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TonyaH

Guest
Treatment Of Cystic Fibrosis: Encouraging New Results For Miglustat




ScienceDaily (July 21, 2009) - Miglustat is a drug currently under phase 2
clinical trials on patients suffering from cystic fibrosis (1). Its
potential for treating the disease was discovered in 2006 thanks to the work
of Frédéric Becq's team at the Institute of Cell Physiology and Biology
(CNRS/Université de Poitiers), funded by the associations Vaincre la
Mucoviscidose, MucoVie66, La Pierre Le Bigaut and ABCF2.


In new work to be published on 1 August 2009 in the American Journal of
Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology, the researchers show that daily,
long-term treatment of human cystic fibrosis cells with low doses of
miglustat corrects the main pathological abnormalities. They are therefore
extremely hopeful that miglustat will prove effective with patients, and
become the first drug able to treat the disease rather than the symptoms.


Cystic fibrosis is a genetic disease, transmitted jointly by both parents,
and affects around 6000 people in France. It is caused by the dysfunction of
a membrane protein (CFTR), present especially in the epithelial cells in the
lungs, which controls exchange of water and mineral salts between the cell
and the exterior. On the cell level, the disease manifests itself by the
absence of chloride secretion, sodium hyperabsorption, deregulation of
calcium homeostasis, and heightened inflammatory response. This results in
thickening of the mucus that lines the bronchial tubes and the pancreatic
ducts, leading to lung infections and digestive disorders. At the current
time, there is no treatment that cures cystic fibrosis. In order to
alleviate the symptoms, extremely strict daily treatment is necessary.


In 2006, Frédéric Becq's team at the Institute of Cell Physiology and
Biology (CNRS/Université de Poitiers) showed that a drug called miglustat
restored the activity of the CFTR protein and could thus temporarily correct
the specific phenotype characteristic of cystic fibrosis. Used to treat two
rare diseases (Gaucher's disease and Niemann-Pick type C disease), its
safety and tolerance had already been assessed, and clinical trials could be
rapidly begun in September 2007.


In the new study published in American Journal of Respiratory Cell and
Molecular Biology, the researchers show that daily treatment of human
respiratory cells that are homozygous for the F508del mutation with low
concentrations of miglustat leads to progressive, sustained and reversible
correction of the diseased phenotype. The researchers cultured diseased
human respiratory cells in the presence of miglustat for two months. The
correction observed in the cells takes place after 3-4 days, and then
stabilizes. When the treatment is stopped, the cells revert to the diseased
phenotype. The low doses used (3 micromolars) mean that they can be
administered to patients and that their presence in the bloodstream causes
no problems.


This study is the first that shows that a cystic fibrosis cell can acquire a
sustained non-diseased phenotype when treated daily with a pharmacological
agent. The researchers are therefore very optimistic about the results of
the clinical trials under way.


(1) The clinical study is being carried out by the Actelion pharmaceutical
laboratory on 15 patients suffering from cystic fibrosis and carrying the
delta F508 mutation (F508del), which is the most common and the most serious
of the mutations affecting children with cystic fibrosis. The results will
be known in the coming weeks
 
T

TonyaH

Guest
Treatment Of Cystic Fibrosis: Encouraging New Results For Miglustat




ScienceDaily (July 21, 2009) - Miglustat is a drug currently under phase 2
clinical trials on patients suffering from cystic fibrosis (1). Its
potential for treating the disease was discovered in 2006 thanks to the work
of Frédéric Becq's team at the Institute of Cell Physiology and Biology
(CNRS/Université de Poitiers), funded by the associations Vaincre la
Mucoviscidose, MucoVie66, La Pierre Le Bigaut and ABCF2.


In new work to be published on 1 August 2009 in the American Journal of
Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology, the researchers show that daily,
long-term treatment of human cystic fibrosis cells with low doses of
miglustat corrects the main pathological abnormalities. They are therefore
extremely hopeful that miglustat will prove effective with patients, and
become the first drug able to treat the disease rather than the symptoms.


