Posted on 03/11/2005 10:15:24 AM PST by Ernest_at_the_Beach
Gene therapy has been successfully used to treat a four-year-old boy with no immune system, a team of British scientists has revealed. The boy, named only as Mustaf, had the rare life-threatening immune disorder known as ada-SCID.
Doctors at Great Ormond Street Hospital used a harmless virus to deliver stem cells containing a corrective gene. It is the first successful treatment of ada-SCID in the UK. Five children have been treated in Milan, Italy.
Children with ada-SCID have no working immune system. They are susceptible to even the most minor infection. The condition is one of a number of Severe Combined Immunodeficiency conditions. Children with SCID conditions used to be known as "bubble babies" because they had to live within a protective plastic bubble. Seven children and one adult with XCID, a related condition which only affects boys, have also been successfully treated using gene therapy at Great Ormond Street. The conditions differ in that different genes are faulty. Ada-SCID is more difficult to treat. It results from the lack of an enzyme which helps cells get rid of toxic by-products. Without it, poisons build up and kill immune system cells. A bone marrow transplant from a good donor can provide a cure in 90% of cases, but only 30% of families have such a donor and the risks are much higher if attempted with a poorer match. 'Steady progress'
In gene therapy, blood stem cells are removed from the bone marrow, and an artificially created version of the correct, working gene is then inserted into those cells, using a harmless virus.
When these modified cells are infused into the child, they proliferate and come to dominate. Since stem cells create all the other cells in the blood and immune system, the corrected cells create a new working immune system.
Mustaf was born in September 2000. He was diagnosed with ada-SCID when he was a month old. In Nov 2003 doctors stopped the enzyme treatment he was receiving after his condition deteriorated. He was given the gene therapy a month later after a mild dose of chemotherapy to prime his bone marrow for the treatment. Five weeks after his treatment, Mustaf was allowed to go home. Professor Adrian Thrasher, who led the treatment, said: "He has made steady progress and his immune function is already better than it was with enzyme replacement therapy. "He continues to receive prophylactic antibiotics and antibodies, but if his immune system continues to develop we will be able to withdraw these. Doctors are pleased with his progress." Mustaf, who is from London, is now in pre-school education, and doctors say he can live a life largely free of restrictions. Dr Peter Fraser, a gene therapy researcher at the Babraham Institute in Cambridge, said: "This whole procedure is in its very early stages, and every success, especially now it has proved effective in a different disease, is a real triumph, not just for the patient, bur for scientists involved in gene therapy. "There are many other genetic diseases for which gene therapy could be really useful.
"There are always concerns about treatments at such an early stage in their development, but it's looking good for this little boy because he doesn't seem to have had any problems."
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fyi
Cute little guy...
This article just shows that virtually any stem cell, not just fetal stem cells, can be engineered for the desired effect....
But the crowd that wants you to believe that only fetal stem cells have promise don't want you to know that.
"harmless virus to deliver stem cells containing a corrective gene."
How the heck can a virus deliver a cell?
yeah they must spend better or something....
I really liked the idea of using fat cells for stem cell research. I have a big donation to make to that :)
The virus is just like a bus....it can handle passengers.
/sarcasm
the therapy has also killed more kids than it has helped, but I guess they conveniently overlooked that little fact in this little accolade
Medieval Plague May Explain Resistance to HIV
had this diagram:
Well it's a neat diagram.....
the correct form of the human gene is spliced into the rna of the "harmless virus". The altered "harmless virus" is used to infect the bone marrow cells. The "harmless virus" rna will replace the defective existing genes (within the patients extracted bone marrow tissue cells) with the new "correct form" gene. This takes place in literally millions of one at a time transactions.
I am not disputing you, but do you have some support for that statement?
ummmm...link?
(This article appeared in the New York Times on October 4, 2002)
Trials are Halted on a Gene Therapy
By Sheryl Gay Stolberg
WASHINGTON, Oct. 3 - Officials in the United States and France said today that they had suspended four gene therapy experiments because the treatment, which cured a 3-year-old boy of a fatal immune deficiency, may have given him an illness similar to leukemia.
Scientists conducting the research said it was not clear whether the boy, who was treated as an infant in France, was made sick by the therapy. But officials at the Food and Drug Administration said they suspected that the experiment, which until now had been hailed as the only unequivocal gene therapy success, was responsible.
"It is not absolutely a definitive thing, but the preliminary data that we have leads us to suspect that it surely isn't a coincidence," said Dr. Philip Noguchi, the agency official who oversees gene therapy research. "It's a sobering experience, but we are doing what should be done."
The experiments - one in France, three in the United States - were suspended in early September. But the news was not made public until today, authorities said, to give the researchers time to notify the families of 14 children enrolled in the trials.
The move is yet another major setback for the fledgling field of gene therapy, which involves using viruses to introduce healthy genes into cells. The field is still reeling from the death of Jesse Gelsinger, 18, who lost his life three years ago while undergoing gene therapy at the University of Pennsylvania
hmmmm....ok....
I guess they need to continue to study it and figure out why it worked for some and not for others....
there isnt a reason to abandon it completely however. There are definitive benefits to making this process work correctly for the patients.
I do believe another child in the US died just a couple of weeks ago, but I only remember reading about it, so not sure where he or she was located
And they need to continue to study it, as I said....
well, I dont necessarily disagree, but they need to be honest about the research, and not be torturing kids if that indeed is what they are doing. They used to give kids growth hormones to make them taller, but wound up giving them some awful disease.
Kids, and I know you agree, shouldnt be guinea pigs for science papers
My sister would agree with you. She lost three baby boys to this condition and one of her daughters had a boy who was saved after a bone marrow transplant after an exhaustive search.
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