PARIS: A drug
initially developed to treat some types of cancer now appears to help
people suffering from multiple sclerosis (MS), a study said Thursday.
The
drug, alemtuzumab, proved effective in patient trials at reducing
relapses -- a key feature of MS which sees symptoms appear sporadically.
In
one trial, patients who received the drug "were nearly half as likely
to relapse within two years than those who received interferon", the
most commonly-used MS drug, said a statement by The Lancet medical
journal which published the research.
A second trial had similar results.
The
outcome "offers the prospect of substantial improvement in quality of
life and a better future for thousands of people with MS," said Alastair
Compston from the University of Cambridge, principal investigator on
both studies.
Many MS patients already use alemtuzumab, even though it has not been licenced for this purpose.
Both
trials were Phase III, which is the final testing stage in a process to
vet a new drug. Together, the two involved some 1,400 patients.
About
100,000 people in Britain and about 400,000 in the United States are
believed to suffer from MS, which sees the immune system attacking the
body's own nerve fibres.
This affects vision, movement, balance, sensation, bladder control and eventually also memory and thinking.
About
85 percent of patients start with a form of the disease known as
"relapsing remitting" MS, with symptoms appearing sporadically (a
relapse) before fading away again.
There is no cure, and existing
drugs seek to reduce symptoms, said the statement. Success of a drug is
measured by a reduction in the frequency of relapses.
The
researchers found that alemtuzumab, licenced to treat leukaemia,
appeared to increase the risk of certain auto-immune disorders,
particularly those affecting the thyroid, but said these could be
treated effectively.
The Lancet, in an editorial, said the
results were encouraging but added that there were concerns that
licencing the drug for MS may lead to a rise in cost.
"More effective, affordable, evidence-based treatments with long-term benefits are desperately needed," it said.
"Finding
promising treatments such as alemtuzumab is important. But so is
keeping alemtuzumab accessible and affordable if its early success in
these trials proves to be of enduring value."
Regulatory
authorities in the US and Europe are likely to approve the drug for MS
use during the course of 2013, according to University of Cambridge
spokeswoman Genevieve Maul.
No comments:
Post a Comment