Cystic fibrosis is a genetic disease, transmitted jointly by both parents,
and affects around 6000 people in France. It is caused by the dysfunction of
a membrane protein (CFTR), present especially in the epithelial cells in the
lungs, which controls exchange of water and mineral salts between the cell
and the exterior. On the cell level, the disease manifests itself by the
absence of chloride secretion, sodium hyperabsorption, deregulation of
calcium homeostasis, and heightened inflammatory response. This results in
thickening of the mucus that lines the bronchial tubes and the pancreatic
ducts, leading to lung infections and digestive disorders. At the current
time, there is no treatment that cures cystic fibrosis. In order to
alleviate the symptoms, extremely strict daily treatment is necessary.


In 2006, Frédéric Becq's team at the Institute of Cell Physiology and
Biology (CNRS/Université de Poitiers) showed that a drug called miglustat
restored the activity of the CFTR protein and could thus temporarily correct
the specific phenotype characteristic of cystic fibrosis. Used to treat two
rare diseases (Gaucher's disease and Niemann-Pick type C disease), its
safety and tolerance had already been assessed, and clinical trials could be
rapidly begun in September 2007.


In the new study published in American Journal of Respiratory Cell and
Molecular Biology, the researchers show that daily treatment of human
respiratory cells that are homozygous for the F508del mutation with low
concentrations of miglustat leads to progressive, sustained and reversible
correction of the diseased phenotype. The researchers cultured diseased
human respiratory cells in the presence of miglustat for two months. The
correction observed in the cells takes place after 3-4 days, and then
stabilizes. When the treatment is stopped, the cells revert to the diseased
phenotype. The low doses used (3 micromolars) mean that they can be
administered to patients and that their presence in the bloodstream causes
no problems.


This study is the first that shows that a cystic fibrosis cell can acquire a
sustained non-diseased phenotype when treated daily with a pharmacological
agent. The researchers are therefore very optimistic about the results of
the clinical trials under way.


(1) The clinical study is being carried out by the Actelion pharmaceutical
laboratory on 15 patients suffering from cystic fibrosis and carrying the
delta F508 mutation (F508del), which is the most common and the most serious
of the mutations affecting children with cystic fibrosis. The results will
be known in the coming weeks
 
T

TonyaH

Guest
Treatment Of Cystic Fibrosis: Encouraging New Results For Miglustat




ScienceDaily (July 21, 2009) - Miglustat is a drug currently under phase 2
clinical trials on patients suffering from cystic fibrosis (1). Its
potential for treating the disease was discovered in 2006 thanks to the work
of Frédéric Becq's team at the Institute of Cell Physiology and Biology
(CNRS/Université de Poitiers), funded by the associations Vaincre la
Mucoviscidose, MucoVie66, La Pierre Le Bigaut and ABCF2.


In new work to be published on 1 August 2009 in the American Journal of
Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology, the researchers show that daily,
long-term treatment of human cystic fibrosis cells with low doses of
miglustat corrects the main pathological abnormalities. They are therefore
extremely hopeful that miglustat will prove effective with patients, and
become the first drug able to treat the disease rather than the symptoms.


Cystic fibrosis is a genetic disease, transmitted jointly by both parents,
and affects around 6000 people in France. It is caused by the dysfunction of
a membrane protein (CFTR), present especially in the epithelial cells in the
lungs, which controls exchange of water and mineral salts between the cell
and the exterior. On the cell level, the disease manifests itself by the
absence of chloride secretion, sodium hyperabsorption, deregulation of
calcium homeostasis, and heightened inflammatory response. This results in
thickening of the mucus that lines the bronchial tubes and the pancreatic
ducts, leading to lung infections and digestive disorders. At the current
time, there is no treatment that cures cystic fibrosis. In order to
alleviate the symptoms, extremely strict daily treatment is necessary.


