Children with rare genetic disease get world-first treatment to save sight
- 14 January 2022
- 2 min read
Clinicians at Great Ormond Street Hospital (GOSH) and UCL GOS Institute of Child Health (ICH) are the first in the world to test a treatment that could prevent blindness in children with the rare and fatal genetic disorder, CLN2 type Batten disease.
CLN2 disease is a rare degenerative genetic disorder affecting 30-50 children in the UK. It first causes seizures, then gradual decline in a child's ability to walk, speak and see, alongside progressive dementia. The life expectancy for a child with this disease without treatment is 10-12 years old.
It is caused by a change in a gene that is responsible for making a specific enzyme in the nervous system. For the past two years enzyme replacement therapy has been used which helps prevent neurological deterioration in children with CLN2 disease. The drug, called Brineura, was first approved for use on the NHS in 2019 and is administered directly into the brain by a regular infusion. It has been shown to restore enzyme activity and slow the onset of disability.
However, this infusion into the brain does not prevent children going blind, as the enzyme cannot cross the blood-retina barrier. This means that the nerves in the eye cannot function, and vision is lost.
Clinicians and researchers at GOSH and ICH are trying a treatment to prevent blindness in children with CLN2 Batten disease by using the tiny amount of the drug leftover from the brain infusion and injecting it directly into the back of the eye. The treatment, which is being given on a compassionate use basis, hopes to prevent eyesight deterioration in children by providing the enzyme that the nerves in the back of the eye need to function.
The eye injection is a quick and common procedure, and the treatment is being given to a small number of patients who have been rigorously chosen by the clinical teams. Those who are receiving the treatment are being carefully monitored by the clinicians to check for any side effects. At this early stage, clinicians are treating just one eye every two months, and after a year they will compare the difference in vision between the two eyes.
Professor Paul Gissen, is honorary Consultant in Paediatric Metabolic Diseases at GOSH and the UCL GOS Institute of Child Health with research time supported by the NIHR. He said;
“Treatments given under compassionate use are always subject to very rigorous assessment and at GOSH we have a long history of pioneering these carefully-considered treatments for children who have no other option. If successful, we hope our work on this programme can pave the way to saving the sight of more children with this disease to preserve their quality of life for as long as possible."
It is hoped that this pioneering programme will help the tens of children globally who have CLN2.