Aztreonam

dramamama

New member
<div class="FTQUOTE"><begin quote><i>Originally posted by: <b>Ender</b></i>

<div class="FTQUOTE"><begin quote><i>Originally posted by: <b>dramamama</b></i>



Just thought y'all would like to know that the azstreonam has arginine as one of its components. Arginine is the precursor to Nitric Oxide.....one of the most important inhibitors of bacteria in immune response....it is actually bacteriacidal in itself and is produced by the human lungs just not in cf.







That is ,ost likely why so many are experiencing such great results with it in cf!!!</end quote></div>



Hey,

This is interesting cause from what i read, the aztreonam being used in the clinical trials does not have arganine in it. It is the IV az that has the arganine. From what i read on the Stanford site, they think that the arganine can increase inflammation in the lungs of cfers. I found that contradictive to what i have read in the past that arganine could be a benefit to cf patients. I really have no idea.....



From the site:



"Aztreonam Lysinate for Inhalation.Drug formulation: lysine salt of aztreonam (Gilead) - No inhibition by CF sputum (vs 90% inactivation of Tobi by CF sputum) .Aztreonam formulation for iv use contains arginine and may increase airway inflammation - Arginine is a substrate of nitric oxide synthetase - Inhaled arginine may contribute to inflammation in CF patients .Formulated for airway tolerability - Sterile and preservative-free solution - Safe in preclinical toxicology studies - Safe and well tolerated in Phase I-III trials in healthy subjects and patients with CF"



I know they are also testing GSNO, which has the same affect of NO but has a much longer half life. So if the goal of that drug is to increase NO, wouldn't it be a good thing if the IV contains arganine. Like, what the hell?



$$?



Have they even tried IV AZ in cf patients? I'm curious....



Kiel</end quote></div>


Whoa Ender!!
Thanks for posting this!!! I had no idea they changed the formulation and was actually excited about the prospect of arginine....dang it! I actually inhaled Tobra long before Tobi and cannot inhale the Tobi version...the reformulation is too hard on me. One of the preservatives (phenol I think) was awesome in keeping my inflamation down....Tobi causes inflamation for me. And of course, phenol is HIGHLY antibacterial in and of itself....oand of course, it is not in TOBI.

Strange about the arginine...when I was trying to get a compounding pharmacy to mix arginine for me (buffered in its own salts) the pharmacist said that he had recently read that the reformualtion of azstreonam lacked arg because they believed it to be inflammatory. All evidence to the contrary in cf unfortunately....as arginine is so important in development of NO, smoothe muscle relaxation and of course in immune defense particularly in the lung.

Thanks for posting this...once again, if that is the case, why is there a clinical trial by the CFF with inhaled GSNO? Crazy.
 

dramamama

New member
<div class="FTQUOTE"><begin quote><i>Originally posted by: <b>Ender</b></i>

<div class="FTQUOTE"><begin quote><i>Originally posted by: <b>dramamama</b></i>



Just thought y'all would like to know that the azstreonam has arginine as one of its components. Arginine is the precursor to Nitric Oxide.....one of the most important inhibitors of bacteria in immune response....it is actually bacteriacidal in itself and is produced by the human lungs just not in cf.







That is ,ost likely why so many are experiencing such great results with it in cf!!!</end quote></div>



Hey,

This is interesting cause from what i read, the aztreonam being used in the clinical trials does not have arganine in it. It is the IV az that has the arganine. From what i read on the Stanford site, they think that the arganine can increase inflammation in the lungs of cfers. I found that contradictive to what i have read in the past that arganine could be a benefit to cf patients. I really have no idea.....



From the site:



"Aztreonam Lysinate for Inhalation.Drug formulation: lysine salt of aztreonam (Gilead) - No inhibition by CF sputum (vs 90% inactivation of Tobi by CF sputum) .Aztreonam formulation for iv use contains arginine and may increase airway inflammation - Arginine is a substrate of nitric oxide synthetase - Inhaled arginine may contribute to inflammation in CF patients .Formulated for airway tolerability - Sterile and preservative-free solution - Safe in preclinical toxicology studies - Safe and well tolerated in Phase I-III trials in healthy subjects and patients with CF"



I know they are also testing GSNO, which has the same affect of NO but has a much longer half life. So if the goal of that drug is to increase NO, wouldn't it be a good thing if the IV contains arganine. Like, what the hell?



$$?



Have they even tried IV AZ in cf patients? I'm curious....



