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Self help: stem cells rescue lupus patients.


By rebuilding a patient's immune system using his or her own stem cells, doctors can reverse the course of lupus in severely ill patients for whom medication no longer works, a new study shows.

In this autoimmune disease, white blood cells White blood cells
A group of several cell types that occur in the bloodstream and are essential for a properly functioning immune system.

Mentioned in: Abscess Incision & Drainage, Bone Marrow Transplantation, Complement Deficiencies
 go awry and create antibodies that target the person's cells and tissues. The tissue damage results in rashes, swollen joints, fever, and fatigue. Lupus can also turn deadly and attack vital organs, especially the kidneys, lungs, and nervous system.

Immune-suppressing drugs can alleviate symptoms, but they sometimes have debilitating de·bil·i·tat·ing
adj.
Causing a loss of strength or energy.


Debilitating
Weakening, or reducing the strength of.

Mentioned in: Stress Reduction
 side effects. In many patients, the drugs eventually stop working.

The experimental therapy uses stem cells to make new, healthy white blood cells to replace the tissue-targeting ones. Doctors first administer a drug that coaxes those cells out of a patient's bone marrow into the bloodstream. The researchers isolate these stem cells from the patient's blood.

The patients then receive drugs that wipe out the remaining defective white blood cells. This treatment leaves the patient temporarily without an immune system. Finally, the doctors return to the patient's bloodstream the stem cells that had been isolated. Being in blood expedites their transformation into working immune cells.

These stem cells--sometimes called adult stem cells rather than embryonic stem cells--form a fresh army of white blood cells that's less likely to make rogue antibodies.

"We kind of reboot the computer," says Richard K. Burt, a physician and immunologist at Northwestern University School of Medicine in Chicago, who pioneered the therapy.

Since 1997, when Burt performed the first stem cell therapy stem cell therapy Cell therapy Molecular medicine A technology in which a person's own cells–eg, neuronal stem cells are triggered to revert to their primitive embryonic form, then redifferentiate into mature cells of various organs  for lupus, he and his colleagues have treated 48 people at Northwestern Memorial Hospital in Chicago. The patients all had life-threatening disease or impending im·pend  
intr.v. im·pend·ed, im·pend·ing, im·pends
1. To be about to occur: Her retirement is impending.

2.
 organ damage and weren't expected to improve.

No patient died from the therapy; Butt and his team report in the Feb. 1 Journal of the American Medical Association JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association is an international peer-reviewed general medical journal, published 48 times per year by the American Medical Association. JAMA is the most widely circulated medical journal in the world.  (JAMA JAMA
abbr.
Journal of the American Medical Association
). As of 6 mouths ago, after an average follow-up of 29 months, 42 of the patients were still alive. Lupus was in remission in 33 of these patients, Burt says. One patient has survived nearly 8 years.

Roughly 1.5 million people in the United States have lupus. "About 15 to 20 percent of them [become] seriously ill," says Joan Merrill, medical director of the Lupus Foundation of America The Lupus Foundation of America (LFA) is the nation's leading non-profit voluntary health organization dedicated to finding the causes of and cure for lupus. The LFA was founded in 1977, and currently operates a nationwide network of almost 300 chapters, branches and support groups.  and a rheumatologist at the Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation The Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation (OMRF), located in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, is an independent, nonprofit biomedical research institute. Established in 1946, OMRF is dedicated to understanding and developing more effective treatments for human disease. Stephen M.  in Oklahoma City.

Although preliminary, she says, "these new data are very exciting."

While a stem cell transplant doesn't necessarily represent a cure, "the therapy offered substantial benefit ... to the majority of patients," say lupus specialist Michelle Petri and hematologist he·ma·tol·o·gist
n.
A physician specializing in hematology.


Hematologist
A medical specialist who treats diseases and disorders of the blood and blood-forming organs.
 Robert A. Brodsky of Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions in Baltimore in the same issue of JAMA.

Burt's team has received Food and Drug Administration clearance to begin a large-scale trial in which randomly selected volunteers will get either the stem cell treatment or the best medication currently available.
COPYRIGHT 2006 Science Service, Inc.
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Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:This Week
Author:Seppa, N.
Publication:Science News
Geographic Code:1U3IL
Date:Feb 4, 2006
Words:476
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