Skip to main content

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

Gene therapy helps people with monochrome vision to see in color

Color blindness is usually a hereditary condition. While there have been a few high-tech methods, such as special glasses, to help people deal with it, to date there hasn’t been much in the way of a permanent solution to the problem. Perhaps until now, that is.

An initial trial in patients suggests that a new gene therapy treatment for helping overcome color blindness, developed by researchers in Germany, is completely safe. The researchers also obtained evidence that the treatment works.

The condition in question, referred to as achromatopsia, is one of the rarer types of color blindness. Approximately 8% of men and 0.5% of women have some kind of color blindness which renders them unable to see certain colors (red-green color blindness being the most common). Achromatopsia, however, affects just 1 out of 33,000 people — which nonetheless adds up to a sizable cohort of people worldwide. The condition is due to non-functioning or absent retinal cones, and it makes the world appear entirely black and white. It also causes blurred vision and makes eyes extremely sensitive to bright light.

In around one-third of patients with achromatopsia, the condition is caused by a gene called CNGA3. The new treatment, developed by researchers at the Institute for Ophthalmic Research at the University Hospitals in Tübingen and Departments of Pharmacy and Ophthalmology at Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich, makes it possible to inject a corrected version of the gene into a patient’s retina using a harmless virus.

A trial involving nine achromatopsia patients, aged between 24 and 59, was recently carried out at the University Eye Hospital Tübingen. There were no health issues, and the retina suffered no permanent change or damage as a result of the procedure. Patients involved in the study saw their vision improve in terms of focus, contrast perception, and — most crucially — color vision.

“The study is an important first step,” Martin Biel from the Department of Pharmacy at LMU, said in a statement. “It represents a milestone on the road to a curative therapy of achromatopsia, and we expect even better treatment success in the future.”

A paper describing the research was recently published in the journal JAMA Ophthalmology 2020.

Editors' Recommendations

Luke Dormehl
I'm a UK-based tech writer covering Cool Tech at Digital Trends. I've also written for Fast Company, Wired, the Guardian…
RTX 4090 owners are in for some bad news
Nvidia GeForce RTX 4090 GPU.

Nvidia's RTX 4090 remains the undisputed most powerful GPU on the market right now, despite being a year-and-a-half old. As such, you might think that reselling it later should be a breeze, not to mention that it should net you a nice amount of money -- but that is not always the case.

Wccftech reports that one owner of an MSI RTX 4090 tried to use the Micro Center GPU Trade-In Program to get some money back, and the GPU was valued at just $700 -- a mere 36% of the total cost of the graphics card.

Read more
Boston Dynamics retires its remarkable Atlas robot
Boston Dynamics' Atlas Robot

Farewell to HD Atlas

Boston Dynamics’ Atlas robot has been impressing us with its acrobatics and other antics over the last decade, but the company just announced that it's retiring the bipedal bot.

Read more
So THAT’S why Boston Dynamics retired its Atlas robot
boston dynamicss new atlas robot takes on the tesla bot

All New Atlas | Boston Dynamics

“Til we meet again, Atlas” was the closing message on Boston Dynamics’ video on Tuesday that announced the retirement of the hydraulic-powered version of its remarkable bipedal robot.

Read more