Kiel</end quote></div>


Whoa Ender!!
Thanks for posting this!!! I had no idea they changed the formulation and was actually excited about the prospect of arginine....dang it! I actually inhaled Tobra long before Tobi and cannot inhale the Tobi version...the reformulation is too hard on me. One of the preservatives (phenol I think) was awesome in keeping my inflamation down....Tobi causes inflamation for me. And of course, phenol is HIGHLY antibacterial in and of itself....oand of course, it is not in TOBI.

Strange about the arginine...when I was trying to get a compounding pharmacy to mix arginine for me (buffered in its own salts) the pharmacist said that he had recently read that the reformualtion of azstreonam lacked arg because they believed it to be inflammatory. All evidence to the contrary in cf unfortunately....as arginine is so important in development of NO, smoothe muscle relaxation and of course in immune defense particularly in the lung.

Thanks for posting this...once again, if that is the case, why is there a clinical trial by the CFF with inhaled GSNO? Crazy.
 

dramamama

New member
<div class="FTQUOTE"><begin quote><i>Originally posted by: <b>Ender</b></i>

<div class="FTQUOTE"><begin quote><i>Originally posted by: <b>dramamama</b></i>



Just thought y'all would like to know that the azstreonam has arginine as one of its components. Arginine is the precursor to Nitric Oxide.....one of the most important inhibitors of bacteria in immune response....it is actually bacteriacidal in itself and is produced by the human lungs just not in cf.







That is ,ost likely why so many are experiencing such great results with it in cf!!!</end quote>



Hey,

This is interesting cause from what i read, the aztreonam being used in the clinical trials does not have arganine in it. It is the IV az that has the arganine. From what i read on the Stanford site, they think that the arganine can increase inflammation in the lungs of cfers. I found that contradictive to what i have read in the past that arganine could be a benefit to cf patients. I really have no idea.....



From the site:



"Aztreonam Lysinate for Inhalation.Drug formulation: lysine salt of aztreonam (Gilead) - No inhibition by CF sputum (vs 90% inactivation of Tobi by CF sputum) .Aztreonam formulation for iv use contains arginine and may increase airway inflammation - Arginine is a substrate of nitric oxide synthetase - Inhaled arginine may contribute to inflammation in CF patients .Formulated for airway tolerability - Sterile and preservative-free solution - Safe in preclinical toxicology studies - Safe and well tolerated in Phase I-III trials in healthy subjects and patients with CF"



I know they are also testing GSNO, which has the same affect of NO but has a much longer half life. So if the goal of that drug is to increase NO, wouldn't it be a good thing if the IV contains arganine. Like, what the hell?



$$?



Have they even tried IV AZ in cf patients? I'm curious....



Kiel</end quote>


Whoa Ender!!
Thanks for posting this!!! I had no idea they changed the formulation and was actually excited about the prospect of arginine....dang it! I actually inhaled Tobra long before Tobi and cannot inhale the Tobi version...the reformulation is too hard on me. One of the preservatives (phenol I think) was awesome in keeping my inflamation down....Tobi causes inflamation for me. And of course, phenol is HIGHLY antibacterial in and of itself....oand of course, it is not in TOBI.

Strange about the arginine...when I was trying to get a compounding pharmacy to mix arginine for me (buffered in its own salts) the pharmacist said that he had recently read that the reformualtion of azstreonam lacked arg because they believed it to be inflammatory. All evidence to the contrary in cf unfortunately....as arginine is so important in development of NO, smoothe muscle relaxation and of course in immune defense particularly in the lung.

Thanks for posting this...once again, if that is the case, why is there a clinical trial by the CFF with inhaled GSNO? Crazy.
 

dramamama

New member
<div class="FTQUOTE"><begin quote><i>Originally posted by: <b>Ender</b></i>

<div class="FTQUOTE"><begin quote><i>Originally posted by: <b>dramamama</b></i>



Just thought y'all would like to know that the azstreonam has arginine as one of its components. Arginine is the precursor to Nitric Oxide.....one of the most important inhibitors of bacteria in immune response....it is actually bacteriacidal in itself and is produced by the human lungs just not in cf.







That is ,ost likely why so many are experiencing such great results with it in cf!!!</end quote>



Hey,

This is interesting cause from what i read, the aztreonam being used in the clinical trials does not have arganine in it. It is the IV az that has the arganine. From what i read on the Stanford site, they think that the arganine can increase inflammation in the lungs of cfers. I found that contradictive to what i have read in the past that arganine could be a benefit to cf patients. I really have no idea.....



