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A teenage girl's incurable cancer has been cleared from her body in the first use of a revolutionary new type of medicine.

All other treatments for Alyssa's leukaemia had failed.

So doctors at Great Ormond Street Hospital used "base editing" to perform a feat of biological engineering to build her a new living drug.

Six months later the cancer is undetectable, but Alyssa is still being monitored in case it comes back.

Alyssa, who is 13 and from Leicester, was diagnosed with T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukaemia in May last year.

T-cells are supposed to be the body's guardians - seeking out and destroying threats - but for Alyssa they had become the danger and were growing out of control.

Her cancer was aggressive. Chemotherapy, and then a bone-marrow transplant, were unable to rid it from her body.

Without the experimental medicine, the only option left would have been merely to make Alyssa as comfortable as possible.

"Eventually I would have passed away," said Alyssa. Her mum, Kiona, said this time last year she had been dreading Christmas, "thinking this is our last with her". And then she "just cried" through her daughter's 13th birthday in January.

Full story: https://www.bbc.com/news/health-63859184

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Great to read about previously incurable cancers being cured. I wish her a long and happy life.

  • Like 2
  • 1 month later...

Thanks for sharing!!

 

I wasn’t actually aware cancers can be incurable with chemotherapy. I guess I’m well out of the loop!

Great discovery though, hope this treatment becomes mainstream. 

I wonder whether this new treatment will also have the same negative impact on the immune system and kills healthy cells? Hopefully not, and hopefully it can be a potential replacement for chemo.

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