MS patients seek safe and effective treatment: answers found in a decade of experience. (Advertisement).Multiple sclerosis became treatable in 1993 Multiple sclerosis (MS) has become more manageable, in large part because of the availability of disease-modifying drugs typified by the interferon-betas. The first of these therapies, interferon beta-1b interferon beta-1b Betaferon (UK), Betaseron Pharmacologic class: Biological response modifier Therapeutic class: Antiviral, immunoregulator Pregnancy risk category C Action(Betaseron[R]), began clinical trials in 1988 and was approved by the US Food and Drug Administration for widespread use in 1993. Since then it has become apparent that treatment is best started at the very first stages of illness, because doing so increases the odds that therapy will be effective.Long-term therapy helps prevent future relapses and limit permanent nerve damage Immunotherapies are to MS what insulin is to diabetes. As long as a person with diabetes stays on insulin, the disease stays under control. So, too, as long as a person with MS continues to use immunotherapy, disease flare-ups disease flare-up A transient ↑ in severity of the manifestations of a disease can be reduced. Patients need assurance of safety with extended treatment Neither insulin nor disease-modifying therapies are without side effects Side effects Effects of a proposed project on other parts of the firm. .* Fortunately, adverse reactions adverse reactions, n.pl unfavorable reactions resulting from administration of a local anesthetic; responsible factors include the drug used, concentration, and route of administration. to anti-MS therapies, particularly flulike symptoms, usually occur only at the beginning of treatment and can be controlled by lowering the dosage for a few weeks and taking ibuprofen ibuprofen (ī`by prō'fən), nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) that reduces pain, fever, and inflammation. during the 24 hours after injection. Encouraging results have been reported Positive long-term safety and tolerability data are now available. At multiple research sites in Canada, people with MS have been treated with interferon beta-1b for almost 13 years. Their progress has been carefully monitored by teams of clinical researchers. One such team, composed of doctors from the University of Western Ontario Western is one of Canada's leading universities, ranked #1 in the Globe and Mail University Report Card 2005 for overall quality of education.[2] It ranked #3 among medical-doctoral level universities according to Maclean's Magazine 2005 University Rankings. in London, Ont, and led by George Rice, MD, recently described their preliminary long-term safety and tolerability findings among patients treated with Betaseron. The report was presented at the ECTRIMS ECTRIMS European Committee for Treatment and Research in Multiple Sclerosis Conference in Dublin, Ireland, last September. Forty-five patients with relapsing-remitting MS began Betaseron treatment at the London (Ont.) Health Sciences Centre in 1988; of these, 31 elected to continue therapy after 5 years of treatment. Nineteen (61%) of these 31 patients are still using Betaseron. Tolerability of the drug in those who continued treatment was very good. For example, flulike symptoms largely disappeared. Although skin damage at the site of injection occurred in 16% of the patients, it was not an impediment to long-term use. It is important to note that no unexpected adverse effects were reported in this group of patients who had more than a decade of Betaseron therapy. Long-Term Tolerability of Betaseron[R] Exceeds Expectations George Rice, MD, Director of the MS Clinic, London Health Sciences Centre The London Health Sciences Centre is a major teaching hospital in London, Ontario, Canada. It operates three hospital facilities:
"Favorable long-term tolerability, depression of MRI 1. (application) MRI - Magnetic Resonance Imaging. 2. MRI - Measurement Requirements and Interface. T2 lesion burden, and the disappearance of neutralizing antibodies are reassuring to patients who have begun long-term treatment programs with interferon beta-1b. These factors may explain a treatment compliance of 61% ... which we consider remarkable for such a treatment." These long-term tolerability data come as particularly welcome news in conjunction with the American Academy of Neurology The American Academy of Neurology (AAN) is a professional society for neurologists and neuroscientists. As a medical specialty society it was established in 1949 by A.B. Baker of the University of Minnesota to advance the art and science of neurology, and thereby promote the best guidelines that confirm the effectiveness of interferon beta-1b in slowing disease progression. |
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