In 2006, Frédéric Becq's team at the Institute of Cell Physiology and
Biology (CNRS/Université de Poitiers) showed that a drug called miglustat
restored the activity of the CFTR protein and could thus temporarily correct
the specific phenotype characteristic of cystic fibrosis. Used to treat two
rare diseases (Gaucher's disease and Niemann-Pick type C disease), its
safety and tolerance had already been assessed, and clinical trials could be
rapidly begun in September 2007.


In the new study published in American Journal of Respiratory Cell and
Molecular Biology, the researchers show that daily treatment of human
respiratory cells that are homozygous for the F508del mutation with low
concentrations of miglustat leads to progressive, sustained and reversible
correction of the diseased phenotype. The researchers cultured diseased
human respiratory cells in the presence of miglustat for two months. The
correction observed in the cells takes place after 3-4 days, and then
stabilizes. When the treatment is stopped, the cells revert to the diseased
phenotype. The low doses used (3 micromolars) mean that they can be
administered to patients and that their presence in the bloodstream causes
no problems.


This study is the first that shows that a cystic fibrosis cell can acquire a
sustained non-diseased phenotype when treated daily with a pharmacological
agent. The researchers are therefore very optimistic about the results of
the clinical trials under way.


(1) The clinical study is being carried out by the Actelion pharmaceutical
laboratory on 15 patients suffering from cystic fibrosis and carrying the
delta F508 mutation (F508del), which is the most common and the most serious
of the mutations affecting children with cystic fibrosis. The results will
be known in the coming weeks
 
T

TonyaH

Guest
Treatment Of Cystic Fibrosis: Encouraging New Results For Miglustat




ScienceDaily (July 21, 2009) - Miglustat is a drug currently under phase 2
clinical trials on patients suffering from cystic fibrosis (1). Its
potential for treating the disease was discovered in 2006 thanks to the work
of Frédéric Becq's team at the Institute of Cell Physiology and Biology
(CNRS/Université de Poitiers), funded by the associations Vaincre la
Mucoviscidose, MucoVie66, La Pierre Le Bigaut and ABCF2.


In new work to be published on 1 August 2009 in the American Journal of
Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology, the researchers show that daily,
long-term treatment of human cystic fibrosis cells with low doses of
miglustat corrects the main pathological abnormalities. They are therefore
extremely hopeful that miglustat will prove effective with patients, and
become the first drug able to treat the disease rather than the symptoms.


Cystic fibrosis is a genetic disease, transmitted jointly by both parents,
and affects around 6000 people in France. It is caused by the dysfunction of
a membrane protein (CFTR), present especially in the epithelial cells in the
lungs, which controls exchange of water and mineral salts between the cell
and the exterior. On the cell level, the disease manifests itself by the
absence of chloride secretion, sodium hyperabsorption, deregulation of
calcium homeostasis, and heightened inflammatory response. This results in
thickening of the mucus that lines the bronchial tubes and the pancreatic
ducts, leading to lung infections and digestive disorders. At the current
time, there is no treatment that cures cystic fibrosis. In order to
alleviate the symptoms, extremely strict daily treatment is necessary.


In 2006, Frédéric Becq's team at the Institute of Cell Physiology and
Biology (CNRS/Université de Poitiers) showed that a drug called miglustat
restored the activity of the CFTR protein and could thus temporarily correct
the specific phenotype characteristic of cystic fibrosis. Used to treat two
rare diseases (Gaucher's disease and Niemann-Pick type C disease), its
safety and tolerance had already been assessed, and clinical trials could be
rapidly begun in September 2007.


In the new study published in American Journal of Respiratory Cell and
Molecular Biology, the researchers show that daily treatment of human
respiratory cells that are homozygous for the F508del mutation with low
concentrations of miglustat leads to progressive, sustained and reversible
correction of the diseased phenotype. The researchers cultured diseased
human respiratory cells in the presence of miglustat for two months. The
correction observed in the cells takes place after 3-4 days, and then
stabilizes. When the treatment is stopped, the cells revert to the diseased
phenotype. The low doses used (3 micromolars) mean that they can be
administered to patients and that their presence in the bloodstream causes
no problems.


