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News from Yahoo! News July 14, 2007
Enduring a rare disease with no
cure
By BEN DOBBIN, Associated Press Writer Sat Jul 14, 4:10 AM ET
ROCHESTER, N.Y. - All three of Darlene Royalty's daughters began to
go blind at age 8, victims of a rare and brutal brain disorder with
no cure.
Against the odds, Amber, Sandy and Sarah have survived into their
20s. They cannot speak or see, rely on feeding tubes, spend most of
their days in bed at their home in tiny Ursa, Ill., and take
multiple drugs to control seizures, clear their lungs, and relieve
the anxiety or pain that comes with Batten disease.
They were diagnosed within three months of each other in 1995.
"We've been doing this for 12 years — 12 very painful and very
wonderful, fulfilling years," their mother said. "I know there's no
hope right now for them. I'm a realist. But maybe down the road,
somebody else may be spared all of this suffering."
Batten disease is caused when defective genes fail to make enzymes
needed to dispose of waste made by brain cells. The waste piles up
in the brain and kills healthy cells until the patient dies. There
are some 500 cases in the United States and most victims die before
or during their teens.
Families cursed with the inherited degenerative disorder come
together for a few days each year to sustain one another. They share
a grueling ordeal that somehow fills their lives with dignity and
purpose.
Their three-day "family support" convention in Rochester, which
wraps up Saturday, coincided this year with a biennial summit of
doctors who specialize in treating the disease and seeking a cure.
On Friday, researchers at the University of Rochester Medical Center
presented test results on Batten-afflicted mice, hoping the results
will hasten the first drug-based clinical trials aimed at
alleviating the most common form of the disease, which typically
shows up in children age 5 or older.
Gene-therapy treatments for younger victims with more aggressive
types of the disease are already under way at Weill Cornell Medical
College in New York. And stem-cell trials being conducted in Oregon
could, if successful, open the door to treating a host of neural
disorders.
"I think we have the scientific basis for a clinical trial," said
David Pearce, an associate professor in biochemistry and biophysics
who heads the Rochester school's 2-year-old Batten disease research
center. "But there's a lot of very limiting steps. One is I don't
have half a million dollars to do it.
"When it comes to a clinical trial, usually there's a big drug
company behind it," he said. "This is a rare disease, so actually
figuring out how to raise the resources is very difficult."
"It's definitely ignored as far as diseases go because we don't have
the numbers that AIDS or leukemia or cancer has," said Karen
Upchurch, of St. Petersburg, Fla., whose daughters, Dorothy, 16, and
Rose, 24, died a decade apart of Batten disease.
Peg Davis, of Balsam, Minn., who brought her stricken daughters,
Holly, 28, and Hannah, 25, to the convention, said that devoting her
life to their care is not a burden.
"You get so much joy from them," she said.
But Davis admits she's begun to worry about "every little thing (being)
the sign that it's the end" since her eldest, Chad, died of the
disease in May 2006 at age 30.
"The last four years of his life, he really went through a lot," she
said tearfully. "He had a (heart) pacemaker put in, he had septic
shock, he had pneumonia. All those years you're grieving. But when
they're not with you anymore, that's when your heart breaks. When
they're gone, what is your purpose?"
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