By Ben Musanje
For 34 years, Allan Byamukama lived with pain that could strike at any moment. The pain was brutal. Sudden. Unforgiving.
“On a scale of one to ten, it was always a ten,” Byamukama said. “It felt like my bones were being crushed. Within minutes, I could not walk or talk.”
Byamukama was born in Uganda with sickle cell disease, a serious blood disorder that affects millions of people worldwide and about 100,000 people in the United States alone. In Uganda, according to the Ministry of Health over 20,000 babies are born each year with the Sickle Cell Disease (SCD) and without proper care, many do not live to see their fifth birthday. 20 percent of the Ugandan population have the genetic trait of sickle cell. Many patients with the disease die 20 to 30 years earlier than people without it.
Today, Byamukama’s life has changed forever. He has become the first Ugandan known to be healed of sickle cell disease using advanced gene therapy technology, marking a major medical breakthrough.
A life ruled by sickness
Allan Byamukama was diagnosed at just five months old. His eyes turned yellow. His fingers and toes swelled. He cried constantly.
Doctors later confirmed he had sickle cell disease, an inherited condition that causes red blood cells to become hard and curved like a sickle. These cells block blood flow, leading to severe pain, organ damage, stroke and heart attack.
As a child, Byamukama was different from other children. He could not play football. He missed school for long periods. Pain crises came without warning—sometimes every month.
“My parents rushed me to hospital every time,” Byamukama said. “They saved my life many times.”
A desperate search for hope
At age 28, Byamukama moved from Uganda to Massachusetts in the United States. He wanted to continue his education and find better medical care. But his condition worsened.
Despite treatment, the pain became more frequent. Soon, Byamukama was visiting the emergency room every few days. That is when he came under the care of Dr. Sharl Azar, Medical Director of the Sickle Cell Disease Treatment Center at Massachusetts General Hospital.
“He was suffering badly,” Dr. Azar said. “No standard treatment was helping him anymore. His quality of life was very poor, and we were worried about his future.”
During one visit, Dr. Azar told Byamukama about a new gene therapy that was about to be approved in the United States. “I did not hesitate,” Byamukama said. “I said yes immediately.”
The doctors behind the breakthrough
The treatment, called Casgevy, is one of the most advanced gene therapies ever developed for sickle cell disease. Byamukama became the first patient at Massachusetts General Hospital to receive it and one of only 15 patients worldwide at the time.
The treatment was led by Dr. Sharl Azar and Dr. Richard Newcomb, a specialist in bone marrow and stem cell transplantation.
“This treatment requires many doctors working together,” Dr. Azar said. “Dr. Newcomb handled the transplant. I managed the sickle cell complications.”
Doctors removed Byamukama’s stem cells and edited them in a laboratory to reactivate fetal hemoglobin, a healthy type of blood that protects against sickle cell damage.
After intensive chemotherapy and more than a month in hospital, the edited cells were returned to his body.
Pain disappears
Just weeks after treatment, the results were dramatic. Byamukama’s blood tests improved. His red blood cells began living longer. Most importantly, the pain stopped. “He has not had any pain crises,” Dr. Azar said. “This is exactly what we hoped to see.”
While doctors say the therapy is not a complete cure, studies show it greatly reduces pain crises and may prevent deadly organ damage.
A future once impossible
Today, Byamukama is finishing his graduate studies and planning a future he never believed was possible. “I am not cured,” he said. “But I am free from constant pain. I can live my life.”
Sickle cell disease affects millions of people, especially in Africa. Allan Byamukama’s success is a powerful sign that science may finally be winning the fight.
From a child who lived in constant pain to a man walking free from it, Byamukama’s story is more than medical history. It is a story of hope.






















