Table of Contents
- Trial overview
- Study design and phase
- Who can participate
- What is being measured
- Why this trial matters
Trial overview
The available trial of SGT-003 is a study in people with Duchenne muscular dystrophy, which is a serious muscle disease that gets worse over time.[1] The study is titled “A Study of SGT-003 Gene Therapy in Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy” and is listed as authorised.[1]
This is an interventional study, which means researchers give the study treatment and then observe what happens.[1] The trial plans to enroll 60 participants.[1]
Study design and phase
The study is a Phase 1/2 trial.[1] This early phase usually means the main goal is to learn about safety first, while also looking for early signs that the treatment may help.[1]
Participants receive a single intravenous dose of SGT-003, meaning the treatment is given once through a vein.[1] The source data does not provide more details about the visit schedule or other study procedures.[1]
Who can participate
The target population is people with Duchenne muscular dystrophy.[1] The source data does not list age limits, disease stage rules, or other detailed entry criteria.[1]
Because the trial is in an early phase, participation is usually limited to a carefully selected group, but the exact rules are not provided in the source data.[1]
What is being measured
The main safety measure is the incidence of treatment-emergent adverse events through Day 360.[1] This means the researchers will count any unwanted health problems that start or worsen after treatment begins during the first year of follow-up.[1]
The main efficacy measure is the change from baseline of microdystrophin protein levels at Day 90.[1] “Baseline” means the starting point before treatment, and microdystrophin is the protein level the researchers are checking in muscle tissue.[1]
The brief summary says the study also looks at microdystrophin expression in muscle biopsies, which are small samples of muscle taken for testing.[1]
Why this trial matters
For people with Duchenne muscular dystrophy, early trials like this help researchers learn whether a new treatment can be studied safely in humans and whether it shows a biological effect.[1] In this study, the biological effect is linked to microdystrophin levels in muscle tissue.[1]
Because the trial is early and small, it is not meant to answer every question about long-term benefit.[1] Instead, it is designed to give first important data on safety and early response in the target group.[1]




