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News from
The Minnesota Daily Dec. 6, 2007
22-month-old girl treated at U
for rare disease
As the snow fell Saturday morning, 22-month-old Krystie Karl-Steiger
lay on an examination table at the Phillips-Wagensteen building
where, unannounced to her, her parents were anxiously awaiting the
results of her blood test.
For more information about Tay-Sachs, go to
www.tay-sachs.org
.
To learn about Krystie Karl-Steiger and her journey to the
University, go to
www.caringbridge.org/visit/krystie .
For more information about efforts to cure the disease, go to
www.curetay-sachs.org .
She and her fathers, Rick Karl and Bruce Steiger, are from Rancho
Mirage, Calif. They came to the University in May with hope that a
rare transplant procedure could cure a rare disease Krystie has,
called Tay-Sachs.
Around 15 years ago, University doctors unsuccessfully attempted a
similar procedure. This is the first attempt at the University since
then, after several California doctors said they were unwilling to
attempt it.
Tay-Sachs is a rare and fatal genetic disorder that occurs
when a child is missing the Hex-A enzyme, according to the National
Institutes of Health.
Without the enzyme, toxins can build up in the child's brain cells,
which causes damage to the nervous system - and ultimately death
Seungjae Seo
22-month-old Krystie Karl-Steiger, who has Tay-Sachs disease, rests
Saturday while her parents wait for blood test results at the
Phillips-Wagensteen building. The disease is always fatal, with a
three- to five-year life expectancy.
Karl and Steiger tried for three years to have a child through
surrogates and egg-donors before Krystie was born. When they found
out about Krystie's disease, Karl said their options were obvious.
"After six attempts and several hundred thousand dollars in the
processes, and having a beautiful little kid, we kind of decided
that intervention was the only right thing to do," Karl said.
Krystie was born Jan. 26, 2006. As is common with Tay-Sachs,
everything appeared normal for the first few months, but then things
started to go wrong.
"We started noticing she wasn't developing like other kids her age,"
Steiger said.
MRIs and other tests began showing abnormalities in Krystie's brain
and a day before her first birthday; an ophthalmologist found "cherry-red
spots" behind Krystie's eyes - a tell-tale sign of Tay-Sachs.
Shortly after, a blood test revealed Tay-Sachs disease.
Krystie's parents were drawn to the University when they found
University professor of pediatric blood and marrow transplantation
Paul Orchard online.
"I e-mailed him," Steiger said. "He e-mailed back saying, 'We're
always excited to hear about a new case. Give us a call.' "
Treatment
Karl, Steiger and Krystie arrived at the University in May for a
blood transplant that attempted to replace the blood-producing cells
of Krystie's body with normal, healthy cells, Orchard said.
He said it was a unique strategy.
"I don't know of anyone else who's using the combination of drugs we
are using in order to accomplish this," he said.
Orchard said the outcome of the Tay-Sachs procedure the University
did before was poor, and no new transplants took place. But recent
advancements led the University to try a transplant again, Orchard
said.
"Having designed some new therapies that we think may be less toxic,
we have now opened up this protocol for kids with higher metabolic
diseases like Tay-Sachs," he said.
Karl and Steiger said they are fine with the method of treatment.
"In a way she's a bit of an experiment, and we know that going in,"
Karl said.
Along with Orchard, professor of pediatrics and neurology Lawrence
Charnas has worked closely with Krystie's care.
Charnas said University doctors chose to take up Krystie's case
because they were confident in their abilities to treat her.
"Most (parents) are told by their physicians to take the child home
and keep them comfortable," he said. "We're much more aggressive in
how we've approached her care because we attempted curative or
stabilizing therapy which is not the standard of care in the
country."
Before coming to the University's children's hospital, Karl and
Steiger brought Krystie to many hospitals in California.
"They didn't offer any hope," Karl said.
He and Steiger chose the University because it was one of the most
approachable institutions in the country, Steiger said.
"It was one of the few places we talked to that actually get it and
actually understand the disease," he said.
Daily
"It's pretty rare. Most people have never even seen it. They're
familiar with it; they understand it."
Awareness
To help raise awareness of the disease, Karl said he became a member
of the board of the Cure Tay-Sachs Foundation, an organization
created this year to raise money to combat the disease.
Ken Bihn, the foundation's president, said he became interested in
Tay-Sachs after he found out his daughter had the disease.
Bihn met Karl and Steiger at a national Tay-Sachs conference in
April.
Concerned about the lack of funding for disease research, Bihn said
he started the foundation with the help of other Tay-Sachs parents
in June.
Bihn said his goal for the foundation is simple.
"I want to cure it," he said. "I want it to be gone and vanished
from the planet."
Since its inception, the Cure Tay-Sachs Foundation has raised about
$280,000 for research.
Bihn said he thinks the disease can be cured soon.
"It might be 10 years away, but if we start moving today, we'll get
there in 10 years," he said. "If we sit and do nothing, in 10 years
the clock won't be running."
Orchard said that goal might be a bit lofty, but it's important to
continue doing research on the disease.
"It takes a long time to develop a clinical protocol," he said.
"People continue to be interested in the field and advance it, but
progress is pretty slow."
The Future
Today, 197 days post-transplant, Krystie is now producing the
missing enzyme, but no one knows how effective it will be at this
time, Karl said.
Treatment at the hospital will continue. Krystie and her family
currently live in the Ronald McDonald House just off campus. They
plan on living there possibly through 2008.
Orchard said he is optimistic about Krystie's future, but questions
still remain.
"I think there's a good chance that she's going to survive much
longer than the kids who don't get therapy," he said. "The bigger
question and the tougher question is, what's her quality of life
going to be and what is she going to be able to do?"
Karl and Steiger said they don't regret their decision to go through
the process, and they owe the doctors everything.
"They took a little risk in accepting Krystie," Karl said. "They
were pretty interested in seeing if they could improve her lifestyle
- buy her a few years, perhaps, at the very least."
Karl said he has one goal for Krystie.
"I want her one day to be at the Special Olympics, waving a pompom,"
he said. "Just waving one pompom; I would consider that a tremendous
success."
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