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New
hope for multiple sclerosis sufferers Research
indicates drug not only stops the disease from advancing but may also restore
lost function in many patients A drug which was
developed in The study, led by
researchers from the Alemtuzumab has a long
connection with The new study, which
was funded by Genzyme and Bayer Schering Pharma AG,
Germany , found that alemtuzumab reduces the number
of attacks experienced by people with relapsing-remitting multiple
sclerosis by 74 per cent over and above that achieved with interferon
beta-1a, one of the most effective licensed therapies for similar cases
of MS. More importantly, alemtuzumab also reduced the
risk of sustained accumulation of disability by 71 per cent compared to
interferon beta-1a. Additionally, the investigators
showed that many individuals in the trial who received alemtuzumab
recovered some of their lost functions and so were less disabled after
three years than at the beginning of the study, in contrast to worsening
disability in the interferon beta-1a treated patients. These findings
suggest that alemtuzumab may allow damaged brain tissue to repair,
enabling the recovery of neurologic functions lost following poor
recovery from previous MS attacks. The
new research shows that alemtuzumab is a much more effective treatment
for early-stage RRMS than the currently approved drug interferon
beta-1a. However, as the study was a Phase 2 clinical
trial, additional research will need to be conducted before the drug is
considered for approval in the treatment of MS. “Alemtuzumab
is the most promising experimental drug for the treatment of multiple
sclerosis, and we are hopeful that the Phase 3 trials will confirm that
it can both stabilize and allow some recovery of what had previously
been assumed to be irreversible disabilities,” says the principal
investigator Alastair Compston, Professor of Neurology and the Head of
the Department of Clinical Neurosciences at the University of Cambridge.
Multiple
sclerosis is an autoimmune disease which is caused by the body’s
immune system attacking nerve fibres and their protective insulation,
the myelin sheath, in the central nervous system. This
damage prevents the nerves from ‘firing’ properly, and then leads to
their destruction, resulting in physical and intellectual disabilities.
Alemtuzumab works by destroying one population of white blood
cell (lymphocytes) and, by shutting down the immune system, inhibits the
damage to brain tissue that occurs in MS. “The
ability of an MS drug to promote brain repair is unprecedented.
We are witnessing a drug which, if given early enough, might
effectively stop the advancement of the disease and also restore lost
function by promoting repair of the damaged brain tissue,” says Dr
Alasdair Coles, University Lecturer at the Department of Clinical
Neurosciences, The
main side effect of treatment is, paradoxically, that people can develop
other autoimmune diseases as the immune system gradually recovers
following exposure to alemtuzumab. During the trial, 20% of people
treated with alemtuzumab developed an over- or under-active thyroid
gland. Rarely (3%) people developed a low platelet
count and were vulnerable to bleeding. This complication led to one
fatality during the trial. Although potentially very serious, this
complication can be easily treated if recognised early. The
Phase 2 clinical study involved 334 patients who had been diagnosed with
early-stage RRMS but had not previously been treated. Patients
either received alemtuzumab (one of two dose levels intravenously for
five days initially and three days of re-treatment 12 months later) or
interferon beta-1a (given by injection three times per week).
The patients were followed for three years to determine the
efficacy of the treatments as well as the effect on the patients’
disabilities. MS
affects almost 100,000 people in the For
additional information, please Notes
1.
The paper, ‘Alemtuzumab versus Interferon beta-1a in Early,
Relapsing-Remitting Multiple Sclerosis’, is published in the 23
October 2008 edition of the New England Journal of Medicine. 2.
History of alemtuzumab and Alemtuzumab
(previously known as Campath-1H) was first created by academics at Since
1991, Professor Alastair Compston, principal investigator of this study,
has been exploring the use of alemtuzumab as an experimental treatment
of multiple sclerosis. Dr Alasdair Coles joined the team in 1994 and has
since had primary responsibility for most practical aspects of the work.
The scientists initially treated individuals with severe forms of the
disease in whom disability was already well advanced. Although
alemtuzumab successfully stopped new attacks of multiple sclerosis in
these people, their disability continued to get worse. The
doctors realized that once the immune system has attacked the insulating
covering to the nerves in the brain (the myelin sheath), the consequent
secondary damage to the underlying nerves continues unabated, even if
the immune attack has been turned off by alemtuzumab. It was at this
stage that they decided to treat people with much earlier multiple
sclerosis, before there was too much permanent damage in the brain and
spinal cord. 4.
The clinical trial was sponsored by Genzyme, who own the rights
to develop Campath® and have
strongly supported the MS programme. Genzyme and Bayer Schering
Pharma AG, 5.
Relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS) is the most common
form of MS. It is often followed by secondary-progressive
MS (SPMS) which is a more disabling form of the disease. |