another patient, widad qubrossi, from ontario, also had severe allergies since birth. within a couple weeks of birth, she threw up continuously, allergic to her mother’s breast milk.
all her life, doctors have told her they don’t know what’s causing her medical issues, which includes asthma, idiopathic eczema, respiratory issues. she lived an isolated life to help minimize her reactions, but also learned to strategically adapt to the limitations set by her disease and lead a fulfilling life.
qubrossi has long hypothesized her condition was due to genes, and a few years ago, managed to see a geneticist who connected her with turvey.
she has been taking dupilomab for two years, and it has been a “game changer,” she said. “it’s been huge. what i have isn’t curable, but (the medication) has changed my quality of life drastically.”
at age 36, “i’m able to work now.”
the breakthrough findings may have come too late for two patients in the study, including the vancouver patient whose participation kickstarted the study. they both died from the disease: one from anaphylaxis at age 20, the other from a cerebral aneurysm at age 35.
with the evidence, however, patients with the malfunctioning gene now have an effective, targeted therapy.