Sickle cell affects more families in Africa and India, but new gene therapies are out of reach

This electron microscope image provided by the ºÃÉ«tv Institutes of Health in 2016 shows a blood cell altered by sickle cell disease, top. (ºÃÉ«tv Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (NCATS), ºÃÉ«tv Institutes of Health via AP)

Gautam Dongre’s two children in India and Pascazia Mazeze’s son in Tanzania live with an inherited blood disorder that turns blood cells into instruments of pain.

New gene therapies promise a cure for sickle cell disease, and Dongre says he’s “praying the treatment should come to us.â€

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