Good News!!! History is Made as The 1st Adult is Cured of Sickle Cell disease with a chemotherapy-free (Photo)
Iesha Thomas has been in and out of
hospitals battling sickle cell disease since she was only 8 months old.
This summer, 33-year-old Thomas became the first adult to be cured of
sickle cell disease with a chemotherapy-free
procedure at University of Illinois
Hospital & Health Sciences System (UI Health), the University
reported. Thomas is one of 12 adult patients cured of sickle cell
disease as part of a clinical trial at UI Health that used a unique
procedure for stem cell transplantation from healthy tissue matched from
a sibling donor.
Findings from phase I/II of the clinical
trial are published online in the journal Biology of Blood & Marrow
Transplantation.
A Less Harsh Treatment
A Less Harsh Treatment
Stem cell transplants have been used for
years as a means of possibly curing sickle cell disease. However,
before the stem cell transplant could be completed patients would have
to endure a taxing course of drugs to kill the cancer cells, otherwise
known as chemotherapy.
The more traditional form of stem cell
transplant uses chemotherapy to destroy the patient’s own bone marrow,
which shuts down their immune system and makes them vulnerable to
infections.
The new technique – first developed and
performed at the National Institutes of Health campus in Maryland –
eliminates the need for chemotherapy to prepare the patient to receive
the transplanted cells and offers the prospect of cure for tens of
thousands of adults suffering from sickle cell disease – many of them
Black Americans.
According to the National Heart, Lung
& Blood Institute (NIH), about 1 in 13 African American babies is
born with sickle cell trait. About 1 in every 365 black children is born
with sickle cell disease.
About 90 percent of the approximately
450 patients who have received stem cell transplants for sickle cell
disease have been children. Chemotherapy has been considered too risky
for adult patients, who are often more weakened than children by the
disease.
“Adults with sickle cell disease are now
living on average until about age 50 with blood transfusions and drugs
to help with pain crises, but their quality of life can be very low,”
says Dr. Damiano Rondelli, chief of hematology/oncology and director of
the blood and marrow transplant program at UI Health, and corresponding
author on the paper.



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