Guest guest Posted January 23, 2001 Report Share Posted January 23, 2001 Whew...there's that HLA gene again... Patty From: ilena rose <ilena@...> Sent: Monday, January 22, 2001 6:51 PM Subject: LYME VACCINE LINKED TO AUTOIMMUNE ARTHRITIS > LYME VACCINE LINKED TO AUTOIMMUNE ARTHRITIS > By Otto in the January 200l issue of PHARMACY TODAY > > Kline Beechan To Defend Vaccine In Class Action Suit > > Concerns are growing that Kline Beecham's Lyme vaccine (LYMErix) may > cause irreversible autoimmune arthritis in some patients. About 15% of the > nearly 400 LYMErix adverse events reported to FDA in 1999 involved > rheumatologic > symptoms ranging from muscle pain and acing joints to severe arthritis. > > The reports suggest that a concern raised in preapproval hearings-the > possib- > ility that the vaccine could trigger degenerative autoimmune disease-may not > have been unfounded. Although patients who received the vaccine during > trials > were no more likely than others to develop long-term rheumatologic or > neurologic disorders, vaccine recipients were significantly more likely to > report arthralgia and myalgia within 30 days of administration. > > Kline Beecham stands by the safety of its vaccine, currently the only > one on the market for Lyme disease. " We are aware that this debate is out > there about this theoretical risk, " the company told PHARMACY TODAY. " But we > are not seeing any unusual, unexpected patterns, " she said, noting that the > rates of rheumatologic disease among LYMErix patients are similar to those > in the general population. The vaccine is about 80% effective in preventing > Lyme > disease and has been administered to 440,000 patients since its approval in > 1998. > > DEEP QUESTIONS ABOUT SURFACE ANTIGENS > > The concerns about arthritis hinge on human leukocyte antigen DR4 (HLA-DR4), > a surface protein found on white blood cells in about 10% to 30% of the pop- > ulation. It is easily detected by a blood test, but the test costs $300. > > A class action lawsuit has been filed against Kline by scores of > patients who developed severe arthritis after getting the vaccine. The suit > alleges that LYMErix triggers degenerative autoimmune disease in > HLA-DR4-positive patients and that Kline knew of the association before > its vaccine was approved but failed to warn doctors. > > The spokesperson denies the charge. " We looked at it in our clinical trials, > specifically at this idea that people who tested positive for the HLA-DR4 > were more likely to develop arthritis than anyone else, and found no > evidence > of it " , she said. The company plans a vigorous defense of its product. > > But a handful of rheumatologists are already refusing to give the vaccine to > their patients, among them Andra Gaito, MD, president of the International > Lyme and Associated Diseases Society. Gaito has treated 22 patients who deve > loped severe, crippling rheumatologic disorders following vaccination. A > colleague of hers at Yale has treated 40 such patients. > > " The rheumatology community was suspicious of this vaccine to begin with, " > Gaito said. " Before it was ever approved, there were reports published of > autoimmune reactions in rats, mice, and other lab animals. It doesn't seem > limited to DR4 positive patients. There is such a clear-cut problem here > that > this (product) needs to come off the market. " > > In response to such concerns, FDA recently said it would investigate all > cases of vaccine-associated arthritis, a step that indicates heightened > concern. The agency usually only investigates life-threatening vaccine > complications. > > PREAPPROVAL TESTIMONY > > LYMErix was generally recommended as safe and effective for adults when appr > oved in 1998, but FDA panelists in preapproval hearings were concerned > that it could trigger autoimmune reactions in HLA-DRA4-positive patients. > > Two HLA-DR4-positive study patients, did, in fact, develop joint pain that > lasted for months after being immunized. FDA wondered if these cases > pointed to a potential problem and if the clinical trials had been powerful > enough to > detect one if it existed. > > " I am not sure that we have the answer to your question, " a Kline > researcher told the panelists, but the agency was assured that if the > vaccine > " induces joint symptoms, it must be a rare phenomenon, much rarer than the > (HLA=-DR4 trait) itself. " The idea of testing patients for the trait was > mentioned, but dismissed as " very difficult. " Concern about HLA-DR4 status > was deemed more academic than practical, the company researcher argued. > > " The concern is more than academic if this vaccine were to be delivered to > millions of people, " a FDA panelist shot back. " We don't know for a fact > that > the vaccine elicited either one of these episodes of arthritis and > paresthesias, but I think we are all worried about that. I am left with > uncertainties about whether these two cases are in fact a signal of > something > that we would have seen if we had been able to follow (patients) longer. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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