Archive for Irene Sege
Double stem cell transplant and other tools are helping children survive neuroblastoma
When Emily Coughlin complained of a sore knee in May 2009, doctors initially suspected Lyme disease. After antibiotics failed to relieve the pain, Emily was diagnosed with neuroblastoma, a cancer that begins in nerve cells outside the brain, just shy of her fourth birthday. Though neuroblastomia is rare — about 700 new cases occur annually in the ... Read More about Double stem cell transplant and other tools are helping children survive neuroblastoma
Tagged: cancer, neuroblastoma, stem cell transplant
Wine used to toast CGD gene therapy trial linked to decades-long scientific journey
When Brenden Whittaker of Columbus, Ohio, the first patient treated with gene therapy for chronic granulomatous disease (CGD), showed successful engraftment last winter, the gene therapy team lifted glasses for a celebratory toast. The wine they sipped was no ordinary wine. The 2012 Bordeaux blend came from an award-winning California vineyard owned and operated by Robert ... Read More about Wine used to toast CGD gene therapy trial linked to decades-long scientific journey
Tagged: gene therapy, hematology