Cancer medication can be used for late-stage MS, says FDA
Published:
14 October 2000 y., Saturday
The U.S. government gave its approval Friday for doctors to use a cancer drug as the first treatment for people with crippling late-stage multiple sclerosis.
AN ESTIMATED 350,000 Americans suffer from MS, a disease that attacks the nervous system to cause weakness, blurred vision, poor muscle coordination and sometimes paralysis.
The Food and Drug Administration approved mitoxantrone — to be sold under the name Novantrone — for patients with the secondary progressive form of the disease. In these patients, the drug reduced the frequency of flare-ups and slowed the progression of disability.
The FDA warned, however, that some patients using the drug can develop serious heart problems, a risk that increases with the cumulative dose.
Patients should receive no more than eight to 12 doses of the drug, spread over two to three years, the agency said. That means using Novantrone safely will require patient and doctor education to make sure its use is stopped after the dose limit is reached.
In a two-year study of 194 Europeans with advanced MS, high doses of the drug slowed the disease’s progression by 65 percent. Novantrone causes other side effects typical of cancer chemotherapy — some nausea, hair loss, menstrual disorders, certain infections. But the main shortcoming is the potential heart damage.Novantrone is given intravenously once every three months, costing $2,800 to $3,000 for a year’s treatment.
Šaltinis:
msnbc.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
“Be healthy – be yourself” campaign encourages young people to become more proactive in protecting their health.
more »
When 28 year-old Artyom Sidorkin went to see his doctor to complain about pains in his chest and coughing blood his doctors made a rather bizarre discovery.
more »
Last year French Professor Luc Montagnier jointly won the Nobel Prize for Medicine with Françoise Barré-Sinoussi for their discovery of the HIV virus in 1983.
more »
To mark World Health Day, European Commissioner for Health, Androulla Vassiliou will visit several community health projects in Kenya on 6 and 7 April.
more »
Autism, which affects roughly 67 million people worldwide, is still relatively unheard of in China.
more »
The courses are arranged for the fifth time in a row; this year Estonian, Georgian, Latvian, and Lithuanian military medics are joined by three Armenian representatives.
more »
The choice of food in the EU is huge, but are you well-informed enough to choose well?
more »
MEPs Tuesday backed a minimum tax of €1.28 per pack of 20 cigarettes within 3 years, in an effort to reduce smoking across Europe through higher prices.
more »
Parliament approved an update of EU legislation on cosmetics when it votes on a first-reading agreement thrashed out between EP and Council representatives.
more »
German doctors are treating a woman they say may have contracted the deadly ebola virus while working in a laboratory nt he city of Hamburg.
more »