Close Menu
healthylife7.comhealthylife7.com

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Four Reasons Cashless Lifestyle is Becoming the Mainstay for Daily Transactions

    July 11, 2026

    Cyclospora, the ‘Explosive Diarrhea’ Parasite, Cases Reported in at Least 25 States: See the Map

    July 11, 2026

    Men’s testosterone levels in decline amid rising obesity, researchers warn

    July 11, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • Four Reasons Cashless Lifestyle is Becoming the Mainstay for Daily Transactions
    • Cyclospora, the ‘Explosive Diarrhea’ Parasite, Cases Reported in at Least 25 States: See the Map
    • Men’s testosterone levels in decline amid rising obesity, researchers warn
    • Jayden Daniels and Company Hold Workout in L.A.
    • Premium Chilean Kiwifruit Arrives in India, Bringing Great Taste and Powerful Nutrition
    • UC students organize free health clinic happening July 11
    • Clever design transforms Stourbridge community wellbeing space
    • Fidji Simo says Mark Zuckerberg gave her one piece of health advice that she wishes she had listened to
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    healthylife7.comhealthylife7.com
    • Home
    • Fitness
    • Health
    • Nutrition
    • Lifestyle
    • Conditions
    • Mental Health
    • Weight Loss
    • Wellness Tips
    Saturday, July 11
    healthylife7.comhealthylife7.com
    Home»Conditions»Sasha’s story: The race to make a treatment for the girl with the ultra
    Conditions

    Sasha’s story: The race to make a treatment for the girl with the ultra

    stamilhstgr0518@gmail.comBy stamilhstgr0518@gmail.comJuly 6, 2026No Comments10 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit WhatsApp Email
    Sasha’s story: The race to make a treatment for the girl with the ultra
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest WhatsApp Email

    Advertisement

    In family videos, Sasha Lipworth beams, open-mouthed and elated as she zooms past on her aquamarine scooter. She giggles as she ambles along a footpath hand-in-hand with her pint-sized friend, and trills “I’m calling mummy” as she presses a comically large telephone receiver to her tiny ear

    There’s footage of Sasha sitting on her father’s lap, and singing Happy Birthday before blowing out the four candles on her cake

    Sasha with her parents, Nadine and David Lipworth.Wolter Peeters

    Within a few months, an unknown quirk in Sasha’s genetic coding would begin to rob her of the ability to speak, hold a spoon, use a toilet or play with the most basic of baby toys

    Advertisement

    Now nine, Sasha has been nonverbal longer than she was able to speak. For her past five birthdays, she couldn’t blow out a single candle

    “That is crazy when you express it like that,” Sasha’s father, David Lipworth, says. “It’s taking too long to get this done.”

    David and Sasha’s mother, Nadine Lipworth, have devoted their lives to Sasha – who needs 24-hour care – and to finding a way to restore her abilities and give her the chance to gain new skills

    “We were told that there was no treatment and no cure. That wasn’t going to be an option,” Nadine says. “We knew Sasha before she lost everything, and we wanted to give her her future back.”

    Advertisement

    With no financial backing from any institution, the Lipworths have assembled a crack team of scientists from Australia and the United States to undertake the painstaking work of developing a Sasha-specific genetic therapy

    They are months away from confirming that they have got it: bespoke gene patches called Antisense Oligonucleotides (ASO), the latest frontier in experimental precision therapies for rare genetic disorders that were, until recently, considered “undruggable”

    Mini lab-grown Sasha brains are key to the final stages of testing three potential treatment candidates. The team then plans to send the best performer to the US for mandatory safety testing. If all goes well, Sasha could receive her first dose by her 10th birthday, in March

    “To be so close to the finish line is amazing,” David says. “This disease has stolen so much from her, but that spark she has had since she was a baby gives us hope that we can get her back.”

    Among the regulatory, logistical and clinical obstacles sits a $1 million hurdle: securing philanthropic donations to cover the cost of toxicology testing in a US laboratory, then, hopefully, manufacturing a new medicine

    Advertisement

    If the Lipworths succeed, they hope to blaze a trail for other children whose rare genetic diseases could be treated with RNA-targeting precision medicines

    “I cannot leave this world until my daughter can tell someone if she is in pain or being harmed,” Nadine says

    Sasha with her father, David Lipworth.Wolter Peeters

    ‘It’s up to us’

    Nadine and David Lipworth quit their jobs to care for Sasha and support their mission. David has become a citizen scientist in RNA therapeutics, impressing with his nous internationally renowned molecular biologist and antisense pioneer Professor Emerita Sue Fletcher

    Advertisement

    Nadine is spearheading crucial fundraising for the expensive endeavour through a GoFundMe page, raffles and tax-deductible donations

    “It has all been up to us,” Nadine says

    Loading

    Cut-and-paste

    In March 2024, the University of Sydney’s RNA for Rare Diseases teamidentified a spontaneous mutation in Sasha’s SLC6A1 gene, which encodes a protein called GAT-1 that recycles the brain’s main calming neurotransmitter, affecting how messages move through the brain. Only one other person in the world is known to have this variant

