ABC

Dying baby cured in world first

Samantha Donovan for AM, ABC November 5, 2009, 11:39 am
If you are unable to view this video, you may need to install the latest Flash plug-in, available free here.

A Victorian baby with a rare metabolic disease has amazed the medical world with her positive response to an experimental drug used only on mice.

Baby Z was born with molybdenum cofactor deficiency type A, a metabolic disorder that there was no known treatment for. The rare disease kills about 100 babies each year.

The disease stops the body from expelling sulphide and causes babies to suffer seizures and progressive brain damage until they die, usually in early infancy.

But the parents of Baby Z and their friends refused to accept that the situation was hopeless and discovered a plant biologist in Germany had come up with a compound he thought could treat the disorder.

Even though Professor Gunther Schwarz's treatment had only been tested on mice, he couriered all the compound he had to Melbourne in the hope it could save Baby Z.

The baby's doctor, Alex Veldman, a neo-natal specialist at the Monash Medical Centre, says he was excited about the treatment but wary.

"This substance was never ever given to a human and it was years away from being a medication. How should we just take it from the bench to the bedside in a brief period of time?" he said.

Legal hurdles

But Dr Veldman and his colleagues first had to clear the experimental therapy with the Monash Medical Centre's bio-ethics board.

Then as Baby's Z's condition worsened by the hour, the hospital raised another legal hurdle.

"Chief legal officer of Southern Health said to me 'Alex, we need to know if the Australian public agrees that this experimental approach is in the genuine interest of this baby and the only person who can tell us that is the court, so we need to have a court order'," Dr Veldman said.

Finally after a nervous day's wait in June last year, the court gave the go-ahead and Dr Veldman and the hospital pharmacist sprang into action.

"He sprinted up the stairs with the substance in his hand and we started to treat the baby on that afternoon, actually about 40 minutes after we got the court order," Dr Veldman said.

"What then happened was really amazing, because the baby just was waking up, she was starting to move around, starting to look around, she was starting to drink milk from a bottle, she just improved massively."

Dr Veldman will present his findings to the United States Food and Drug Administration and European regulators next week.

The parents of Baby Z want to remain anonymous, but Dr Veldman says that although the 18-month-old girl has some problems she is doing well.

"She is such a delightful little lady and the parents love her and she has a very happy life," he said.

"The amazing thing is that I spoke to mum and she said that she never believed that her baby would die, she always knew that she would fight for it until we find something."

The discovery of the treatment has thrilled doctors specialising in metabolic diseases around the world and an international trial is now planned.

Show:
Newest First
Oldest First

1 - 10 of 40

First Page | < Previous | Next > | Last Page

40 Comments

  1. Alan A 12:01pm Saturday 07th November 2009 EST Report Abuse

    Don't you just love the legal system entanglements in a world where they probably would not have considered themselves in the wrong for demanding a court order, even if the baby died before it was obtained. "Is this in the baby's best interests?" "Yes, ...

  2. Kylie 09:55am Saturday 07th November 2009 EST Report Abuse

    Finally common sence came befoer protocol. All the best to the babay girl and her family for a bright future.

  3. Liam 09:42am Saturday 07th November 2009 EST Report Abuse

    well lets hope that baby z is well and that the pharmacuetical companies dont see it as another potential billion dollar profit, patent an easily made synthetic substitue, price it beyond the reach of those that need it and the government in all their wisdom decide its not going to put it on the pha ...

  4. Murray 09:13am Saturday 07th November 2009 EST Report Abuse

    God bless you small one

  5. Sandra 08:51am Saturday 07th November 2009 EST Report Abuse

    Best wishes to the family. My father in law died of cancer last year through misdignosis, and had we had the opportunity to save him through some drug, we would have snapped it up in a flash. Peoples opinions on these issues mean nothing till they have experienced it themselves

  6. sharren 07:59am Saturday 07th November 2009 EST Report Abuse

    to POST u are entitled to your opinion. But until u sit beside a dying loved one and not be able to do anything to help them. U will understand how frustrated and useless u really are. I have lost a child, and also my husband of 26 years to cancer if we could have tried experimental drugs to keep ...

  7. Andrea 07:56am Saturday 07th November 2009 EST Report Abuse

    Considering that the baby would have died anyway, I think the right thing was done. When there is a shred of hope for survival, we must grab it with both hands. Yes, there may be long term effects, but it's bought the parents precious time with their daughter. Good luck to them.

  8. Chris 09:51pm Friday 06th November 2009 EST Report Abuse

    what a nice story, one with a happy ending, away from all the doom and gloom,good luck little one and mom and dad, our hearts are with you

  9. errol 09:27pm Friday 06th November 2009 EST Report Abuse

    more experimental drugs that are in a later stage of trials should be offered to patients that have no hope of cure of their diseases and have nothing to look forward to but that pain for the rest of their lives it may give them some decency of life what have they got to lose,

  10. Brian 09:03pm Friday 06th November 2009 EST Report Abuse

    good luck to the little angel

1 - 10 of 40

First Page | < Previous | Next > | Last Page

Post your comment

Do you have a Yahoo! ID? Sign in | Sign up

Yahoo!7 News Preferences

Close

Select your state to see news for your area.