• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to footer

Technologies.org

Technology Trends: Follow the Money

  • Technology Events 2026-2027
  • Sponsored Post
  • Technology Markets
  • About
    • GDPR
  • Contact

FDA Approves First-of-its-Kind Intentional Genomic Alteration in Line of Domestic Pigs for Both Human Food, Potential Therapeutic Uses

December 14, 2020 By admin Leave a Comment

Alteration intended to eliminate alpha-gal sugar on surface of pigs’ cells

Today, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved a first-of-its-kind intentional genomic alteration (IGA) in a line of domestic pigs, referred to as GalSafe pigs, which may be used for food or human therapeutics. This is the first IGA in an animal that the FDA has approved for both human food consumption and as a source for potential therapeutic uses. The IGA in GalSafe pigs is intended to eliminate alpha-gal sugar on the surface of the pigs’ cells. People with Alpha-gal syndrome (AGS) may have mild to severe allergic reactions to alpha-gal sugar found in red meat (e.g., beef, pork, and lamb).

“Today’s first ever approval of an animal biotechnology product for both food and as a potential source for biomedical use represents a tremendous milestone for scientific innovation,” said FDA Commissioner Stephen M. Hahn, M.D. “As part of our public health mission, the FDA strongly supports advancing innovative animal biotechnology products that are safe for animals, safe for people, and achieve their intended results. Today’s action underscores the success of the FDA in modernizing our scientific processes to optimize a risk-based approach that advances cutting-edge innovations in which consumers can have confidence.”

GalSafe pigs may potentially provide a source of porcine-based materials to produce human medical products that are free of detectable alpha-gal sugar. For example, GalSafe pigs could potentially be used as a source of medical products, such as the blood-thinning drug heparin, free of detectable alpha-gal sugar. Tissues and organs from GalSafe pigs could potentially address the issue of immune rejection in patients receiving xenotransplants, as alpha-gal sugar is believed to be a cause of rejection in patients.

As part of its review, the FDA evaluated the safety of the IGA for the animals and people eating meat from them, as well as the product developer’s intention to market the IGA for its ability to eliminate alpha-gal sugar on pigs’ cells. The FDA determined that food from GalSafe pigs is safe for the general population to eat. The FDA’s review also focused on ensuring the effectiveness of the IGA through the evaluation of data demonstrating that there is no detectable level of alpha-gal sugar across multiple generations of GalSafe pigs.

“The FDA is committed to continuing its close work with developers to facilitate safe advancements of animal biotechnology. Our Veterinary Innovation Program focuses on providing greater certainty in the regulatory process, encouraging development and research of innovative public health products, as well as supporting an efficient and predictable pathway to the approval of IGAs in animals,” said Steven M. Solomon, D.V.M., M.P.H., director of the FDA’s Center for Veterinary Medicine. “The developer of GalSafe pigs participated in this program, proving the impact of this important FDA initiative. We look forward to continued work with other developers to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of additional innovative animal biotechnology products.”

As part of its review, the FDA analyzed the potential impact that the approval of the IGA in GalSafe pigs would have on the U.S. environment and determined it is no greater than from conventional pigs. The conditions under which GalSafe pigs will be kept are far more stringent than those for conventionally farmed pigs. Additionally, no animal safety concerns were noted for GalSafe pigs beyond those that would be expected in well-managed, commercial swine operations.

The FDA also assessed the risk of the IGA to promote the emergence or selection of antimicrobial-resistant bacteria of human health concern in or on GalSafe pigs. The FDA concluded that the microbial food safety risk is low and is mitigated by the low number of GalSafe pigs entering the food supply and the ongoing surveillance for antimicrobial resistance, among other factors.

Because the product developer’s application to the FDA did not include data regarding elimination or prevention of food allergies, the FDA’s review process did not evaluate food safety specific to those with AGS, a recently identified type of food allergy to red meat and other products derived from mammals. In the U.S., the condition most often begins when a Lone Star tick bites someone and transmits alpha-gal sugar into the person’s body. In some people, this triggers an immune system reaction that later produces mild to severe allergic reactions to alpha-gal sugar found in red meat.

It’s important to note that these pigs have not been evaluated for use as xenotransplantation products for transplantation or implantation into human subjects. Developers of any such human medical products must first submit an application to, and obtain approval from, the FDA before these products can be used in human medicine.

The product developer indicated that it initially intends to sell meat from GalSafe pigs by mail order, rather than in supermarkets.

The FDA granted approval of the IGA in GalSafe pigs to Revivicor Inc.

The FDA, an agency within the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, protects the public health by assuring the safety, effectiveness, and security of human and veterinary drugs, vaccines and other biological products for human use, and medical devices. The agency also is responsible for the safety and security of our nation’s food supply, cosmetics, dietary supplements, products that give off electronic radiation, and for regulating tobacco products.