From the site:



"Aztreonam Lysinate for Inhalation.Drug formulation: lysine salt of aztreonam (Gilead) - No inhibition by CF sputum (vs 90% inactivation of Tobi by CF sputum) .Aztreonam formulation for iv use contains arginine and may increase airway inflammation - Arginine is a substrate of nitric oxide synthetase - Inhaled arginine may contribute to inflammation in CF patients .Formulated for airway tolerability - Sterile and preservative-free solution - Safe in preclinical toxicology studies - Safe and well tolerated in Phase I-III trials in healthy subjects and patients with CF"



I know they are also testing GSNO, which has the same affect of NO but has a much longer half life. So if the goal of that drug is to increase NO, wouldn't it be a good thing if the IV contains arganine. Like, what the hell?



$$?



Have they even tried IV AZ in cf patients? I'm curious....



Kiel</end quote>


Whoa Ender!!
Thanks for posting this!!! I had no idea they changed the formulation and was actually excited about the prospect of arginine....dang it! I actually inhaled Tobra long before Tobi and cannot inhale the Tobi version...the reformulation is too hard on me. One of the preservatives (phenol I think) was awesome in keeping my inflamation down....Tobi causes inflamation for me. And of course, phenol is HIGHLY antibacterial in and of itself....oand of course, it is not in TOBI.

Strange about the arginine...when I was trying to get a compounding pharmacy to mix arginine for me (buffered in its own salts) the pharmacist said that he had recently read that the reformualtion of azstreonam lacked arg because they believed it to be inflammatory. All evidence to the contrary in cf unfortunately....as arginine is so important in development of NO, smoothe muscle relaxation and of course in immune defense particularly in the lung.

Thanks for posting this...once again, if that is the case, why is there a clinical trial by the CFF with inhaled GSNO? Crazy.
 

AnD

New member
Huh. I had wondered about that...I have had the same thing with inhaled Tobra vs. inhaled Tobi. I tolerated the Tobra really well- the Tobi, I can only take for 3 of the 4 weeks, and usually only 3/4 of a dose, tops (yes, I talked to my dr. about this- but this round, I am tolerating the whole dose-I wonder if it's my GSH or Culturelle? <img src="i/expressions/face-icon-small-wink.gif" border="0"> ). I have not for the life of me been able to grasp why something that was preservative free would be more irritating...

That's one of the reasons I hope I qualify for this, and I am going to contact my clinic about it.
 

AnD

New member
Huh. I had wondered about that...I have had the same thing with inhaled Tobra vs. inhaled Tobi. I tolerated the Tobra really well- the Tobi, I can only take for 3 of the 4 weeks, and usually only 3/4 of a dose, tops (yes, I talked to my dr. about this- but this round, I am tolerating the whole dose-I wonder if it's my GSH or Culturelle? <img src="i/expressions/face-icon-small-wink.gif" border="0"> ). I have not for the life of me been able to grasp why something that was preservative free would be more irritating...

That's one of the reasons I hope I qualify for this, and I am going to contact my clinic about it.
 

AnD

New member
Huh. I had wondered about that...I have had the same thing with inhaled Tobra vs. inhaled Tobi. I tolerated the Tobra really well- the Tobi, I can only take for 3 of the 4 weeks, and usually only 3/4 of a dose, tops (yes, I talked to my dr. about this- but this round, I am tolerating the whole dose-I wonder if it's my GSH or Culturelle? <img src="i/expressions/face-icon-small-wink.gif" border="0"> ). I have not for the life of me been able to grasp why something that was preservative free would be more irritating...

That's one of the reasons I hope I qualify for this, and I am going to contact my clinic about it.
 

AnD

New member
Huh. I had wondered about that...I have had the same thing with inhaled Tobra vs. inhaled Tobi. I tolerated the Tobra really well- the Tobi, I can only take for 3 of the 4 weeks, and usually only 3/4 of a dose, tops (yes, I talked to my dr. about this- but this round, I am tolerating the whole dose-I wonder if it's my GSH or Culturelle? <img src="i/expressions/face-icon-small-wink.gif" border="0"> ). I have not for the life of me been able to grasp why something that was preservative free would be more irritating...

That's one of the reasons I hope I qualify for this, and I am going to contact my clinic about it.
 

AnD

New member
Huh. I had wondered about that...I have had the same thing with inhaled Tobra vs. inhaled Tobi. I tolerated the Tobra really well- the Tobi, I can only take for 3 of the 4 weeks, and usually only 3/4 of a dose, tops (yes, I talked to my dr. about this- but this round, I am tolerating the whole dose-I wonder if it's my GSH or Culturelle? <img src="i/expressions/face-icon-small-wink.gif" border="0"> ). I have not for the life of me been able to grasp why something that was preservative free would be more irritating...

That's one of the reasons I hope I qualify for this, and I am going to contact my clinic about it.
 

