After his treatment, the boy was able to do normal work again. Credit: Catholic Clinic Bochum |
The case is considered unique worldwide: in 2015, a German-Italian team replaced 80 percent of its skin with its genetically modified stem cells for a boy who was then seven years old. He suffered from the life-threatening butterfly disease Epidermolysis bullosa. Those affected have extremely thin skin, which blows, tears and dissolves even with minimal external influences. Around five years later, the skin is stable and has the same sensory qualities as healthy skin. The treatments from the Center for Regenerative Medicine at the University of Módena (Italy) and the Fire Injury Center of the Ruhr University Bochum (RUB) report in the magazine New England Journal of Medicine from 9. December 2021.
The skin is stable, the immune system intact
After all conservative and surgical therapy attempts were unsuccessful at the time, the international team, the small patient, succeeded Remove skin, process it genetically and then transplant it to the wound surfaces This method had never been used on such a large skin area.