MSUD
NIH Family Members Giving Back: Charlotte Phillips
Posted on by Dr. Francis Collins

Caption: Charlotte Phillips during a visit to a Missouri Mennonite community.
Credit: Richard Hillman
At 1 a.m., most people are fast asleep in their beds. But Charlotte Phillips sometimes finds herself up at that odd hour, waiting anxiously in a deserted Missouri parking lot far from her home. Phillips drives there to meet a contact for a very special delivery: a packet of cheek swabs and blood samples from a newborn Mennonite baby at risk of a life-threatening genetic condition called maple syrup urine disease (MSUD).
For more than two decades, Phillips, an NIH grantee at the University of Missouri, Columbia, has volunteered to ensure that the DNA in these swabs and samples is tested for MSUD within hours of a baby’s birth. If found to be positive for the condition, the baby can receive a needed special formula. Without it, the baby would suffer brain damage within days from its inability to break down amino acids in protein-rich foods, including breast milk and standard infant formula. Hurrying off at a moment’s notice isn’t always convenient, but Phillips, who is not Mennonite, feels a personal calling to do it. She wouldn’t want any babies to die.
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Posted In: Health, Science, Tribute
Tags: DNA test, genetic testing, genetics, Maple Syrup Urine Disease, Mennonites, metabolic disease, MSUD, pediatrics, rare diseases, volunteerism, volunteers