    Advertisement

    In every human cell, there are more than 3 billion base pairs of DNA, each pair a combination of the letters A, T, C and G

    “In Sasha’s case, just one letter has been changed, and this is causing her disorder,” Fletcher says

    The single-letter change does not alter the protein code in Sasha’s DNA. It alters how the code is edited, cut and pasted together

    When a cell needs to make a protein, it copies the gene containing that protein’s assembly instructions from the master blueprint, DNA, to make a temporary, portable transcription called messenger RNA (mRNA). This transcription needs to be edited before it reaches the cell’s protein-building factory

    Advertisement

    The initial unedited message (pre-mRNA) is made up of exons – sequences of the protein-making code – which are separated by non-coding filler sequences called introns. This is where Sasha’s mutation wreaks havoc

    The cell’s machinery – cellular scissors and glue – needs to “splice out” the non-coding introns and paste the exon coding sequences together

    Sasha’s single-letter change signals the cellular scissors to splice in the middle of an exon, severing crucial information, rendering it impossible to correctly assemble the protein from the incorrectly edited instructions

    “Everything downstream [from the errant splice] is garbled,” Fletcher says

    If Sasha’s splicing error was a TV murder mystery

    Think of mRNA as a whodunit on commercial television, where the exons are the movie and the introns the ad breaks

    To watch the movie without ad breaks, you need to edit out the introns and stitch the exon sequences together

    Sasha’s movie is being spliced in the middle of an exon at the climactic plot twist – excising the moment that the true murderer is unmasked, and their fiendish motive revealed – rendering the rest of the movie incomprehensible

    Advertisement

    “If we can overcome that one small glitch, Sasha’s cells will make a perfectly normal protein from the gene that carries this one damaging ‘letter’ change,” Fletcher says

    To fix the glitch, Sasha’s research teams turned to ASOs: short, synthetic strands of RNA modified with such precision that they can bind to a specific mRNA sequence

    The genetic masking tape

    In a laboratory at the Queensland University of Technology, Dr Laura Croft has been tending to dishes of miniature Sasha brains. For 140 days, Croft has raised them on a steady diet of nutrient-rich media

    Advertisement

    These brain organoids – 3D brain tissue derived from Sasha’s blood cells reprogrammed into stem cells – are a critical component to testing treatment candidates designed with painstaking specificity for Sasha and her ultra-rare mutation

    “It’s so emotional seeing them,” Nadine says after a recent visit to Croft’s lab and seeing her daughter’s mini brains. “I feel like crying now thinking about it.”

    Dr Laura Croft and Nadine Lipworth with Sasha’s brain organoids.David Lipworth

    Croft specialises in advancing rare disease therapies for “n-of-1” cases, like Sasha: a patient whose condition is so rare that she represents the entire patient cohort

    “It is so exciting,” Croft says. “It’s possible that Sasha will be the first child in Australia to be treated with an Australian-developed n-of-1 ASO.”

    Advertisement

    Croft screened about 20 ASOs engineered by her team, Fletcher and US researchers. David thinks of them as masking tape that covers the errant splice site, shielding it from the cellular scissors

    “ASOs are the ultimate precision medicines,” Fletcher says. “They can be targeted very specifically to certain types of gene mutations.”

    But not every genetic disorder could be targeted by this bespoke approach. “It very much depends on the gene and the specific mutation,” Fletcher says

    The ASO Nusinersen was the first-ever disease-modifying treatment forspinal muscular atrophy – the biggest genetic killer of children under two years of age

    Advertisement

    The world’s first person to be treated with an ASO made just for them was a seven-year-old girl named Mila Makovec at Boston Children’s Hospital in 2018 – within a year of her diagnosis. Tragically, Mila, who had the rare and fatal neurodegenerative disorder Batten disease, died in 2021. But her experimental drug, dubbed Milasen, was shown to reduce her seizures and provided a blueprint for the rapid development of highly customised therapeutics

    Nadine said she can’t leave this world until her daughter can communicate if she is in pain.Nadine Lipworth

    An estimated 15 to 30 per cent of all genetic diseases are caused by mutations affecting RNA splicing, suggesting they may be amenable to ASOs, Croft says

    In Croft’s lab, three ASOs corrected the errant splicing at the RNA level in Sasha’s lab-made brain cells

    “We have to repeat these studies at least three or four times for all three ASOs,” says Croft, a task she expects to take three months

    Advertisement

    “[Then] we need to make sure that this translates into functional protein, [and] which one is the best at restoring the GAT-1 protein function in Sasha’s cells,” she adds

    Preliminary evidence shows at least one ASO does just that, Croft says. It will cost $75,000 to confirm a top candidate

