Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is an autosomal recessive disease caused by deletions or mutations in the SMN1 gene, leading to loss of motor neurons with subsequent muscle atrophy and weakness. The disease is characterized by progression in weakness and loss of function that is only partially reduced by improved standards of care.
The advent of three new therapies has dramatically changed the natural history of all SMA subtypes, including the severe and advanced type I SMA. As the first drug was approved in 2016, these therapies have been available for a decade, with a rapidly increasing collection of data demonstrating their safety and efficacy in a range of clinical trials and in the real-world setting.
We critically review how the field has evolved in response to the new therapies, the long-term follow-up and the emergence of new phenotypes, and the outcome of initiating these therapies in presymptomatic individuals identified via newborn screening programmes.
Nature Reviews Neurology published a clinical update in Neurology on 17 Jun 2026.
The item focuses on Ten years of disease-modifying therapy in spinal muscular atrophy: lessons learned and future directions.
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