Health and Parenting
A mom helps her little girl color

July 2023 coloring pages

Chase away rainy-day boredom with this month’s coloring pages, brought to you by Boston Children’s! Coloring_Summer_BeachDownload Coloring_Summer_BikeDownload Coloring_Summer_InsectsDownload Images: Adobe Stock/Illustration: David Chrisom Get more coloring pages, news, and tips for your family from our weekly newsletter. Sign up now! Share this:
Research
A 3D blood vessel in a microchip, with lymphoma cells lodged next to the vessel endothelial cells.

Tackling an aggressive, treatment-resistant lymphoma where it lives

Anaplastic large cell lymphoma, a form of non-Hodgkin lymphoma, is the most common aggressive lymphoma in children. Chemotherapy and radiation fail to cure about 30 percent of cases. When tumors are driven by the oncogene ALK — which is the case for the majority of children — kinase inhibitor drugs like crizotinib are very effective ... Read More about Tackling an aggressive, treatment-resistant lymphoma where it lives
Research
A shield blocking angry-looking T cells from getting to the intestines, preventing intestinal GVHD.

One-time treatment could block a deadly form of graft-versus-host disease

Even when a bone marrow transplant cures leukemia or lymphoma, patients can still pass away from graft-versus-host disease (GVHD), in which T cells in the donor graft attack the recipient’s own tissues. Leslie Kean, MD, PhD, director of stem cell transplant at Dana-Farber/Boston Children’s Cancer and Blood Disorders Center, has long sought to prevent this ... Read More about One-time treatment could block a deadly form of graft-versus-host disease
Research
Scott Snapper, MD, PhD, in the lab

From bench to bedside: A promising option for unremitting ulcerative colitis

Many existing treatments for inflammatory bowel disease, like Remicade® and Humira®, work by blocking inflammatory cytokines such as tumor necrosis factor (TNF) and interleukins IL-12 and IL-23, which are over-produced in autoimmune disease. But few patients with ulcerative colitis get complete relief from these drugs. A small but promising open-label clinical trial, published recently in ... Read More about From bench to bedside: A promising option for unremitting ulcerative colitis
Research
Dosh Whye portrait

Perfecting the craft of modeling disease in stem cells: Dosh Whye

Part of an ongoing series profiling researchers at Boston Children’s Hospital. Dosh Whye has always wanted to make peoples’ lives better, but he never imagined that tending to stem cells in a lab seven days a week would be the way he would do it. Now, as an assistant director of the Human Neuron Core ... Read More about Perfecting the craft of modeling disease in stem cells: Dosh Whye
Patient Stories
Iris poses with her parents, Austin and Jessica, and older sister, Audrey

Not just another patient: Care for midaortic syndrome that’s ‘handcrafted’ for Iris

This past July, Iris Huot, her older sister, Audrey, and their parents, Jessica and Austin, gathered around their dining room table. To an outsider, it might seem like an ordinary dinner, but for the Huots, it was a moment of perspective — and gratitude. “It was the first time in eight weeks that we had ... Read More about Not just another patient: Care for midaortic syndrome that’s ‘handcrafted’ for Iris
Patient Stories
Corey, who had ACL surgery, at the Boston Marathon finish line

From medical first to marathon finisher: Corey’s ACL story

Corey Peak’s role as a “medical first” began on a ski slope in 2015 when he tore his anterior collateral ligament (ACL). He remembers falling and hearing two pops. “One side was my binding releasing. The other side, I later realized, was my ACL tearing.” Thirty days after his accident, Corey would become the first ... Read More about From medical first to marathon finisher: Corey’s ACL story
Research
A magnifying glass, decorated with DNA, showing the face of a girl with a droopy mouth due to facial weakness.

Facial weakness: A dark matter detective story

Elizabeth Engle, MD, has devoted her career to finding genetic and developmental causes for disorders of eye, eyelid, and facial movement. From common conditions like strabismus to very rare disorders, these conditions can impact a person’s appearance and impair social communication, making it hard to shift one’s eyes up, down, or sideways or adjust facial expressions. Each ... Read More about Facial weakness: A dark matter detective story
Patient Stories
Saoirse running toward the camera in a Spiderman sweatshirt.

Thinking – and operating – outside the box: Bypassing Saoirse’s aneurysm

Saoirse just turned 3. There was a big to-do for her birthday, complete with family flying to Massachusetts from Ireland for the occasion. The celebration was big because Saoirse has a lot to celebrate. About six months ago, doctors discovered an unstable aneurysm in her brain, and within days she underwent surgery to treat the ... Read More about Thinking – and operating – outside the box: Bypassing Saoirse’s aneurysm