| March 19,
2009
Medical News Today
Early-Stage Multiple Sclerosis Reversed
By Stem Cell Transplant
Researchers from Northwestern University's Feinberg School of Medicine
appear to have reversed the neurological dysfunction of early-stage
multiple sclerosis patients by transplanting their own immune stem
cells into their bodies and thereby "resetting" their
immune systems.
"This is the first time we have turned the tide on this disease,"
said principal investigator Richard Burt, M.D. chief of immunotherapy
for autoimmune diseases at the Feinberg School. The clinical trial
was performed at Northwestern Memorial Hospital where Burt holds
the same title.
The patients in the small phase I/II trial continued to improve
for up to 24 months after the transplantation procedure and then
stabilized. They experienced improvements in areas in which they
had been affected by multiple sclerosis including walking, ataxia,
limb strength, vision and incontinence. The study will be published
online January 30 and in the March issue of The Lancet Neurology.
Multiple sclerosis (MS) is an autoimmune disease in which the immune
system attacks the central nervous system. In its early stages,
the disease is characterized by intermittent neurological symptoms,
called relapsing-remitting MS. During this time, the person will
either fully or partially recover from the symptoms experienced
during the attacks. Common symptoms are visual problems, fatigue,
sensory changes, weakness or paralysis of limbs, tremors, lack of
coordination, poor balance, bladder or bowel changes and psychological
changes.
Within 10 to 15 years after onset of the disease, most patients
with this relapsing-remitting MS progress to a later stage called
secondary progressive multiple sclerosis. In this stage, they experience
a steady worsening of irreversible neurological damage.
The 21 patients in the trial, ages 20 to 53, had relapsing-remitting
multiple sclerosis that had not responded to at least six months
of treatment with interferon beta. The patients had had MS for an
average of five years. After an average follow-up of three years
after transplantation, 17 patients (81 percent) improved by at least
one point on a disability scale. The disease also stabilized in
all patients.
In the procedure, Burt and colleagues treated patients with chemotherapy
to destroy their immune system. They then injected the patients
with their own immune stem cells, obtained from the patients' blood
before the chemotherapy, to create a new immune system. The procedure
is called autologous non-myeloablative haematopoietic stem-cell
transplantion.
"We focus on destroying only the immune component of the bone
marrow and then regenerate the immune component, which makes the
procedure much safer and less toxic than traditional chemotherapy
for cancer," Burt said. After the transplantation, the patient's
new lymphocytes or immune cells are self-tolerant and do not attack
the immune system.
"In MS the immune system is attacking your brain," Burt
said. "After the procedure, it doesn't do that anymore."
In previous studies, Burt had transplanted immune stem cells into
late-stage MS patients. "It didn't help in the late stages,
but when we treat them in the early stage, they get better and continue
to get better," he said.
"What we did is promising and exiting, but we need to prove
it in a randomized trial," Burt noted. He has launched a randomized
national trial.
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