The Donnells had happy, “normal” children. And then the unthinkable happened. Twice.
From the outside, Megan and Al Donnell looked like they had it all. This family of four from Freshwater in northern Sydney have two beautiful children – Isla, 5 and Jude, 3 – and were enjoying life. That is, until they started to notice that their daughter wasn’t speaking at the same rate as other children.
They started doing special activities to help her development but results were limited. Then, the call no parent wants to face. Her new school said they had serious concerns and asked her worried parents to have her properly assessed.
Isla was diagnosed with Sanfilippo Syndrome, a rare genetic disease that affects neurological function. For children with Sanfilippo, they are born seeming completely normal but at around the age of two or three, they start to regress.
The deadly metabolic disorder is officially classified as ultra-rare, affecting one in 70,000 births.
"The doctors, I can remember early on, just kept saying to us, “Oh, but this is so rare. But this is so rare.”' Megan told 60 Minutes tonight. "But that doesn’t matter. It doesn’t matter how rare it is to us, because it happened to us."
And then it happened again.
Due to Isla's diagnosis, these shocked parents were urged to have their son tested, 'just in case'. There was a 1 in 4 chance he too would have the syndrome. He does. Now Megan and Al face life caring for two very sick children.