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NOT A CURE, BUT HOPE |
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Drug shows promise in treating MS
Antegren reduced the number of new brain lesions in patients with MS and cut number of relapses in half.
Jan. 1 — An experimental drug shows promise as an effective new approach for treating multiple sclerosis and the intestinal ailment Crohn’s disease. In preliminary tests, the new drug Antegren dramatically reduced the number of new brain lesions in patients with MS and cut the number of relapses in half. In Crohn’s patients, it increased the rate of remission and improved the patients’ quality of life.
Both were early studies, and researchers stressed
that more definitive results will come from larger, longer studies that are now
under way.
“At this stage, these are very promising
results,” said one of the MS researchers, Dr. David H. Miller of the Institute
of Neurology in London. “One
hopes that these will be confirmed and then one will have an additional
effective treatment for people with MS.”
The findings were reported in Thursday’s New
England Journal of Medicine. The
studies were funded by the two companies developing the drug, Elan Corp. and
Biogen Inc. Some of the researchers
have received grants from the companies or worked as consultants for them.
IMMUNE SYSTEM GONE AWRY
There is no cure for MS or Crohn’s and the causes
are unknown. In both, the immune
system goes awry, resulting in inflammation and damage to brain tissue in MS and
to the intestinal wall in Crohn’s disease.
MS patients can have loss of balance and
coordination, blurry vision and fatigue. Crohn’s
causes chronic diarrhea, abdominal pain, fever, and weight loss.
Current treatments include injections of interferon,
which slows down the immune system, or anti-inflammatory drugs, including
steroids, which ease the swelling. Some
of the drugs have serious side effects and they don’t work for all patients,
researchers said.
Antegren, also called natalizumab, is the first
in a new class of medicines that uses a novel approach to prevent inflammation.
It attaches to the immune cells and stops them from leaving the
bloodstream and reaching the areas of inflammation in MS and Crohn’s.
Dr. Lars Ekman, president of research and
development at Elan, said the companies expect to seek approval for the drug at
the end of 2003 in the United States and Europe. Depending on the regulatory process, the drug could be
available as early as the end of 2004, he said.
In the MS study, 213 patients in the United States,
Canada and the United Kingdom were given six monthly infusions of one of two
Antegren doses or a dummy drug. Patients
who received the dummy drug had about 10 new brain lesions, compared to about
one new lesion in those getting Antegren, a reduction of about 90 percent.
The frequency of relapses was cut in half in
the Antegren groups, to 19 percent from 38 percent in the comparison group.
The 248 patients in the Crohn’s study in
Europe received 2 infusions a month apart of either of 2 Antegren doses, a dummy
drug or a combination of Antegren and the dummy drug. A scoring system measured their response over 12 weeks.
REMISSION RATE
Overall, the patients who received only Antegren had
higher remission rates and response rates.
The highest remission rate was 44 % at 6-weeks in the low dose Antegren
group, compared with 27 % in the dummy drug group.
In both studies, there were few serious side
effects and there was no difference in side effects between the treatment
groups.
One of the Crohn’s researchers, Dr. Subrata
Ghosh of Imperial College London, said he was particularly encouraged because
the drug improved the quality of patient’s lives.
“The wider the choice of therapy available,
the better for the patients. And
certainly as clinicians, we welcome that,” said Ghosh.
Patricia O’Looney, director of biomedical
research programs for the National Multiple Sclerosis Society, said the future
for MS treatment may be drug combinations.
One of the ongoing studies is testing Antegren with a standard interferon
drug.
“It’s promising new results for a new
approach to treating people with MS, but we’re not at the end of the story
yet,’ said O’Looney.
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Modified: 17 September 2005 |