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Medical Mysteries This is a series that spotlights rare diseases or unusual conditions. First baby to have 'bubble boy disease' diagnosed at birth here gets transplant
The Straits Times
|June 10, 2025
He is also the first to receive a stem cell transplant before the symptoms emerged
Mannat Singh was only six days old when he was diagnosed with severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID).
This means he was born without a functioning immune system, making him highly vulnerable to even the common flu. Without treatment, Mannat would not have made it past his first birthday.
His mother Harminder Kaur, 39, a nurse, recalled the guilt and fear she felt "because I made him this way".
SCID is a rare life-threatening genetic disorder that affects one in 50,000 babies worldwide, with one new case born in Singapore every two years.
"It did not help our state of mind when his odds were stacked against him," said her husband Harminder Singh, 39, an IT consultant.
It is also known as "bubble boy disease" after David Vetter, an American boy with the disease who captured the world's attention for living all his life in a sterile plastic enclosure — his "bubble".
At the time of his birth in 1971, a bone marrow transplant from an exact matched donor was the only cure for SCID, but there was no match available in David's family.
In 1984, four months after receiving a bone marrow transfusion via a new technique, the 12-year-old died from lymphoma, a cancer later traced to a dormant Epstein-Barr virus in the donor bone marrow.
As for baby Mannat, he had Artemis SCID, a rare form of recessive radiosensitive SCID, which meant he could not be treated with radiation or have certain scans done.
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