DJ always seemed to have skin infections, and he got sick easily. Doctors in his native India originally believed his skin infections were a type of allergy. But medication wasn't helping. Bloodwork eventually showed DJ had been born with a compromised immune system.
To find out what was causing his immunodeficiency, DJ's family brought their son to the United States. But tests came back inconclusive until doctors referred DJ to the National Institutes of Health for genetic testing.
One year after beginning genetic testing at the NIH Clinical Center, DJ's family finally got a diagnosis: Dock8 deficiency, a rare genetic mutation on the Dock8 gene that causes immunodeficiencies, leaving patients prone to minor and potentially serious viral and other infections, along with certain cancers.
His diagnosis made DJ eligible to participate in a Dock8 clinical trial through the National Cancer Institute, where advancements in bone marrow transplants have helped children and adults with a range of immunodeficiencies replace their compromised immune systems with healthy ones from donors. In 2015, DJ underwent a successful transplant that helped him rebuild a healthy immune system with the help of a donor from London, England.
But none of this would have been possible without the public's support of The Children's Inn. Since 2014, DJ, 16, has stayed at The Children's Inn 17 times – all at no cost to his family.