No child should be born into this world with Batten Disease,
which—and here I’ll just quote from the National Institutes of
Health—causes “mental impairment, worsening seizures, and progressive
loss of sight and motor skills. Eventually, children with Batten
disease become blind, bedridden, and demented. Batten disease is often
fatal by the late teens or twenties.” And if Mark Chandler has his way,
no more will be.
Chandler is chairman and CEO of Biophysical Corp., a pioneering company that, as I wrote about two years ago,
offers a battery of tests for “biomarkers” that can indicate the
presence of early-stage disease before symptoms appear. (The virtue of
testing for biomarkers rather than disease genes is that with the
former you are testing for the presence of the actual disease, but with
DNA tests you are almost always testing for the possibility of
developing a disease in the future.) Now Chandler is hoping to offer
tests to identify carriers of rare genetic disorders such as Batten
Disease: as carriers, they would not have the disease and so would have
no idea they carry silent genes for it until, tragically, their child
is born with one of these 1-in-a-million disorders. A genetic test
could warn them.
The model is what the Ashkenazi Jewish community has done, beginning in 1969, to screen couples for Tay-Sachs disease,
which was more common among that population than Americans generally.
If both a husband and wife carried the rare mutation, they were
counseled to avoid having children, or (if they had not yet married)
even to find other partners, since if two carriers mate their children
have a 25 percent chance of having the disease. As a result of the
widespread screening, Tay-Sachs has been almost eliminated in American
Jewry; of the 20 or so children born with Tay-Sachs in the U.S. each
year, most are from Louisiana's Cajun community or are
French-Canadians, two population groups that also carry the mutation.
It may seem
like overkill to test all couples or would-be couples for diseases that
are so rare, but Chandler thinks he can develop a test for the 400 or
so “orphan,” diseases such as those on the list of the National Association for Rare Disorders.
All are autosomal recessive: if you inherit the mutation from one
parent, and therefore have one copy of the disease gene, you do not
develop the disease but are a carrier; if you inherit one copy from mom
and one from dad because both your parents are carriers, you get the
disease. Chandler is confident that new DNA technology can offer the
test for all 400 for $125. You can spend more on a maternity dress.
But before
the DNA test can be offered, it needs to be validated—that is, known
carriers must have their DNA tested, and the screening must correctly
identify them as carriers, while not identifying non-carriers as
carriers. That is, no false negatives and no false positives—or as near
to “no” as one can get, which Chandler believes is 99.9 percent
accurate. To validate the test for autosomal recessive orphan diseases,
he figures he needs 5 to 10 couples for each disease. If you want to be
one of them—volunteering to spare other children these fatal
diseases—you can contactKristin Thomas Miskovsky at kmiskovsky@biophysicalcorp.com, or call her at 512.623.4923.