Spiderman-loving Saffie was diagnosed with LCA when she was five and a half-years-old after her parents noticed she was struggling to see in the dark.
After undergoing tests at Moorfields Eye Hospital, she was transferred to GOSH to have the eye gene therapy, Luxturna, which is the first of its kind for one of the genetic causes of LCA.
Mum Lisa said: “Saffie’s diagnosis came as a huge shock to us, as we’d never heard of the condition or knew me and her dad Tam were carriers. It was such a rollercoaster of a journey, but we were so relieved and grateful when we heard there was a treatment available on the NHS for Saffie. We were told that without the treatment, she would be blind by the age of 30.
Saffie had the eye gene therapy in her first eye in April 2025 just before her sixth birthday, and in her second eye in September 2025.
“Having the treatment has been life-changing, it’s like someone waved a magic wand and restored her sight in the dark. We’ve been able to take her trick or treating, and out to restaurants in the evening – something that was impossible before.
“Her peripheral sight in the daylight has also improved. She’s now able to see hazards and has improved at school. She’s thriving and you wouldn’t know she had the condition just by looking at her.”
actionerror on April 24th, 2026 at 23:46 UTC »
https://giphy.com/gifs/DvtsYOKrqPZg4
And more
octopusgardeb on April 24th, 2026 at 19:11 UTC »
TLDR she’s spider man now
https://giphy.com/gifs/lnieUIckonF4eA0tGF
VVynn on April 24th, 2026 at 18:02 UTC »
To be clear, she doesn’t have a superpower. It just restored some degree of normal vision in low light.