Australian doctors use stem cells to treat cystic fibrosis
16/01/2024
Researchers at the University of Adelaide, Australia have discovered a way to replace the cells responsible for causing cystic fibrosis with healthy, disease-free alternatives.
Scientists found that cell transplant therapy, normally used to treat immunodeficiency disorders, could also hold the key to curing the worst symptoms of the condition.
What is cystic fibrosis?
Cystic fibrosis is a genetic disorder that affects the lungs, and sometimes the pancreas, liver, kidneys, and intestine. It causes a build-up of thick mucus that impairs a person’s breathing and can lead to blockages. This increases the chances of serious lung infection.
Over time, lung function declines in early childhood to the point where permanent damage is sustained by the lungs.
The condition is caused by a mutation in the CF gene on chromosome 7. This gene encodes a protein called the cystic fibrosis transmembrane regulator (CFTR). The abnormal protein in patients with cystic fibrosis disrupts chloride channels on the cells.
For many patients, cystic fibrosis ultimately leads to fatal airway disease. It is also the most common life-shortening inherited genetic condition in Caucasian people for which there is no cure.
The study
The study aims to cure cystic fibrosis in the lungs, in an attempt to prevent the infections that usually lead to patients undergoing transplants or even suffering lung failure.
Therapy begins with doctors harvesting stem cells from patients’ lungs before correcting them with gene therapy.
This gene therapy aims to address the cause of cystic fibrosis at the source by editing the protein responsible for regulating cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance (CFTR). CFTR has either mutated or is not present in a sufficient quantity in patients with the disorder.
After this, stem cells are re-introduced back into patients, where they pass healthy genes to their ‘daughter cells’. This provides the body with a way to replenish the airways with healthy cells.
About Cystic Fibrosis
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- 10,500 people have cystic fibrosis in the UK
- Cystic fibrosis affects young people most
- 75% of new diagnoses happen before age 2
- 1 in 10 people are diagnosed before or soon after birth
- 1 in 29 Caucasians carry the faulty gene
- CF is most common in Caucasian newborns
- In the UK, the median life expectancy with CF is 36.6 years
What are the signs and symptoms of cystic fibrosis?
Symptoms include:
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- Your baby not passing stool when first born
- Your baby’s skin tasting salty
- Thick, sticky mucus in the airways
- Lung infections – including sinusitis, bronchitis, pneumonia
- Mucus in the tubes or ducts in the pancreas
- Diarrhoea or constipation
- Too much gas and stomach pain
- Poor weight gain and growth