logo
Baby Is Healed With World's First Personalized Gene-Editing Treatment

Baby Is Healed With World's First Personalized Gene-Editing Treatment

New York Times15-05-2025

Something was very wrong with Kyle and Nicole Muldoon's baby.
The doctors speculated. Maybe it was meningitis? Maybe sepsis?
They got an answer when KJ was only a week old. He had a rare genetic disorder, CPS1 deficiency, that affects just one in 1.3 million babies. If he survived, he would have severe mental and developmental delays and would eventually need a liver transplant. But half of all babies with the disorder die in the first week of life.
Doctors at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia offered the Muldoons comfort care for their baby, a chance to forgo aggressive treatments in the face of a grim prognosis.
'We loved him, and we didn't want him to be suffering,' Ms. Muldoon said. But she and her husband decided to give KJ a chance.
Instead, KJ has made medical history. The baby, now 9 ½ months old, became the first patient of any age to have a custom gene-editing treatment, according to his doctors. He received an infusion made just for him and designed to fix his precise mutation.
The investigators who led the effort to save KJ are presenting their work on Thursday at the annual meeting of the American Society of Cell & Gene Therapy, and are also publishing it in the New England Journal of Medicine.
The implications of the treatment go far beyond treating KJ, said Dr. Peter Marks, who was the Food and Drug Administration official overseeing gene-therapy regulation until he recently resigned over disagreements with Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the secretary of health and human services. More than 30 million people in the United States have one of more than 7,000 rare genetic diseases. Most are so rare that no company is willing to spend years developing a gene therapy that so few people would need.
But KJ's treatment — which built on decades of federally funded research — offers a new path for companies to develop personalized treatments without going through years of expensive development and testing.
Illnesses like KJ's are the result of a single mutation — an incorrect DNA letter among the three billion in the human genome. Correcting it requires pinpoint targeting in an approach called base editing.
To accomplish that feat, the treatment is wrapped in fatty lipid molecules to protect it from degradation in the blood on its way to the liver, where the edit will be made. Inside the lipids are instructions that command the cells to produce an enzyme that edits the gene. They also carry a molecular GPS — CRISPR — which was altered to crawl along a person's DNA until it finds the exact DNA letter that needs to be changed.
While KJ's treatment was customized so CRISPR found just his mutation, the same sort of method could be adapted and used over and over again to fix mutations in other places on a person's DNA. Only the CRISPR instructions leading the editor to the spot on the DNA with the mutation would need to be changed. Treatments would be cheaper, 'by an order of magnitude at least,' Dr. Marks said.
The method, said Dr. Marks, who wrote an editorial accompanying the research paper, 'is, to me, one of the most potentially transformational technologies out there.'
It eventually could also be used for more common genetic disorders like sickle cell disease, cystic fibrosis, Huntington's disease and muscular dystrophy.
And, he said, it 'could really transform health care.'
The story of KJ's bespoke gene-editing treatment began on the evening of Aug. 8, when Dr. Kiran Musunuru, a gene-editing researcher at the University of Pennsylvania got an email from Dr. Rebecca Ahrens-Nicklas at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. A baby had been born, and genetic testing showed he had CPS1 deficiency.
Could he save the baby?
Dr. Musunuru had begun investigating the use of gene editing for fairly common gene mutations.
Developing a gene editor to treat patients is a deliberate process that can take years. But KJ did not have years to wait — perhaps as few as six months before a mounting risk of severe brain damage or death.
'At this point, the clock starts in my mind,' Dr. Musunuru said. 'This is real life. This is not hypothetical.'
