Opal was diagnosed at 3 weeks old. When she was 11 months old she became the first patient treated in a global trial of the new gene therapy. She was given the new treatment via an injection into her right ear. The virus injected during the procedure known as an adeno-associated virus delivers a working copy of OTOF to cells in the ear to replace the mutated version. Afterwards, the virus is naturally eliminated from the body.
Doctors also installed a cochlear implant in Opal's left ear; these devices help users hear some sound by relaying signals to the brain that their ear cells can't.
Within four weeks of the gene therapy, Opal could respond to sounds even when her cochlear implant was switched off, her doctors reported. Twenty-four weeks out from treatment, her treated ear could pick up soft sounds, such as whispering, at "close to normal" hearing levels. Now, at 18 months old, Sandy can respond to her parents' voices without her implant activated and say words such as "dada" and "bye-bye."
"When Opal could first hear us clapping unaided it was mind-blowing we were so happy when the clinical team confirmed at 24 weeks that her hearing was also picking up softer sounds and speech," Opal's mother Jo said in the statement. Her father, James, noted that Opal can't wear her implant in certain contexts, such as in the bath, so the therapy is already making a difference in their day-to-day lives.
The ongoing trial that Opal is part of is enrolling patients in the U.S., the U.K. and Spain. In this stage of the research, patients receive a low dose of the therapy in one ear. Future trials will test the therapy at higher doses in one ear and then in both ears. Patients will be followed up for five years to assess long-term outcomes.
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