AnD

New member
Huh. I had wondered about that...I have had the same thing with inhaled Tobra vs. inhaled Tobi. I tolerated the Tobra really well- the Tobi, I can only take for 3 of the 4 weeks, and usually only 3/4 of a dose, tops (yes, I talked to my dr. about this- but this round, I am tolerating the whole dose-I wonder if it's my GSH or Culturelle? <img src="i/expressions/face-icon-small-wink.gif" border="0"> ). I have not for the life of me been able to grasp why something that was preservative free would be more irritating...

That's one of the reasons I hope I qualify for this, and I am going to contact my clinic about it.
 

ak80

New member
Hi

I've just joined this forum and I've been reading your posts about Aztreonam - I've been reading up on it a bit and I read about both twice daily and three times - is it definitely going to be three times then?? Has the company confirmed that? I saw that it was both in the trials...Also, will it be an add on to TOBI or something or could it be used on its own? Sorry if these questions are dumb, I have a friend with CF and I'm just trying to read up on treatments to understand it better...

Thanks!
 

ak80

New member
Hi

I've just joined this forum and I've been reading your posts about Aztreonam - I've been reading up on it a bit and I read about both twice daily and three times - is it definitely going to be three times then?? Has the company confirmed that? I saw that it was both in the trials...Also, will it be an add on to TOBI or something or could it be used on its own? Sorry if these questions are dumb, I have a friend with CF and I'm just trying to read up on treatments to understand it better...

Thanks!
 

ak80

New member
Hi

I've just joined this forum and I've been reading your posts about Aztreonam - I've been reading up on it a bit and I read about both twice daily and three times - is it definitely going to be three times then?? Has the company confirmed that? I saw that it was both in the trials...Also, will it be an add on to TOBI or something or could it be used on its own? Sorry if these questions are dumb, I have a friend with CF and I'm just trying to read up on treatments to understand it better...

Thanks!
 

ak80

New member
Hi

I've just joined this forum and I've been reading your posts about Aztreonam - I've been reading up on it a bit and I read about both twice daily and three times - is it definitely going to be three times then?? Has the company confirmed that? I saw that it was both in the trials...Also, will it be an add on to TOBI or something or could it be used on its own? Sorry if these questions are dumb, I have a friend with CF and I'm just trying to read up on treatments to understand it better...

Thanks!
 

ak80

New member
Hi

I've just joined this forum and I've been reading your posts about Aztreonam - I've been reading up on it a bit and I read about both twice daily and three times - is it definitely going to be three times then?? Has the company confirmed that? I saw that it was both in the trials...Also, will it be an add on to TOBI or something or could it be used on its own? Sorry if these questions are dumb, I have a friend with CF and I'm just trying to read up on treatments to understand it better...

Thanks!
 
M

MCGrad2006

Guest
It would be an alternative to Tobi nebs! Yayyyy! hahaha...The trial did conssist of some ppl doing twice and some ppl doing three times daily. From what it sounds like in this article it seems like three times will be the dose...unless they realize in the expanded access that two could do the same. My doc office tells me they are having the same results with both 2 and 3 times ppl (ones in the trial). So i dont know...
 
M

MCGrad2006

Guest
It would be an alternative to Tobi nebs! Yayyyy! hahaha...The trial did conssist of some ppl doing twice and some ppl doing three times daily. From what it sounds like in this article it seems like three times will be the dose...unless they realize in the expanded access that two could do the same. My doc office tells me they are having the same results with both 2 and 3 times ppl (ones in the trial). So i dont know...
 
M

MCGrad2006

Guest
It would be an alternative to Tobi nebs! Yayyyy! hahaha...The trial did conssist of some ppl doing twice and some ppl doing three times daily. From what it sounds like in this article it seems like three times will be the dose...unless they realize in the expanded access that two could do the same. My doc office tells me they are having the same results with both 2 and 3 times ppl (ones in the trial). So i dont know...
 
M

MCGrad2006

Guest
It would be an alternative to Tobi nebs! Yayyyy! hahaha...The trial did conssist of some ppl doing twice and some ppl doing three times daily. From what it sounds like in this article it seems like three times will be the dose...unless they realize in the expanded access that two could do the same. My doc office tells me they are having the same results with both 2 and 3 times ppl (ones in the trial). So i dont know...
 
M

MCGrad2006

Guest
It would be an alternative to Tobi nebs! Yayyyy! hahaha...The trial did conssist of some ppl doing twice and some ppl doing three times daily. From what it sounds like in this article it seems like three times will be the dose...unless they realize in the expanded access that two could do the same. My doc office tells me they are having the same results with both 2 and 3 times ppl (ones in the trial). So i dont know...
 
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