Mumbai: President Droupadi Murmu on Thursday launched India’s first home-grown gene therapy for cancer at Indian Institute of Technology-Bombay (IIT-B) in Mumbai - a major breakthrough in the battle against cancer.
“As this line of treatment, named 'CAR-T cell therapy', is accessible and affordable, it provides a new hope for the whole of humankind. I am confident that it will be successful in giving new lives to countless patients,” Murmu said in her address.
The President said that CAR-T cell therapy is considered to be one of the most phenomenal advances in medical science.
“It has been available in the developed nations for some time, but it is extremely costly, and beyond the reach of most patients around the world,” Murmu said.
She was happy to note that the therapy being launched is the world’s most affordable CAR-T cell therapy.
She said that it is also an example of the ‘Make in India’ initiative; a shining example of the ‘Atmanirbhar Bharat’.
CAR-T cell therapy has been developed through collaboration between the Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay and Tata Memorial Hospital in association with industry partner ImmunoACT.
She said that this is a praiseworthy example of academia-industry partnership, which should inspire many more similar efforts.
“In the development of CAR-T cell therapy, technology is not only being put in the service of humanity, but partnerships have been with an eminent institution from another field as well as with industry. This has been made possible by the focus IIT-Bombay has placed on research and development over the last three decades. She said that with the knowledge base and skills of the faculty and students of IIT-Bombay and other similar institutions, India as a whole, would benefit greatly from the technological revolution underway,” he said.