This study is the first that shows that a cystic fibrosis cell can acquire a
sustained non-diseased phenotype when treated daily with a pharmacological
agent. The researchers are therefore very optimistic about the results of
the clinical trials under way.


(1) The clinical study is being carried out by the Actelion pharmaceutical
laboratory on 15 patients suffering from cystic fibrosis and carrying the
delta F508 mutation (F508del), which is the most common and the most serious
of the mutations affecting children with cystic fibrosis. The results will
be known in the coming weeks
 
T

TonyaH

Guest
<br />
<br />Treatment Of Cystic Fibrosis: Encouraging New Results For Miglustat
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />ScienceDaily (July 21, 2009) - Miglustat is a drug currently under phase 2
<br />clinical trials on patients suffering from cystic fibrosis (1). Its
<br />potential for treating the disease was discovered in 2006 thanks to the work
<br />of Frédéric Becq's team at the Institute of Cell Physiology and Biology
<br />(CNRS/Université de Poitiers), funded by the associations Vaincre la
<br />Mucoviscidose, MucoVie66, La Pierre Le Bigaut and ABCF2.
<br />
<br />
<br />In new work to be published on 1 August 2009 in the American Journal of
<br />Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology, the researchers show that daily,
<br />long-term treatment of human cystic fibrosis cells with low doses of
<br />miglustat corrects the main pathological abnormalities. They are therefore
<br />extremely hopeful that miglustat will prove effective with patients, and
<br />become the first drug able to treat the disease rather than the symptoms.
<br />
<br />
<br />Cystic fibrosis is a genetic disease, transmitted jointly by both parents,
<br />and affects around 6000 people in France. It is caused by the dysfunction of
<br />a membrane protein (CFTR), present especially in the epithelial cells in the
<br />lungs, which controls exchange of water and mineral salts between the cell
<br />and the exterior. On the cell level, the disease manifests itself by the
<br />absence of chloride secretion, sodium hyperabsorption, deregulation of
<br />calcium homeostasis, and heightened inflammatory response. This results in
<br />thickening of the mucus that lines the bronchial tubes and the pancreatic
<br />ducts, leading to lung infections and digestive disorders. At the current
<br />time, there is no treatment that cures cystic fibrosis. In order to
<br />alleviate the symptoms, extremely strict daily treatment is necessary.
<br />
<br />
<br />In 2006, Frédéric Becq's team at the Institute of Cell Physiology and
<br />Biology (CNRS/Université de Poitiers) showed that a drug called miglustat
<br />restored the activity of the CFTR protein and could thus temporarily correct
<br />the specific phenotype characteristic of cystic fibrosis. Used to treat two
<br />rare diseases (Gaucher's disease and Niemann-Pick type C disease), its
<br />safety and tolerance had already been assessed, and clinical trials could be
<br />rapidly begun in September 2007.
<br />
<br />
<br />In the new study published in American Journal of Respiratory Cell and
<br />Molecular Biology, the researchers show that daily treatment of human
<br />respiratory cells that are homozygous for the F508del mutation with low
<br />concentrations of miglustat leads to progressive, sustained and reversible
<br />correction of the diseased phenotype. The researchers cultured diseased
<br />human respiratory cells in the presence of miglustat for two months. The
<br />correction observed in the cells takes place after 3-4 days, and then
<br />stabilizes. When the treatment is stopped, the cells revert to the diseased
<br />phenotype. The low doses used (3 micromolars) mean that they can be
<br />administered to patients and that their presence in the bloodstream causes
<br />no problems.
<br />
<br />
<br />This study is the first that shows that a cystic fibrosis cell can acquire a
<br />sustained non-diseased phenotype when treated daily with a pharmacological
<br />agent. The researchers are therefore very optimistic about the results of
<br />the clinical trials under way.
<br />
<br />
<br />(1) The clinical study is being carried out by the Actelion pharmaceutical
<br />laboratory on 15 patients suffering from cystic fibrosis and carrying the
<br />delta F508 mutation (F508del), which is the most common and the most serious
<br />of the mutations affecting children with cystic fibrosis. The results will
<br />be known in the coming weeks
 