KJ's disease is caused by an inability to rid the body of ammonia, a byproduct of protein metabolism. Ammonia builds up in the blood and crosses into the brain. His doctors put him on a diet that severely restricted protein — just enough for him to grow. He also had a medicine, glycerol phenylbutyrate, that helped remove the ammonia in his blood. But he still was at high risk for brain injury or death. Any illness or infection could make his ammonia levels soar and cause irreversible damage to his brain.
KJ lived at the hospital under 24-hour care.
Building a gene-editing system for the Muldoons' baby and testing it was not easy.
'There was a lot of shooting from the hip,' Dr. Musunuru said.
He began working with Fyodor Urnov at the University of California, Berkeley, who made sure there were no unexpected and deleterious gene edits elsewhere in the DNA. Dr. Urnov is a part of an academic collaboration with Danaher Corporation, a company capable of producing the gene editor for KJ at a standard that would allow it to be used in a patient.
Danaher in turn collaborated with two other companies it owned, two additional biotechnology firms and another research institute, said Sadik Kassim, its chief technology officer for genomic medicines.
'At every step of the process, we were always expecting someone to say, 'No, sorry,'' Dr. Kassim said. 'And that would be the end of the story.' But his fears were unfounded. Danaher and the other companies charged only for the raw materials to make the drug, he added.
The F.D.A. also smoothed regulatory approval of the treatment, Dr. Ahrens-Nicklas said.
Dozens of researchers put all else aside for months.
In Berkeley, Dr. Urnov said, 'scientists burned a vat of midnight oil on this the size of San Francisco Bay.' He added that 'such speed to producing a clinic-grade CRISPR for a genetic disease has no precedent in our field. Not even close.'
David Liu of Harvard, whose lab invented the gene-editing method used to fix KJ's mutation, said the speed was 'astounding.'
'These steps traditionally take the better part of a decade, if not longer,' he said.
Only when the gene-editing solution was in hand and the F.D.A. approved the researchers' work did Dr. Ahrens-Nicklas approach KJ's parents.
'One of the most terrifying moments was when I walked into the room and said, 'I don't know if it will work but I promise I will do everything I can to make sure it is safe,'' she said.
On the morning of Feb. 25, KJ received the first infusion, a very low dose because no one knew how the baby would respond. He was in his room, in the crib where he had lived his entire life. He was 6 months old and in the seventh percentile for his weight.
Dr. Musunuru monitored the two-hour infusion, feeling, he said, 'both excited and terrified.'
KJ slept through it.
Within two weeks, KJ was able to eat as much protein as a healthy baby. But he still needed the medication to remove the ammonia from his blood — a sign that the gene editor had not yet corrected the DNA in every affected cell.
The doctors gave him a second dose 22 days later.
They were able to halve the medication dose. He got a few viral illnesses in that time, which normally would have triggered terrifying surges in his ammonia levels. But, Dr. Ahrens-Nicklas said, 'he sailed through them.'
A week and a half ago, the team gave KJ a third dose.
It is too soon to know if he can stop taking the medication completely, but the dosage is greatly reduced. And he is well enough for the team to start planning to discharge him home from the hospital. He is meeting developmental milestones and his weight is now in the 40th percentile for his age, but it is not yet known if he'll be spared a liver transplant.
The result 'is a triumph for the American peoples' investment in biomedical research,' Dr. Urnov said.
The researchers emphasized the role government funding played in the development.
The work, they said, began decades ago with federal funding for basic research on bacterial immune systems. That led eventually, with more federal support, to the discovery of CRISPR. Federal investment in sequencing the human genome made it possible to identify KJ's mutation. U.S. funding supported Dr. Liu's lab and its editing discovery. A federal program to study gene editing supported Dr. Musunuru's research. Going along in parallel was federally funded work that led to an understanding of KJ's disease.
'I don't think this could have happened in any country other than the U.S.,' Dr. Urnov said.
Those who worked on saving KJ were proud, Dr. Urnov said.
'We all said to each other, 'This is the most significant thing we have ever done.''

