Guest guest Posted January 21, 2010 Report Share Posted January 21, 2010 Was reading the following article about Multiple Sclerosis last evening online on the Canadian news service CBC. I left a comment below at the end of this article, about low dose naltrexone. I also have been to a Fibromyalgia support group and a chronic pain support group in London Ontario Canada to spread the good word about LDN. MS pill studies show better results, more risks Last Updated: Wednesday, January 20, 2010 | 8:08 PM ET Comments7Recommend9CBC News People with multiple sclerosis may someday have the option of taking a pill for the disease instead of the injections available now. But the oral treatments under study also carry potentially dangerous side-effects, two new studies suggest. The studies in Thursday's New England Journal of Medicine suggest the oral drugs work to reduce relapses and deterioration of the neurodegenerative disease, which attacks the brain and spinal cord. Symptoms of MS include inflammation, paralysis and problems with speech, memory and concentration. 'The studies in this issue of the Journal provide a new horizon for patients with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis.' — Dr. Carroll Current treatment therapies, which include the injection of drugs such as interferon, show good results but become tiresome for the patients in the long term, researchers say. This leads some patients to look to oral treatments, even with some increased risk, said Dr. Jock Murray, a neurologist at Dalhousie University's MS research centre in Halifax. One of the new studies tested cladribine, made by Merck Serono, which is already sold to treat a rare blood cancer. The other tested fingolimod, a daily MS pill being developed by Novartis. The two-year study of cladribine involved 1,300 people with multiple sclerosis. Half got the pill, the other half a placebo. Those taking the drug were half as likely to relapse and 30 per cent less likely to have worsening disability, Dr. Gavin Giovannoni of Queen University in London and his colleagues found. Side-effect questions Between 20 per cent and 30 per cent of those taking cladribine developed low white blood-cell counts, and there also were more cases of shingles, the study found. The second study, by Dr. Cohen of the Neurologic Institute in Cleveland and colleagues, followed 1,200 MS patients, who were given either fingolimod or an injection of interferon, the standard treatment. There was less brain shrinkage, a sign of worsening disease, among those taking fingolimod. About 20 per cent of those taking the pill had relapses compared with 30 per cent for the injection group. There were also more shingles cases in the fingolimod group. Nine per cent of those on fingolimod had serious side-effects, compared with six per cent for the interferon. Two people on fingolimod died of herpes infections and eight had skin cancers. There were also more heart problems in the fingolimod group. For instance, 2.7 per cent had bradycardia or a slow heart rate, compared with 0.7 per cent for the standard treatment. " As with other new therapies for MS, there are better results but increased risks, " Murray said. Treatment options Until the side-effects of cladribine and fingolimod are better understood, doctors will likely continue using injection treatments, said Dr. Neil Lava, the director of Emory University's multiple sclerosis clinic. An editorial in the New England Journal of Medicine accompanying the research welcomed the findings. " The studies in this issue of the Journal provide a new horizon for patients with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis and a welcome increase in the range of treatment options, " wrote Dr. Carroll of Sir Gairdner Hospital in Perth, Australia. The two drugs work in different ways by targeting T cells, which are involved in the immune system's attack on myelin — the protective coating around nerve cells that becomes damaged in multiple sclerosis. Cladribine causes active T cells to undergo apoptosis, the most common type of cell death. Fingolimod causes a receptor on the surface of T cells to stop working properly, so the cells can no longer respond to signals directing them to attack nerves in MS. The pills for MS will not be available immediately, Murray said, because they have not been approved by regulators in the United States or Canada. If approved in Canada, provincial funding for the drugs would be another step. Merck Serono filed for U.S. approval in late November. Novartis said in mid-December that its FDA filing for fingolimod was imminent. Each company financed the studies of their drugs. Authors involved in each study reported receiving fees from drug companies. With files from The Associated Press Post a comment 7Comments have been postedRecommend this story 9People have recommended this storyLICENSE | EMAIL | PRINT | Text Size: S M L XL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK | Story comments (7) Sort: Most recent | First to last | Agreed gumhead wrote: Posted 2010/01/21 at 12:03 AM ET Low dose naltrexone is another option for MS patients and other patients with autoimmune disease. It is a medication that has been around for decades with extremely minor side effects. It slows the progression of MS and often treats symptoms as well. There is a grassroots movement world wide to bring this drug to the attention of doctors so this will be prescribed as a first line treatment for MS and autoimmune diseases, before prescribing medications with severe side effects. A petition has recently been brought to 10 Downing Street with 13,000 signatures in favor of LDN (low dose naltrexone). They are petitioning the UK government to have this medication covered by the NHS (National Health Service). For more information, visit www.ldn.org Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 21, 2010 Report Share Posted January 21, 2010 The interesting thing about these drugs is that the proposed mechanism by which they function involves the destruction of T cells. The implication is that MS is the result of " molecular mimicry, " in which the immune system is combating an intruder, and (unfortunately) part of that intruder sufficiently resembles the body's own tissues, resulting in autoimmune attack. In the case of MS, it's probably Chlamydia pneumoniae; in the case of Crohn's, it's probably Klebsiella pneumoniae. (No relationship- just a lousy coincidence.) Interestingly, if MS starts in the gut (one reason why selective diets seem to help, not to mention the effect of naltrexone- patching up the gut in MS as well as Crohn's disease), it is conceivable that the efficacy of these T-cell ablation therapies would be markedly more effective if combined with a low-carb diet. -AJ > Posted 2010/01/21 > at 12:03 AM ET Low dose naltrexone is another option for MS patients and other patients with autoimmune disease. It is a medication that has been around for decades with extremely minor side effects. It slows the progression of MS and often treats symptoms as well. There is a grassroots movement world wide to bring this drug to the attention of doctors so this will be prescribed as a first line treatment for MS and autoimmune diseases, before prescribing medications with severe side effects. A petition has recently been brought to 10 Downing Street with 13,000 signatures in favor of LDN (low dose naltrexone). They are petitioning the UK government to have this medication covered by the NHS (National Health Service). For more information, visit www.ldn.org > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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