Breakthrough for "Bubble Boy" Disease
By Lucy Williams, Ivanhoe Health Correspondent ORLANDO, Fla. (Ivanhoe Newswire) -- For people born with severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID), exposure to seemingly harmless germs can be deadly. But breakthroughs in stem cell research bring new hope to the search for a cure. SCID is a severe genetic defect more commonly known as "bubble boy disease." Individuals with SCID are extremely susceptible to germs and disease; even benign germs can be fatal. Patients must live essentially in a hospital or in isolation until the disease is successfully treated. Previously, SCID patients required continuous treatment over their lifetime to prevent sickness and death. advertisement
"Without treatment, these children generally die within months of birth," lead author Alessandro Aiuti, M.D., of the San Raffaele Telethon Institute for Gene Therapy in Italy, told Ivanhoe. "Unfortunately, with this type of disease, the success rate is very low." Now, researchers believe stem cell transplants could effectively treat and potentially cure a form of SCID caused by a deficiency of the adenosine deaminase gene, or ADA-SCID. Researchers treated eight children with ADA-SCID. They removed autologous hematopoietic stem cells from the patient's bone marrow, combined stems cells with the ADA gene, then transplanted the stem cells back into the patient's body. All study participants are healthy, even six years after
treatment. The stem cells integrated into the patients' marrow, and
patients are now able to generate healthy blood cells. The children
no longer need to be isolated to survive.
The children have continued to grow and develop because the ADA genes sustain activity in the blood cells. Tests reveal the presence of antigen-specific antibodies, which help the immune system fight bacteria and viruses. Five patients had antibody levels high enough to discontinue treatment of supplemental antibodies. Related Links
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