Related News
-
Rare Genetic Disorder Strikes…
Friday, March 5, 2010
WESLEY CHAPEL -- They spend their afternoons lying on air mattresses, watching cartoons, prisoners in their own… more...
-
Investigators Identify Gene…
Thursday, January 14, 2010
Investigators in The Research Institute at Nationwide Children's Hospital have identified a link between specific… more...
-
UCLA Scientists Find…
Monday, December 28, 2009
UCLA scientists have identified a molecular switch that prevents Huntington's disease from developing in micePublished… more...
-
Boy With Rare Disorder Gets…
Friday, December 11, 2009
Providence, RI -- A young boy with an extremely rare developmental disorder is getting a new lease on life thanks to… more...
-
My Husband Gave Me Gift of…
Thursday, November 26, 2009
After four anxious years on a transplant waiting list, Jennifer Elliot's husband Jimmy gifted her with one of his… more...
News
-
CheckOrphan NewsFlash, March 2,…
3/02/2010
CheckOrphan NewsFlash for Tuesday, March 2, 2010: breaking news about rare diseases, orphan diseases, orphan drugs, and…
-
CheckOrphan NewsFlash January 15,…
1/15/2010
CheckOrphan NewsFlash for Friday, January 15, 2010: breaking news about rare diseases, orphan diseases, orphan drugs,…
-
CheckOrphan NewsFlash January 11,…
1/11/2010
CheckOrphan NewsFlash for Monday, January 11, 2010: breaking news about rare diseases, orphan diseases, orphan drugs,…
NewsFlash
More News
-
Holyhead's Women Footballers Take on…
A charity football match is set to take place later this month to help raise £400… more...
-
PA's Kilimanjaro Climb Raises Awareness…
Climbing Mount Kilimanjaro, at more than 19,300 feet, is so difficult that only 40% of… more...
-
Staying Strong: Bone Marrow Match…
Vinod Challagundla learned in December he had a potentially fatal disease, but he didn't… more...
-
Lavaca Police Chief's Wife Gives Him a…
He's a loving husband and father who also happens to be the Lavaca Chief of PoliceShe's a… more...
-
Boy's Stem Cells Rescue Sick Sister
A sick 4-year-old girl is now expected to live a long and healthy life, thanks to her 3-… more...
People News
Baby Will Donate Cells to Treat Brother With Rare Genetic Syndrome
| More
Wednesday, July 29, 2009
By Judy Siegel-Itzkovich
For the first time in Israel, a healthy baby girl has been born at Jerusalem's Shaare Zedek Medical Center to a couple who both carry single defective genes that can give their offspring Shwachman-Diamond Syndrome, a rare genetic disorder that occurs in about one in 50,000 births.
Not only is the baby - who in her embryonic stage was selected from among other embryos that carried the disease - healthy, but she will be able to donate bone marrow to her older brother, who suffers from the syndrome.
The parents and relatives were not found suitable to donate bone marrow to their sick son. But they decided that they wanted to have more children - healthy ones - by undergoing preimplantation genetic diagnosis (PGD). This involves taking a cell from embryos a few days old to examine the genes and implant healthy embryos in the woman's womb.
The couple are in their 20s. Their son was diagnosed at nine months of age with the syndrome, which is a rare genetic condition.
Shwachman-Diamond Syndrome (SDS) is a genetic disorder that occurs in approximately one in 50,000 births and involves bone marrow problems causing inadequate white cells in the blood, pancreatic defects leading to digesting difficulties, skeletal abnormalities and short stature.
Patients are also at risk for sometimes fatal complications such as severe infections, acute myelogenous leukemia and bone marrow failure.
This condition is inherited in an autosomal recessive pattern, in which both copies of the gene in each cell have mutations. The parents of an individual with an autosomal recessive condition each carry one copy of the mutated gene, but they typically do not show signs and symptoms of the condition.
PGD, a very complicated process, is used to rule out disease and to identify embryos that eventually can safely donate bone marrow to a sibling. Until now, there have been no reports on the birth of any child suitable to donate bone marrow to a sibling who needs a donation. Couples who wanted to undergo such a process had to go abroad to one of the few centers that perform it, but have had few successes.
Dr. Geona Alterescu (head of Shaare Zedek's PGD center), Prof. Ephrat Levy-Lahad (director of the medical genetics unit) and Prof. Ehud Margaliot (head of its in-vitro fertilization unit) successfully carried out the procedure.
A few days ago, a healthy baby who is free of the syndrome was born, and her bone marrow was shown to be absolutely compatible with her brother's.
© 1995 - 2009 The Jerusalem Post. All rights reserved.
Source: The Jerusalem Post
Log in to comment.