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

ISS Conference Scrapped as NASA Budget Cuts Threaten Crew and Cargo
ISS Conference Scrapped as NASA Budget Cuts Threaten Crew and Cargo

Gizmodo

time20 minutes ago

  • Gizmodo

ISS Conference Scrapped as NASA Budget Cuts Threaten Crew and Cargo

The International Space Station (ISS) still has a few years left in orbit before it's due for retirement, but the future of the orbital lab is looking a little shaky as NASA is forced to tighten its purse strings. The Center for the Advancement of Science in Space (CASIS), which operates the ISS National Lab, is canceling an upcoming space station research conference, SpaceNews reported. The ISS Research and Development Conference was due to be held at the end of July in Seattle, but CASIS announced this week that, after consulting with NASA, 'the current regulatory and budgetary environment does not support holding' the annual conference this year. The announcement comes a little over a month after the release of the current administration's so-called skinny budget, which included funding for NASA in 2026. The budget proposes a $6 billion cut to the agency, 24% less than NASA's current $24.8 billion budget for 2025. The budget also proposes reducing the size of the ISS crew ahead of its planned retirement in 2030, when it's expected to be replaced by multiple commercial space stations. Funding for the ISS could be reduced by a quarter, from $1.24 billion to $920 million, according to the proposed budget for 2026. 'Crew and cargo flights to the station would be significantly reduced,' the budget proposal read. 'The station's reduced research capacity would be focused on efforts critical to the Moon and Mars exploration programs.' During a briefing held in late May, Dana Weigel, NASA's ISS program manager, revealed that the space agency had already been facing resource issues regarding the space station before the 2026 budget proposal. 'The station has been faced with a cumulative multi-year budget reduction,' Weigel is quoted in SpaceNews as saying. 'That's the challenge that I've had that we've been managing through today. That has left us with some budget and resource challenges that result in less cargo.' The cargo includes supplies for onboard crew members. For more than two decades, the space agency has maintained a crew of at least four NASA astronauts on board the ISS, along with international crew members from Russia, Japan, Canada, and other countries. NASA has previously flown four or five cargo missions a year, but the agency has only planned for three drop-offs in 2025. 'We're evaluating the potential for moving to three crew,' Weigel said during the briefing. 'That's something that we're working through and trying to assess today.' NASA is also considering extending the duration of missions on the ISS from six to eight months, Ars Technica previously reported. Meanwhile, five commercial space stations, including Orbital Reef, Axiom Station, and Starlab, are currently in the works but nowhere near being ready to host astronauts in low Earth orbit. The ISS maintains a steady presence of orbital science above Earth's surface, which would leave behind a major gap to fill.

Astronomers Discover Most Energetic Cosmic Explosions Ever Observed
Astronomers Discover Most Energetic Cosmic Explosions Ever Observed

Gizmodo

time35 minutes ago

  • Gizmodo

Astronomers Discover Most Energetic Cosmic Explosions Ever Observed

Astronomers in Hawaii have discovered a new kind of explosion, and they're the most energetic stellar explosions ever recorded. Meet 'extreme nuclear transients' (ENTs): when supermassive black holes tear apart stars at least three times heavier than the Sun, triggering an immense release of energy. An international team of researchers describes the discovery of this newly observed phenomenon in a study published Wednesday in the journal Science Advances, shedding light on events that will help astronomers study the distant universe. 'We've observed stars getting ripped apart as tidal disruption events for over a decade, but these ENTs are different beasts, reaching brightnesses nearly ten times more than what we typically see,' Jason Hinkle, lead author of the study and PhD student at the Institute for Astronomy at the University of Hawaii, said in a W. M. Keck Observatory statement. Tidal disruptions consist of supermassive black holes tearing apart any star that wanders too close, so ENTs are a kind of tidal disruption. 'Not only are ENTs far brighter than normal tidal disruption events, but they remain luminous for years, far surpassing the energy output of even the brightest known supernova explosions,' he added. Their discovery took place almost by accident. While searching for enduring flares projecting from the center of galaxies in data from the European Space Agency's Gaia mission, Hinkle came across two strange signals from 2016 and 2018, which started a multi-year investigation. At the same time, two separate teams found a comparable flare from 2020 in an astronomical survey called the Zwicky Transient Facility (ZTF). More data from the W. M. Keck Observatory in Hawaii confirmed the 2020 event's similarity to the two Gaia events. Given that these events unleashed more energy than any supernova known to science, Hinkle and his colleagues concluded that they weren't your average stellar explosions. The enormous energy release and the shape of the event's light curves indicated the presence of a supermassive black hole actively absorbing material, a process called accretion. Unlike regular black hole accretion, however—which sees nearby matter heat up and project irregular light—the astronomers discovered that these astrophysical events clearly involve a supermassive black hole systematically shredding and eating a giant star. ENTs represent the most energetic known explosions in the universe. Gaia18cdj, the team's strongest documented ENT, released 25 times more energy than the most energetic supernovae known to science. More broadly, each ENT releases as much energy as 100 Suns would emit over their entire 10-billion-year lifespans. For comparison, a regular supernova usually unleashes similar amounts of energy to a single Sun. 'These ENTs don't just mark the dramatic end of a massive star's life,' Hinkle explained. 'They illuminate the processes responsible for growing the largest black holes in the universe.' ENTs are also at least 10 million times rarer than supernovae. Nevertheless, their massive energy outputs will prove to be extremely useful for astronomers studying far-away massive black holes. 'Because they're so bright, we can see them across vast cosmic distances—and in astronomy, looking far away means looking back in time,' said Benjamin Shappee, study co-author and Associate Professor at the University of Hawaii's Institute for Astronomy. 'By observing these prolonged flares, we gain insights into black hole growth during a key era known as cosmic noon, when the universe was half its current age when galaxies were happening places—forming stars and feeding their supermassive black holes 10 times more vigorously than they do today.' From theories of black holes leading to white holes to the suggestion that the universe might exist in a black hole and that supermassive black holes could replace particle colliders, the recent study joins a host of research shedding light on one of the most mysterious components of our universe.

