The young child had ADA-SCID, which is one of the few variants of SCID that is targeted by a new form of a gene therapy trial from 2017. Instead of trying to replace her immune system, her doctors decided to collect her stem cells, insert a healthy ADA gene using a modified HIV virus, and return the corrected cells to her body.
A study done recently that followed 62 babies found that every child was alive after eight years, and 95% had a fully restored immune system. The treatment for this condition is now much less dangerous for patients, and families are overall happier with this treatment. Although this treatment is costly for families.
This type of gene therapy saved Cora's life, as well as many other patients. She and many others can now live a healthy, normal life due to gene therapy. This article was refreshing to read to see good news occurring because of gene therapy.
References:
Bajaj, S. (2025, December 1). Gene therapy offer a cure for babies with the deadly ‘bubble boy disease’ - the new york times. https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/27/well/bubble-boy-disease-gene-therapy.html
Wadbudhe, A. M., Meshram, R. J., & Tidke, S. C. (2023, October 26). Severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) and its new treatment modalities. Cureus. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC10676291/
The fact that 95% had their immune system fully restored is crazy!! Hopefully, a bigger study size can be used soon to see if that percentage still holds up, because that would be big news if so.
ReplyDeleteIts amazing that so many children are able to live out their lives do to gene therapy! I look forward to seeing all the new ways this can be applied!
ReplyDeleteThis article makes me happy because it shows how gene therapy can actually saves instead of just risky treatments. Even though it is pretty expensive, its good to know that kids like Cora can now live a normal, healthy life.
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