    Simultaneously, Sasha’s team have been working to select a laboratory to conduct toxicology testing as soon as a lead candidate is identified. This, plus manufacturing a clinical-grade drug, will cost $900,000, which is why the Lipworths’ focus is now on finding new philanthropic donors, fast

    “We are progressing the program as quickly as possible because we know that the earlier the intervention occurs, the better the outcome for Sasha is likely to be,” Croft says

    The Lipworths hope to have Sasha treated at the Sydney Children’s Hospital Network (SCHN)

    Advertisement

    A network spokesperson said that administering experimental therapy is governed by rigorous ethical, regulatory and legal requirements, and that the network was developing pathways that enable children with rare diseases to access highly personalised therapies

    Sasha’s parents dream of Sasha regaining all the skills she has lost and more, attending a mainstream school and, in adulthood, having a productive, fulfilling job

    A trial of an experimental ASO to treat Dravet syndrome – a neurodevelopmental disorder triggered similarly to Sasha’s – found that children regained skills they had lost and developed some new abilities, including communication, language and gross and fine motor skills

    “If we can get Sasha treated soon, while her brain is still developing, then who knows what the future holds for her,” David says

    Advertisement

    Professor Zornitza Stark, clinical geneticist at Murdoch Children’s Research Institute, says: “The explosion in precision treatments over the last 10 years has been hugely exciting.”

    Stark says that even when an ASO is developed for a single child, the principles learnt can help advance the entire field of new-generation therapies

    One day, David hopes this will be as routine as surgery: “You go to the doctor, the doctor finds your mutation and develops a personalised genetic treatment that targets [it].”

    But infrastructure must be built for these personalised therapies to be developed faster and more cheaply

    There is no doubt, Fletcher says, that Sasha is at the forefront of her parents’ minds. “But they have been very clear that … whatever the outcome for Sasha, we are working on a pipeline and creating opportunities to help the next child, and the next and the next.”

    Advertisement

    “We must get this done,” Nadine says. “The impact is bigger than one child.”

    Start the day with a summary of the day’s most important and interesting stories, analysis and insights. Sign up for our Morning Edition newsletter

    License this article

    More:

    Kate Aubusson is Health Editor of The Sydney Morning Herald.Connect via Xoremail.
    Advertisement
    Advertisement

    make Race Sashas story Treatment
    stamilhstgr0518@gmail.com
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Cyclospora, the ‘Explosive Diarrhea’ Parasite, Cases Reported in at Least 25 States: See the Map

    July 11, 2026

    Fidji Simo says Mark Zuckerberg gave her one piece of health advice that she wishes she had listened to

    July 11, 2026

    Legionnaires’ outbreak: 31 NYC cooling towers test positive for Legionella bacteria

    July 11, 2026
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Health
    Lifestyle

    Four Reasons Cashless Lifestyle is Becoming the Mainstay for Daily Transactions

    By stamilhstgr0518@gmail.comJuly 11, 20260

    JAKARTA – Buying coffee before work, paying for parking, lunch, and shopping for daily necessities is now increasingly done without cash

    Cyclospora, the ‘Explosive Diarrhea’ Parasite, Cases Reported in at Least 25 States: See the Map

    July 11, 2026

    Men’s testosterone levels in decline amid rising obesity, researchers warn

    July 11, 2026

    Jayden Daniels and Company Hold Workout in L.A.

    July 11, 2026
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • Vimeo
    Fitness

    Opinion: The FDA must put biotech at its center or continue to cede early research to China

    July 6, 2026

    Inside Elevance’s digital chronic disease management strategy

    July 6, 2026

    Best, Worst States For Well

    July 6, 2026

    What do the Middle Ages tell us about mental health then and now? VCU historian Leigh Ann Craig has answers

    July 6, 2026

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from SmartMag about art & design.

    About Us

    Welcome to HealthyLife7.com, your trusted source for reliable health, wellness, fitness, and lifestyle information. Our mission is to help people make informed decisions about their health by providing clear, practical, and easy-to-understand content.

    At HealthyLife7.com, we believe that good health starts with the right knowledge. Whether you're looking for healthy eating tips, fitness advice, mental wellness strategies, weight management guidance, or information about common health conditions, our goal is to deliver valuable content that supports a healthier lifestyle.

    Fitness

    Four Reasons Cashless Lifestyle is Becoming the Mainstay for Daily Transactions

    July 11, 2026

    Cyclospora, the ‘Explosive Diarrhea’ Parasite, Cases Reported in at Least 25 States: See the Map

    July 11, 2026

    Men’s testosterone levels in decline amid rising obesity, researchers warn

    July 11, 2026
    Health

    Opinion: The FDA must put biotech at its center or continue to cede early research to China

    July 6, 2026

    Inside Elevance’s digital chronic disease management strategy

    July 6, 2026

    Best, Worst States For Well

    July 6, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • About Us
    • Contact us
    • Disclaimer
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
    © 2026 healthylife7.com. Designed by Pro.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.