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Severe Combined Immunodeficiency (SCID)


What is Severe Combined Immunodeficiency (SCID)?

Severe Combined Immunodeficiency (SCID) is the result of several defective genes in a child's immune system. Kids with SCID are extremely susceptible to life-threatening infections. SCID is sometimes known as the "bubble boy disease" because of the 1976 television movie about David Vetter, the boy who spent his childhood in a plastic bubble. Despite the extreme precautions to keep him safe from pathogens, David died after an unsuccessful bone marrow transplant when he was 12.

Frequency

Severe combined immunodeficiency is quite rare. Researchers estimate only between 40-100 babies are born with SCID in the United States annually. The numbers may be higher, though, because there likely are infants who die from infections before they were diagnosed with SCID.



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