Tag Archives: adulthood

Tocizilumab

A drug launched today could ease the agony of hundreds of children suffering from severe arthritis.

At least two thirds of children taking tocizilumab have been able to return to a normal life, after many were bedridden or forced into wheelchairs by the disease.

Doctors claim the drug has transformed the outlook for victims of systemic juvenile arthritis, a severe inflammatory disease that can affect children as young as 18 months.

Around 2,500 children in Britain are currently living with the disease, which can persist into adulthood and cause significant disability.

Until now, commonly used treatments have been anti-inflammatory drugs such as corticosteroids which may cause severe side effects and often do not slow progression of the disease.

But trial results of 112 children show after just three months of treatment with tocizilumab nearly three-quarters had a 70 per cent improvement in their condition, compared with eight per cent taking a placebo, or dummy drug.

After a year two-thirds of children had a 90 per cent improvement in their symptoms.

Dr Eileen Baildam, consultant paediatric rheumatologist and triallist at Alder Hey Children’s Hospital, Liverpool, has treated 12 children with the drug and seen them all make a remarkable recovery.

She said ‘These are very sick children, the disease affects every single joint in their bodies as well as heart and lungs. They can die from heart failure and other conditions if they don’t get treated. It’s much worse than rheumatoid arthritis in adults.

Arthritis

Arthritis

‘To control flare ups we’ve had to use huge doses of steroids which have bad side effects or another drug called methotrexate, and they tend to wear off.’

Dr Baildam said the new drug, already prescribed for adults with rheumatoid arthritis where it is not controlled by other medication, is given by intravenous infusion once a month.

‘The trial results show two-thirds get a 90 per cent response, which is almost complete recovery and with few side effects.

‘But in practice every single one of my patients has gone back to a normal life, even if they have had the disease for some time. They have been able to get out of their wheelchairs, it’s fantastic’ she said.

The new drug is a laboratory-manufactured antibody that blocks the activity of interleukin 6 (IL-6), an important immune system signalling molecule that underpins many inflammatory processes.

It may be given either on its own or in combination with standard disease modifying anti-rheumatic drugs.

The treatment made by Roche is being licensed from today for use in children aged two and older.


The £9,000 annual cost of tocilizumab, also known as RoActemra, is the same as other advanced ‘biologic’ drugs already used for arthritis, but the NHS rationing body will have to decide whether it offers value for money in children.

Dr Baildam said ‘I hope and expect it will be approved and I think it should be given to children as soon as they are diagnosed to limit the disability caused by this dreadful disease.’

Professor Patricia Woo, professor of paediatric rheumatology at London’s Great Ormond Street Hospital, which also took part in the trial, said ‘Systemic juvenile arthritis can be a devastating disease.

‘It strikes often very young children, causing chronic illness, pain and disability. It is hugely encouraging to have an effective medicine now available to alleviate symptoms, control disease activity and potentially hold back the worst long-term consequences of the disease.’

Ailsa Bosworth, chief executive of the National Rheumatoid Arthritis Society (NRAS) said the treatment offered ‘a future with hope’ to affected children and their families.

‘It causes immense distress and tocilizumab provides both families and clinicians with a new and effective treatment option which is greatly welcomed.’

Helicobacter pylori & allergy-induced asthma

Researchers have indicated that infection with the gastric bacterium Helicobacter pylori provides reliable protection against allergy-induced asthma.

The results confirmed the hypothesis recently put forward that the dramatic increase in allergic diseases in industrial societies is linked to the rapid disappearance of specific micro-organisms that populate the human body.

Scientists from the University of Zurich and the University Medical Center of the Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz have now revealed that the increase in asthma could be put down to the specific disappearance of the gastric bacterium Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) from Western societies.

Asthma

Asthma

H. pylori is resistant to gastric acid. The affliction often has no symptoms, but under certain conditions can cause gastritis, gastric and duodenal ulcers, and stomach cancer. Consequently, H. pylori is often killed off with antibiotics as a precaution, even if the patient does not have any complaints.

For their study, the researchers infected mice with H. pylori bacteria. If the mice were infected at the age of a few days old, they developed immunological tolerance to the bacterium and even reacted insignificantly – if at all – to strong, asthma-inducing allergens. Mice that were not infected with H. pylori until they had reached adulthood, however, had a much weaker defence.


“Early infection impairs the maturation of the dendritic cells and triggers the accumulation of regulatory T-cells that are crucial for the suppression of asthma,” said Anne Muller, a professor of molecular cancer research at the University of Zurich, explaining the protective mechanism.

If regulatory T-cells were transferred from infected to uninfected mice, they too enjoyed effective protection against allergy-induced asthma. However, mice that had been infected early also lost their resistance to asthma-inducing allergens if H. pylori were killed off in them with the aid of antibiotics after the sensitisation phase.

The study has been published in the prestigious Journal of Clinical Investigation.