
The baby saved from a rare disease by a first-ever personalized gene fix has reached a big milestone, taking his first steps ahead of Christmas.
KJ Muldoon is walking and getting ready to celebrate the holiday season at home with his parents and three siblings.
KJ was born last year with a genetic disorder called carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase 1 deficiency. Also known as CPS1 deficiency, the metabolic condition affects only 1 in 1.3 million babies and often leads to life-threatening outcomes.
When he was 6 months old, doctors began giving KJ a groundbreaking new treatment -- a personalized CRISPR gene editing therapy at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia.
Doctors save baby's life with first-ever gene fix for deadly rare disease
The gene-editing therapy works like a "molecular spell-checker,” finding and fixing the specific genetic error causing his condition.
After three infusions and after spending the first 10 months of his life in a hospital, KJ was discharged and sent home in June.
Baby saved by gene-editing therapy 'graduates' from hospital, goes home
Since then, KJ has continued to grow and thrive with his family, celebrating his first birthday at home and taking part in one of the family’s favorite rituals -- cheering for their beloved Philadelphia Eagles.
Doctors hope new technology like CRISPR gene-editing therapies can be the key to treating more than 7,000 rare diseases, such as sickle cell disease, cystic fibrosis, Huntington’s disease and muscular dystrophy, that affect approximately 30 million people across the country.
latest_posts
- 1
Spain’s Picos de Europa: What to see and do in ‘the world’s most beautiful place’ - 2
Iran war upends aviation strategies - 3
The most effective method to Apply Antiquated Ways of thinking in Current Brain science Practices - 4
Top 15 Online Entertainment Stages for Individual Marking - 5
Full SNAP benefits must be paid ‘promptly,’ USDA tells states as government reopens
UAE recalls some Nestle infant formula products, Qatar warns consumers
Support Your Wellness: 20-Minute Home Exercises That Work
Former school bus aide pleads guilty to assaulting 3 autistic students in Colorado
Chinese astronauts’ return to Earth delayed over fears spaceship damaged by debris
A Time of Careful Eating: Individual Tests in Nourishment
Flu surges across U.S. as doctor visits reach highest level since 1997
Figure out How to Track the Establishment of New 5G Pinnacles
The powerful new Rubin Observatory just found 11,000 new asteroids and measured 'tens of thousands more'
‘Slender Man’ attacker back in custody. What we know about Morgan Geyser's disappearance and what happens next.













