major step toward fulfilling Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s vision of a Sickle Cell–Free India by 2047, while simultaneously advancing the goal of Atmanirbhar Bharat in frontline medical technologies,” he added.

The breakthrough therapy, developed at CSIR-Institute of Genomics and Integrative Biology (IGIB), has demonstrated India’s capability to produce pathbreaking therapies at a fraction of global costs, potentially replacing treatments priced at Rs 20-25 crore overseas.

IGIB has entered into a formal technology transfer and collaboration agreement with the Pune-based Serum Institute of India to scale up the engineered enFnCas9 CRISPR platform into affordable therapies for Sickle Cell Disease and other critical genetic disorders.

“Globally, gene therapies cost over three million dollars and are beyond the reach of even the wealthy. Our mission is to take Indian innovation and make it accessible for the poorest of the poor,” said Dr. Umesh Shaligram, Executive Director, Serum Institute of India.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Rohit P

Atmanirbhar Bharat in action! From Rs 20-25 crore overseas to affordable for common people - this is what true progress looks like. Proud of our scientists and researchers. 🙏

David E

While this is a remarkable achievement, I hope the government ensures proper implementation and accessibility in remote tribal areas where this disease is most prevalent. Infrastructure and awareness are key.

Ananya R

Naming it BIRSA 101 after Bhagwan Birsa Munda shows such beautiful respect for our tribal heritage. This is more than just medicine - it's honoring our history while building our future. ❤️

Sarah B

As a medical student, this is absolutely inspiring! India leading in cutting-edge gene therapy while keeping costs low - this could transform global healthcare accessibility. Kudos to CSIR-IGIB team!

Vikram M

Hope this reaches the people who need it most. Many tribal families have been suffering for generations with this disease. This could be life-changing for them. Jai Hind!

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