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- <text id=93TT1787>
- <title>
- May 31, 1993: Brave New Babies
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- May 31, 1993 Dr. Death: Dr. Jack Kevorkian
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- MEDICINE, Page 56
- Brave New Babies
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>In three landmark experiments involving gene therapy, doctors
- try to cure a rare hereditary disease
- </p>
- <p>By LEON JAROFF--With reporting by David S. Jackson/San
- Francisco and Larry Thompson/Bethesda
- </p>
- <p> Even before Andrew Gobea was born, doctors knew his future
- would be clouded. Prenatal tests showed he had inherited a set
- of defective genes that would leave him defenseless against
- infections. Had he been born 10 years earlier, he could have
- survived only in a sterile environment, as did David, the famous
- "Bubble Boy," who died after 12 years inside a sealed plastic
- enclosure. Andrew, however, has a chance to lead a normal life.
- In a new test of gene therapy, doctors at Childrens Hospital
- in Los Angeles, using blood extracted from his umbilical cord
- moments after he was born, separated out some white cells and
- inserted a new gene into them. The altered cells were injected
- into Andrew's body four days later in what could become part
- of a remarkable medical milestone: the first attempts to cure
- a disease by gene therapy.
- </p>
- <p> Andrew was one of three youngsters with Severe Combined Immunodeficiency
- treated with the new technique in the past two weeks. Doctors
- at the University of California at San Francisco performed an
- operation identical to Andrew's on Zachary Riggins, a three-day-old
- infant. And at the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda,
- Maryland, an 11-year-old girl underwent a similar procedure.
- These three cases mark an important new phase in the rapidly
- expanding field of gene therapy. Earlier experiments involved
- inserting beneficial genes only to treat disease, not to cure
- it.
- </p>
- <p> The new work is based on the landmark experiment performed in
- 1990 by NIH Drs. W. French Anderson, Michael Blaese and Kenneth
- Culver on two Ohio girls, ages 4 and 9. Neither child was producing
- ADA, an enzyme that rids the bloodstream of harmful metabolic
- products. The absence of ADA can cause SCID by allowing toxic
- substances to accumulate and destroy immune-system cells. Both
- children had been kept alive by weekly injections of PEG-ADA,
- a costly synthetic enzyme, but neither was in good health.
- </p>
- <p> In the first approved gene-therapy trials, the pioneering NIH
- team extracted immune-system T cells from the Ohio girls, inserted
- normal ada genes into the cells and reinjected them. As the
- team had hoped, the T cells began churning out natural ADA,
- enabling the children's immune systems to function effectively.
- While that result marked the first successful treatment by gene
- therapy, it was not a cure; the altered T cells die out after
- several months, and the little patients must return to the NIH
- periodically to repeat the procedure.
- </p>
- <p> Seeking a cure, researchers have now focused on so-called stem
- cells--long-lasting cells that continually give rise to fresh
- blood cells. If ADA genes could be inserted into the parent
- stem cells, the scientists reasoned, the genes would be passed
- on to all newly formed immune cells, including T cells, and
- the patient would be ensured a permanent supply of the enzyme.
- But stem cells are rare, and most of them reside in the bone
- marrow.
- </p>
- <p> In his latest experiment at the NIH, Blaese administered a drug
- to one of his two original Ohio patients that coaxed some stem
- cells out of the bone marrow and into her bloodstream. Extracting
- blood, he painstakingly separated out the rare stem cells, inserted
- normal ADA genes into their DNA and injected the cells back
- into the girl's bloodstream, hoping that they would migrate
- back to the marrow and take up permanent residence.
- </p>
- <p> While stem cells are scarce and difficult to extract in children
- and adults, they are plentiful in umbilical-cord blood. For
- that reason, the new gene-therapy technique is particularly
- applicable to newborns. And the parents of both infants involved
- in this month's California experiments had ample warning that
- they would need the new treatment.
- </p>
- <p> Although Richard and Lori Riggins, of Exeter, California, have
- a normal four-year-old daughter, a son born to them in 1991
- was diagnosed with SCID at the age of four weeks, and ever since
- has required treatment with PEG-ADA to survive. His disorder
- was evidence that both his mother and father, while healthy
- themselves, carried a recessive gene for SCID. This meant that
- any of their offspring would have a 1-in-4 chance of being stricken
- with the disease. The outlook was equally gloomy for Crystal
- Emery and Leonard Gobea, from California's Imperial Valley;
- their first child died from SCID at five months.
- </p>
- <p> Aware of the risk, both mothers chose to have amniocentesis
- after becoming pregnant again last fall. The test results showed
- that neither fetus was producing ADA and that the babies would
- have SCID. It was then that Dr. Diane Wara, the pediatric immunologist
- who had treated the Rigginses' other child, suggested the stem-cell
- trial. Lori Riggins was easily convinced. "You only get a once-in-a-lifetime
- chance to get large amounts of stem cells," she says. "That's
- at birth, and we didn't want to pass up that chance."
- </p>
- <p> Emery and Gobea also agreed to have their son be part of the
- experiments. Immediately after Andrew was born, the obstetrician
- snipped his cord and drew out the umbilical blood. She rushed
- it to Childrens Hospital in Los Angeles, where a team led by
- Drs. Donald Kohn and Kenneth Weinberg separated the stem cells
- and endowed them with normal ADA genes. Then the newly equipped
- stem cells were injected into the baby's bloodstream. Two days
- later, Wara went through the procedure on Zachary Riggins in
- San Francisco, after his stem cells had been shuttled to Kohn
- and Weinberg in Los Angeles for genetic engineering.
- </p>
- <p> To guard against the possibility that the gene therapy will
- not work, doctors will initially treat both infants with weekly
- injections of PEG-ADA. "We have no intention of letting these
- children get sick while we're waiting to see if the stem cells
- [become functional]," says Wara. "When we see that this has
- happened, then we will start withdrawing the enzyme replacement."
- But will it happen? "My personal hunch is that this is going
- to benefit these two children," says Kohn. "If it does, then
- we can go on to more common diseases."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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