Jump to content


- - - - -

Multiple Sclerosis 'reversed' With Stem Cell Therapy


  • Please log in to reply
1 reply to this topic

#1 longhaul

longhaul

    Member

  • Members
  • PipPip
  • 1,513 posts
  • Country:n. cali
  • Spinal Injury Level / Relationship:T6-T7

Posted 31 January 2009 - 06:33 AM

11:57 30 January 2009 by Linda Geddes


For the first time, some of the disability associated with the early stages of multiple sclerosis appears to have been reversed. The treatment works by resetting patients' immune systems using their own stem cells.

While randomised clinical trials are still needed to confirm the findings, they offer new hope to people in the early stages of the disease who don't respond to drug treatment.

Multiple sclerosis is an autoimmune disease in which the fatty myelin sheath that wraps around nerve cells and speeds up their rate of transmission comes under attack from the body's own defences.
Clean slate

Richard Burt of Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago and his colleagues had previously tried using stem cells to reverse this process in patients with advanced stages of the disease, with little success.

"If you wait until there's neuro-degeneration, you're trying to close the barn door after the horse has already escaped," says Burt. What you really want to do is stop the autoimmune attack before it causes nerve-cell damage, he adds.

In the latest trial, his team recruited 12 women and 11 men in the early relapsing-remitting stage of MS, who had not responded to treatment with the drug, interferon beta, after six months.

They removed stem cells from the patients' bone marrow, and then used chemicals to destroy all existing immune cells in the body, before re-injecting the stem cells. These then developed into naïve immune cells that do not see myelin as alien, and hence do not attack it.

Three years later, 17 of the patients had improved by at least one point on a standard disability scale, while none of the patients had deteriorated.
First reversal

"For the first time ever in the history of treating MS we have reversed disability," says Burt.

He cautions that more trials are needed to confirm the findings – and these are now underway – but eventually, stem cell transplantation could provide an alternative to drugs in patients who don't respond to them. Transplantation also has the benefit of being a one-off treatment.

"These are very encouraging results, and it's exciting to see that in this trial not only is progression of disability halted, but damage appears to be reversed," says Doug Brown at the UK's MS Society.

"Stem cells are showing more and more potential in the treatment of MS and the challenge we now face is proving their effectiveness in trials involving large numbers of people," he says.

#2 cate

cate

    Member

  • Members
  • PipPip
  • 222 posts
  • Gender:Female
  • Country:cambridgeshire uk
  • Spinal Injury Level / Relationship:daughter has c5 c6 sci

Posted 31 January 2009 - 02:17 PM

Yes I read about the stem cell trials for MS suffers and it is good news, even in the early stages, as so far it has been absolute blank. My mother in law suffered this for many years, as a a para, I do hope it continues, and it seems to me that more and more people are being diagnosed with this, I wonder why, I do know that child birth can accerlarate it. but a lot of men also have it, and there is no pattern to it. so I hope good luck will continue with this, and that it may open other doors.
Cate




1 user(s) are reading this topic

0 members, 1 guests, 0 anonymous users



This website is a way for those with spinal cord injuries to share experiences and advice. Any medical matters, treatments or alternative therapies discussed on this website should be thoroughly reviewed by a medical professional or therapist before being acted upon. Under no circumstances should you alter prescribed medication or a medical care plan without consulting your doctor or care plan supervisor first.