Source: FDA

Filed Under: Tech

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Footer

Recent Posts

  • DealHub Raises $100M to Redefine Enterprise Quote-to-Revenue
  • Preply Reaches $1.2B Valuation After $150M Series D to Scale Human-Led, AI-Enhanced Language Learning
  • Datarails Raises $70M Series C to Turn the CFO’s Office into an AI-Native Nerve Center
  • Emergent Raises $70M Series B as AI Turns Software Creation Into an Entrepreneurial Commodity
  • Fujifilm Introducing SX400: A Long-Range Camera Designed for the Real World
  • D-Wave Becomes the First Dual-Platform Quantum Computing Company After Quantum Circuits Acquisition
  • Wasabi Technologies Secures $70M to Fuel the Next Phase of AI-Ready Cloud Storage
  • Samsung Maintenance Mode: The Quiet Feature That Actually Changed How I Buy Phones
  • Miro AI Workflows Launch: From Whiteboard Chaos to Enterprise-Grade Deliverables
  • 10 Breakthrough Technologies of 2026

Media Partners

  • Market Analysis
  • Cybersecurity Market
Baseten Raises $300M to Dominate the Inference Layer of AI, Valued at $5B
Nvidia’s China Problem Is Self-Inflicted, and Washington Should Stop Pretending Otherwise
USPS and the Theater of Control: How Government Freezes Failure in Place
Skild AI Funding Round Signals a Shift Toward Platform Economics in Robotics
Saks Sucks: Luxury Retail’s Debt-Fueled Mirage Collapses
Alpaca’s $1.15B Valuation Signals a Maturity Moment for Global Brokerage Infrastructure
The Immersive Experience in the Museum World
The Great Patent Pause: 2025, the Year U.S. Innovation Took a Breath
OpenAI Acquires Torch, A $100M Bet on AI-Powered Health Records Analytics
Iran’s Unreversible Revolt: When Internal Rupture Meets External Signals
Fortinet Stock Rises as Wall Street Drops the AI Fear Narrative
Lumu’s 2026 Compromise Report: Why Cybersecurity Has Entered the Age of Silent Breaches
Novee Emerges from Stealth, 2025, Offensive Security at Machine Speed
depthfirst Raises $40M Series A to Build AI-Native Software Defense
Bitwarden Doubles Down on Identity Security as Passwords Finally Start to Lose Their Grip
Cloudflare App Innovation Report 2026: Why Technical Debt Is the Real AI Bottleneck
CrowdStrike Acquires Seraphic Security: Browser Security Becomes the New Cyber Frontline
Hedge Funds Quietly Rewrite Their Risk Playbook as Cybersecurity Becomes Non-Negotiable
Torq Raises $140M Series D, Reaches $1.2B Valuation as Agentic AI Redefines the SOC
CrowdStrike–SGNL Deal Signals Identity’s Promotion to the Center of Cyber Defense

Media Partners

  • Market Research Media
  • Technology Conferences
BBC and the Gaza War: How Disproportionate Attention Reshapes Reality
Parallel Museums: Why the Future of Art Might Be Copies, Not Originals
ClickHouse Series D, The $400M Bet That Data Infrastructure, Not Models, Will Decide the AI Era
AI Productivity Paradox: When Speed Eats Its Own Gain
Voice AI as Infrastructure: How Deepgram Signals a New Media Market Segment
Spangle AI and the Agentic Commerce Stack: When Discovery and Conversion Converge Into One Layer
PlayStation and the Quiet Power Center of a $200 Billion Gaming Industry
Adobe FY2025: AI Pulls the Levers, Cash Flow Leads the Story
Canva’s 2026 Creative Shift and the Rise of Imperfect-by-Design
fal Raises $140M Series D: Scaling the Core Infrastructure for Real-Time Generative Media
Humanoid Robot Forum 2026, June 22–25, Chicago
Supercomputing Asia 2026, January 26–29, Osaka International Convention Center, Japan
Chiplet Summit 2026, February 17–19, Santa Clara Convention Center, Santa Clara, California
HumanX, 22–24 September 2026, Amsterdam
CES 2026, January 7–10, Las Vegas
Humanoids Summit Tokyo 2026, May 28–29, 2026, Takanawa Convention Center
Japan Pavilion at CES 2026, January 6–9, Las Vegas
KubeCon + CloudNativeCon Europe 2026, 23–26 March, Amsterdam
4YFN26, 2–5 March 2026, Fira Gran Via — Barcelona
DLD Munich 26, January 15–17, Munich, Germany

Copyright © 2022 Technologies.org

Media Partners: Market Analysis & Market Research and Exclusive Domains, Photography