RFK Jr. Is Opening the Alternative Medicine Floodgates
RFK Jr. Is Opening the Alternative Medicine Floodgates

Gizmodo

time35 minutes ago

  • Gizmodo

RFK Jr. Is Opening the Alternative Medicine Floodgates

Snake oil salesmen will be eating good during the Trump presidency. Robert F. Kennedy Jr. recently declared that he will greatly expand people's access to experimental and alternative medical treatments, even while acknowledging that a 'lot of charlatans' are likely to take advantage of suffering people as a result. RFK Jr. made the announcement during a recent interview on the Ultimate Human Podcast hosted by Gary Brecka, a self-proclaimed biologist, biohacker, and longevity expert (Brecka appears to possess two bachelors' degrees in biology, but is not a licensed medical doctor). Kennedy stated that, under his reign as Secretary of Health and Human Services, Americans will more easily be able to get their hands on treatments not currently approved by health regulators. 'If you want to take an experimental drug—you can do that, you ought to be able to do that,' Kennedy told Brecka. While many patient advocates in general have pushed for looser regulations surrounding experimental or off-label treatments, other experts have cautioned that it's important to strike a balance between improved access and safety. And it's unlikely Kennedy's approach will meet that threshold. For starters, Kennedy has long spread misinformation about vaccines (one of the most effective medical interventions ever created), nutrition, and other health topics. And he's no stranger to backing alternative treatments that have next to no evidence supporting their use. During this latest interview, for instance, he referenced chelation and stem cells as unproven therapies that people should have easier access to. Stem cell medicine is a legitimate and growing field of research. But direct-to-consumer stem cell clinics often exaggerate their benefits, claiming stem cells can treat everything from cancer to long covid. In recent years, this cottage industry has exploded in the U.S. and overseas, and some patients have been severely injured from buying into the hype. People have experienced pulmonary embolisms, bacterial infections, and other serious complications, including blindness, from visiting these clinics. The risk-balance equation is arguably even worse with chelation therapy. Chelation involves using drugs that bind to heavy metals in the body, allowing them to be excreted out through urine. It's an effective treatment for certain kinds of acute poisoning or toxic exposures. But in alternative medicine circles, chelation is regularly used to 'cleanse' people of supposed toxins dubiously blamed for a bevy of chronic illnesses, including autism. As with stem cells, people have gotten hurt or died after taking chelation for unapproved uses. RFK seems to be fully aware of the potential danger that would come with making these treatments easier to access, yet brushed that off as inevitable during his interview. 'And of course you're going to get a lot of charlatans, and you're going to get people who have bad results,' he said. 'And ultimately, you can't prevent that either way. Leaving the whole thing in the hands of pharma is not working for us.' The Food and Drug Administration has previously warned the public to stay away from chelation therapy for autism and from unregulated stem cell treatments, but who knows if these warnings will stay up for much longer. Kennedy and the Trump Administration have repeatedly undermined approved medical treatments like vaccines. Now he's set to open the floodgates for unlicensed drugs that may not work or will harm people desperate enough to use them.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store