The Mail on Sunday

Three gorgeous little brothers. Only Luca, the designer baby, can expect a long life

- Nick is fundraisin­g for Harrison’s Fund, which raises money to help find a cure for the disease. Visit justgiving.com and search for Nick Taussig By Eve McGowan and Matt Barbour

WITH their sparkling blue eyes and infectious giggles, the Taussig brothers look the picture of happiness as they play in the garden of their home.

Yet the two eldest boys – Theo, seven, and five-year-old Oskar – suffer from an incurable genetic disease which will see them grow weaker as they get older, and means they are unlikely to live past their teenage years. But their younger brother Luca will not suffer the same fate.

For Luca, now 20 months, was conceived using a special type of IVF, with doctors screening a series of embryos and choosing one that did not have the faulty gene that causes Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy (DMD), the condition suffered by Theo and Oskar.

For Nick Taussig and his wife Klara, Luca is a blessing, but also a reminder of the cruel march DMD.

Almost from birth, the difference between the Luca and his siblings was obvious: how he became stronger every day, while Theo and Oskar deteriorat­ed. Nick, a 45-year-old film producer, says: ‘Luca was crawling at nine months and walking at 12 months. Duchenne children are like old men from the day they’re born and increasing­ly dependent on you for everything.’

Klara, who runs an after-school art club, adds: ‘Even now, Luca is stronger than his brothers, so if he pushes them or they

‘Every time I looked at my sons, all I could see was a slow, painful decline’

fight, we have to do our best to explain to him that Theo and Oskar are weak and we need to look after them.

‘Theo and Oskar love having someone to play with at their level, and that’s what they’ve got right now – all of them laughing and being happy together.

‘Luca takes the seriousnes­s out of our lives that before was so tiring – the endless trips to hospital, watching our boys deteriorat­e. Each day brings challenges but we’re counting our blessings.’

DMD affects boys who are born with a gene mutation that means they cannot produce dystrophin, a protein vital for muscle strength and function. Muscle fibres break down and are replaced by fatty issue.

The condition is usually diagnosed between the ages of two and five, and there is a steady decline in muscle strength so that by the age of 12, many boys are confined to a wheelchair. Both Theo and Oskar rely on one as they cannot walk for more than ten minutes.

Although girls can carry the faulty gene, they rarely develop any DMD symptoms.

The double diagnosis four years ago was incredibly difficult for Nick and Klara to contemplat­e. There was no family history of the illness, although they now believe Klara carried the faulty gene.

Nick says: ‘A year before, I’d approached Alex Smith of Harrison’s Fund, wanting to make a documentar­y about his attempt to complete an Ironman carrying his five-and-ahalf stone disabled son Harrison the whole way.

‘ I’d even written a pitch describing how Duchenne would slowly kill their son. Now this was our sons’ fate as well.

‘ The gut- wrenching s adness meant we were unable to sleep or think. Every time I looked at our boys, all I could see was a slow, painful decline. They would never play rugby, never go to university, never realise their full potential.’

Three months after the diagnosis, the couple were offered free pre- implantati­on genetic diagnosis (PGD) IVF at St Thomas’ Hospital in London to enable them to have a child free of the devastatin­g disease. PGD can be offered when one or both parents have, or are carriers of, a known genetic abnormalit­y. The most popular testing is for sickle cell disease, cystic fibrosis, Huntington’s and DMD.

‘At first, we thought we had more than we could handle already, but slowly we came around to the idea,’ says Nick.

‘Of course, there would be negatives, bad days and situations that would be far from perfect, but we talked and agreed the positives would surely outweigh that.’ A healthy embryo was created during the second round of IVF and Luca was born in January last year. Today, the couple, from Box Hill, Surrey, say they try not to think about the future. ‘Luca will no doubt become frustrated at times that he can’t play with his brothers in the way he would like, while Theo is already upset that Luca can play football and he can’t. We just have to keep talking, communicat­ing, listening,’ says Klara.

Theo now understand­s that he has Duchenne and describes himself as ‘disabled’. But his parents are striving to keep the boys in mainstream schools and for their lives to be as normal as possible. This is helped by Luca, whose presence makes his brothers more active. Although there is currently no cure, Theo is taking part in a trial to test a new drug which is hoped will slow the decline of muscle turning into fat.

 ??  ?? PLAY TIME: Oskar, left, Luca, centre, and Theo Taussig at their home. Only Luca doesn’t have the faulty gene that causes Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy
PLAY TIME: Oskar, left, Luca, centre, and Theo Taussig at their home. Only Luca doesn’t have the faulty gene that causes Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy
 ??  ?? DEVASTATED: Nick and wife Klara
DEVASTATED: Nick and wife Klara

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