A Christchurch toddler suffering from a 鈥渙ne-in-a-million鈥 genetic blindness condition has been given a rare window of opportunity to receive treatment.
Ciro Carrascull suffers from Leber congenital amaurosis (LCA), a rare inherited retinal degeneration that affects the photoreceptors behind his eye and causes low vision.
If the condition goes untreated, the 2-year-old is expected to be totally blind by the age of 5.
When the condition was first diagnosed in August last year, his mother Clara Pichon-Riviere was told by an eye specialist little was known about treatment options.
However, the specialist had exciting news in July after attending a conference in the United States - an experimental treatment had been discovered.
鈥淭his feels like a strange window of opportunity,鈥 Pichon-Riviere told the聽Herald.
Ciro's condition was first diagnosed in August last year and there was little known at the time about treatment options. Photo / George Heard
鈥淭here was nothing available in New Zealand and suddenly there鈥檚 this opportunity that doesn鈥檛 have a lot of history, being so new, but I don鈥檛 know if we鈥檒l get this chance again.鈥
Alarm bells were initially raised around Ciro鈥檚 health in November 2021 when, at 3 months old, he was taken into a 24-hour clinic with a cold before doctors noticed his constant eye movements.
They showed concern about his eyes and performed a number of CT scans, which revealed anomalies with a particular gene that affected his eyesight.
鈥淚t was good-bad news because we knew there was nothing wrong with the brain or anything else, but his vision was low,鈥 his mother said.
In April this year, Ciro was taken to the University of Auckland to meet with associate professor in ophthalmology Andrea Vincent to determine possible treatments for his eyesight.
Initially, Vincent couldn鈥檛 provide answers about a cure. She attended an eye genetics conference in the United States a few months later and, in July, was eager to share what she鈥檇 discovered.
鈥淪he was very excited because she鈥檇 learned of these great developments on what Ciro has, but she needed to do some scans on his retina,鈥 said Pichon-Riviere.
Ciro鈥檚 illness means the photoreceptors in the back of his eye don鈥檛 produce the correct amount of proteins and, as a result, the retinas don鈥檛 develop as normal.
Eventually, they鈥檙e expected to weaken and stop working altogether.
Ciro's condition affects the photoreceptors in the back of his eye - the correct amount of proteins isn't produced and the retina weakens. Photo / George Heard
The condition is known to occur more commonly in teenagers, so research and treatment have been designed for that age group and involves assisting their DNA.
Pichon-Riviere said she was told by the specialist of a treatment performed in only four other children worldwide - now her son would be given a chance to receive the same treatment in the UK.
The surgery, called gene therapy, has only been performed on people in Ciro鈥檚 situation since 2019. It鈥檚 a surgical process of introducing new DNA into the patient鈥檚 photoreceptors and pushing the DNA code to produce stronger protein.
The treatment, costing more than $1 million, is fully funded by the UK government under a hospital exemption - and Pichon-Riviere has the chance to take her son overseas to receive the surgery.
鈥淏ut there鈥檚 a lot of theoretical risks,鈥 Pichon-Riviere said.
The lack of tried and tested aspects of the treatment meant there were question marks around how safe it was and there was a possibility the surgery wouldn鈥檛 be made mainstream due to its cost.
鈥淥n one hand, it feels like if they do find more children then they鈥檒l run out of what they came up with, on the other hand, Ciro will most likely be blind by 4 or 5, so he won鈥檛 have another opportunity. So we鈥檙e in the spotlight.鈥
Pichon-Riviere has begun fundraising online to make the trip to the UK possible - the money would cover her time off work and the living costs associated with the minimum two months spent overseas.
Gene therapy is fully funded by the UK government under a hospital exemption. Ciro's family has been given the chance to take their son overseas to complete the treatment. Photo / George Heard
If anything went wrong during the operation there was a chance the trip could be lengthened to six months, Pichon-Riviere said.
鈥淲e鈥檒l need to be able to raise the money, otherwise I don鈥檛 think we鈥檒l be able to afford to go.鈥
Ciro鈥檚 low vision has become an opportunity for him to express the humorous side of his personality, Pichon-Riviere said. Her son has learned to make jokes and laugh about his condition when times get hard.
鈥淗e鈥檚 very clever - he knows how to not feel like he鈥檚 missing out,鈥 she said.
鈥淏ut he does bump his head quite a lot, if we go to a new place it takes longer for him to adjust and know where he is. Sometimes he feels scared of exploring but he鈥檒l hold your hand for support, he wants to go out as much as he can.鈥
Pichon-Riviere said she and her husband have learned how to communicate with their son - it鈥檚 taken adjustment and 鈥渃an be a bit draining鈥 - but they鈥檙e proud of the work they鈥檝e done to create a safe environment for him to grow up in.
鈥淲e do feel the reward of him achieving certain things,鈥 said Pichon-Riviere.
鈥淵ou can tell he will just do things differently. We鈥檙e very patient and describe everything for him, the hard work all pays off in the end.鈥
鈥楾he only child in New Zealand with this condition鈥
Vincent spoke to the聽贬别谤补濒诲听about Ciro鈥檚 unique condition, which she said sets him apart from every other child in New Zealand.
鈥淲e have a database of 1500 people that we do gene testing on and he鈥檚 the only one [with LCA],鈥 said Vincent.
She said the condition comes from a rare recessive gene carried by both Ciro鈥檚 parents.
鈥淥ne copy of the gene is normal but the other isn鈥檛 - so it鈥檚 like your car running on half a tank of petrol. And through an extremely cosmic coincidence, the father also carries the same mistake but the other copy is fine,鈥 said Vincent.
鈥淭here was a one-in-four chance of Ciro inheriting the mistake and, boom, his car runs out of petrol.鈥
She said the preclinical studies of this experimental treatment shown to her in the US showed huge promise, but the possibility of Ciro benefitting from it rode on whether he had enough functioning cells in his retina.
Subsequent tests found Ciro had what was required for the surgery to work - now it was about getting the family to the UK to make use of the rare procedure.
鈥淭hey only have 11 vials of this stuff left, they produced it at cost - it鈥檚 so expensive to make.鈥
It鈥檚 hoped the surgery鈥檚 outcome would be, according to Vincent, enough to change Ciro鈥檚 life for the better.
鈥淚t means their visual functioning and mobility improves because their fields have improved, their contrast sensitivity and quality of life is massively improved.鈥
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