dramamama

New member
This is one of the most exciting developments we have had. I spoke with one of the researchers a year ago and he was very, very, very optimistic. Since it is already an approved drug, the trials would be much shorter...yeah! However, miglustat is a very "tough" medication and comes with some issues.. neuropathy and kidney issues are the main ones. Also, if you are lactose intolerant, you probably can not take it. Because it an approved drug, doctors could prescribe it off label immediately. No one could afford it though, because insurance would not pay for it and it runs around $6000 a month.

They are also investigating it as an inhaled drug with the EXACT same results...better for the kidneys<img src="i/expressions/face-icon-small-smile.gif" border="0">

I personally believe the price would drop some if the Phase II trials show efficacy. It is already treating two orphan diseases and that bodes well for us...
 

dramamama

New member
This is one of the most exciting developments we have had. I spoke with one of the researchers a year ago and he was very, very, very optimistic. Since it is already an approved drug, the trials would be much shorter...yeah! However, miglustat is a very "tough" medication and comes with some issues.. neuropathy and kidney issues are the main ones. Also, if you are lactose intolerant, you probably can not take it. Because it an approved drug, doctors could prescribe it off label immediately. No one could afford it though, because insurance would not pay for it and it runs around $6000 a month.

They are also investigating it as an inhaled drug with the EXACT same results...better for the kidneys<img src="i/expressions/face-icon-small-smile.gif" border="0">

I personally believe the price would drop some if the Phase II trials show efficacy. It is already treating two orphan diseases and that bodes well for us...
 

dramamama

New member
This is one of the most exciting developments we have had. I spoke with one of the researchers a year ago and he was very, very, very optimistic. Since it is already an approved drug, the trials would be much shorter...yeah! However, miglustat is a very "tough" medication and comes with some issues.. neuropathy and kidney issues are the main ones. Also, if you are lactose intolerant, you probably can not take it. Because it an approved drug, doctors could prescribe it off label immediately. No one could afford it though, because insurance would not pay for it and it runs around $6000 a month.

They are also investigating it as an inhaled drug with the EXACT same results...better for the kidneys<img src="i/expressions/face-icon-small-smile.gif" border="0">

I personally believe the price would drop some if the Phase II trials show efficacy. It is already treating two orphan diseases and that bodes well for us...
 

dramamama

New member
This is one of the most exciting developments we have had. I spoke with one of the researchers a year ago and he was very, very, very optimistic. Since it is already an approved drug, the trials would be much shorter...yeah! However, miglustat is a very "tough" medication and comes with some issues.. neuropathy and kidney issues are the main ones. Also, if you are lactose intolerant, you probably can not take it. Because it an approved drug, doctors could prescribe it off label immediately. No one could afford it though, because insurance would not pay for it and it runs around $6000 a month.

They are also investigating it as an inhaled drug with the EXACT same results...better for the kidneys<img src="i/expressions/face-icon-small-smile.gif" border="0">

I personally believe the price would drop some if the Phase II trials show efficacy. It is already treating two orphan diseases and that bodes well for us...
 

dramamama

New member
This is one of the most exciting developments we have had. I spoke with one of the researchers a year ago and he was very, very, very optimistic. Since it is already an approved drug, the trials would be much shorter...yeah! However, miglustat is a very "tough" medication and comes with some issues.. neuropathy and kidney issues are the main ones. Also, if you are lactose intolerant, you probably can not take it. Because it an approved drug, doctors could prescribe it off label immediately. No one could afford it though, because insurance would not pay for it and it runs around $6000 a month.
<br />
<br />They are also investigating it as an inhaled drug with the EXACT same results...better for the kidneys<img src="i/expressions/face-icon-small-smile.gif" border="0">
<br />
<br />I personally believe the price would drop some if the Phase II trials show efficacy. It is already treating two orphan diseases and that bodes well for us...
 
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