Clinical Trials For Lupus Underway After Decades Of Drought
Main Category: LupusAlso Included In: Clinical Trials / Drug Trials; Public Health
Article Date: 04 Oct 2007 - 0:00 PDT
For the first time in decades, a significant number of clinical trials are being conducted to seek a treatment, perhaps even a cure, for lupus, a chronic and potentially fatal autoimmune disease that affects more than 1.5 million Americans -- 10,000 in Los Angeles County alone.
A key question that clinical trials answer is, "Will this drug help people and be safe to take?" The question is urgent for people with lupus, because no major new treatments have been approved for the disease in nearly 50 years, and existing medicines are toxic and fraught with side effects.
Until recently, there weren't even trials for people with lupus to enroll in; only recently, with breakthroughs in understanding why the immune system turns against itself in lupus, are new ideas for treatments making their way into the drug approval pipeline.
Fifteen clinical trials in lupus are underway in the Los Angeles area at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, and an additional 10 are currently recruiting people with lupus. Physicians estimate that 1 in 5 people with the chronic and difficult-to-diagnose illness are not even aware that they are sick with lupus, according to Daniel Wallace, MD, clinical professor of medicine and attending physician in the Division of Rheumatology at Cedars-Sinai. Dr. Wallace is chief investigator at the lupus clinical trial center there.
Lupus Together for Clinical Trials Today, a free patient education program presented by Lupus LA that explains clinical trials for lupus, is scheduled for this Thursday, Oct. 4, from 5:50 to 8 p.m., in the Garden Room at the Veterans Memorial Building, 4117 Overland Ave., Culver City. Registration and a buffet dinner are from 5:30 to 6:30.
Dr. Wallace and Jennifer Grossman, MD, assistant professor of medicine at UCLA Medical Center, will explain the clinical trial process, why these trials are so important for finding new treatments for lupus, and what is expected of participants. People interested in enrolling will also be given a chance to speak with others who have gone through the process.
"It's important to be informed about the clinical trial process and weigh the pros and cons of participating," Dr. Wallace said. "New therapies that can be identified in clinical trails are critical in the search for a better life for people with lupus. Physicians and scientists are committed to finding these breakthrough treatments. People with lupus are needed, too, as partners in this quest."
Lupus Together for Clinical Trials Today is a campaign of the Lupus Research Institute's National Coalition, a network of regional leaders in lupus. The Institute is the only national nonprofit organization singularly devoted to innovative science in lupus. Its official site for the new clinical trials campaign, http://www.LupusTrials.org, has logged more than 14,000 visitors since it launched in late spring. The campaign is supported in part by unrestricted educational grants from Aspreva Pharmaceuticals and Genentech/Biogen Idec.
About Lupus LA
Lupus LA is dedicated to supporting new science in lupus, and as a National Coalition member partners with the Lupus Research Institute (http://www.lupusresearchinstitute.org) to fund the innovative research needed to prevent, treat, and cure lupus. Lupus LA promotes lupus awareness and education, and is committed to serving the needs of people with lupus and their families in Los Angeles County.
Lupus LA
http://www.lupusresearchinstitute.org
Visit our lupus section for the latest news on this subject.
MLA
14 Feb. 2012. <http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/84500.php>
APA
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/84500.php.
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21 Yr Old W/ Lupus From NEB
posted by Brittany on 29 Oct 2007 at 4:24 pmI do want to let people with Lupus know what treatments I go through. I was diagnosed with Lupus when I was 7 Years old and am now 21. I am still with a pediatric rheumatologist because of some of the notes pointed out in this article. This article states that "no new major treatments have been approved for the disease in nearly 50 years". I beg to differ on this.
The summer of 2006 I had a severe relapse with SLE and they started me on the obvious treatments such as Steriods, Plaquenil and many other drugs to treat the symptoms. But there is one thing that they did that I guarantee saved my life.
They started me on Cytoxan (the chemotherapy that they use on breast cancer patients) and it worked miracles for me and a couple other young adults I know. While I was in the hospital that summer my kidneys were only working at 25% and within less than a week of being on chemo, it shot right back up to above 90%. I've been on chemo for a little over a year now and have felt the BEST I've ever felt, besides the few days after getting the chemo. I started out getting it once a month for 7 months and now get it once every 3 months. I'm tellin ya... it works miralces for people with Lupus.
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