Mom's Story, A Child Learns About MS

Mom's Story, A Child Learns About MS
Available on Amazon and www.marynickum.com

Saturday, December 30, 2023

Promising Experimental Treatments for Multiple Sclerosis

 

What’s on the horizon for people with multiple sclerosis? Dedicated doctors, scientists, and volunteers are working today to answer that question and find tomorrow’s breakthroughs.

Several experimental treatments are being studied to figure out whether they’re safe and effective for people with different kinds of multiple sclerosis (MS) and at different points in their journey.

The main research goals are to find new ways to stop MS from getting worse or even to reverse nerve damage and the disability that can come with it. Eventually, the hope is to end MS forever.

That’s a tall order for sure, but progress is being made in laboratories and medical centers all around the world.

Resetting Your Immune System

When you have multiple sclerosis, your immune system attacks your central nervous system. So what if doctors could flush out your “bad” immune system and give you a new one? That’s the basic idea behind a type of bone marrow transplant called autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplant (AHSCT).

How does this work? Thrower explains it this way:

  • Immature stem cells made in your bone marrow are removed from your blood.
  • These cells are sort of cloned and many copies are made.
  • The bad immune system’s “hard drive” is wiped clean with high-dose chemotherapy.
  • The immune system is rebooted with the fresh stem cells that don’t attack your nervous system.

Since they’re your cells, they can’t be rejected. But it will take your body about a month to replace your immune system. That puts you at risk of potentially life-threatening infections, including COVID-19 and others.

The procedure is not new but not approved by the Food and Drug Administration. It could be soon, says Ben Thrower, MD, a neurologist and medical director of the Andrew C. Carlos MS Institute at Shepherd Center in Atlanta and senior medical advisor for the Multiple Sclerosis Foundation.

In fact, the National Institutes of Health is sponsoring a clinical trial comparing AHSCT against the most widely used and effective treatments for relapsing-remitting MS.

Even though AHSCT isn’t approved, experts know a lot about the best candidates for this ambitious therapy. It’s most successful in people with aggressive relapsing-remitting MS who are under age 50, according to Thrower.

This is the same procedure actress Selma Blair had in 2019, he adds. Her journey is the subject of a 2021 documentary called Introducing, Selma Blair.

Talk to your neurologist about whether you should try AHSCT. Many Americans go to other countries for this treatment.

Other New Stem Cell Approaches

Doctors are exploring other stem cell approaches. One stem cell transplant therapy being tried at Atlanta’s Shepherd Center is intended to treat all types of MS: relapsing-remitting, primary progressive, and secondary progressive. The procedure uses what’s called mesenchymal stem cells. It may be able to repair damage and reverse disability.

Mesenchymal cells are more mature than embryonic stem cells, which have a better ability to repair but are risky. “Once you put embryonic cells into the body, you lose control and you can’t take them out once they’re in. They can turn into cancerous cells or tissue you don’t want them to develop into,” Thrower says.

“Embryonic stem cells are like a genie in a bottle, you don’t know whether you’ll get a good genie or a bad genie,” he says.

Mesenchymal cells offer more control and are safer to use. The trial in Atlanta infuses these cells into volunteers through a vein. Unlike AHSCT, it doesn’t destroy the immune system.

But the jury is still out on this approach. It’s only in the first phase of research, so it’s years away from becoming an approved treatment.

Monday, December 25, 2023

Ways To Help Advance MS Research

 Researchers are committed to finding solutions for everyone affected by MS — the very people who hold the key to the answers. Without participants in research studies, MS research would come to a standstill.
 
People with MS, and sometimes family members, can help advance MS research by:

  • responding to surveys online
  • sharing their voices and ideas through NARCOMS and iConquerMSTM, organizations that amass volunteer-submitted information
  • volunteering for clinical trials and other studies
  • donating DNA from saliva and blood samples
  • arranging for brain or spinal cord tissue donation to a tissue bank; this type of donation is incredibly valuable and truly appreciated by all who are involved in moving toward a world free of MS.  Blood samples also can be donated for use in MS research studies.

Assess each opportunity and make an informed decision before agreeing to participate — understand the possible benefits and risks. See our Guide to Participating in Clinical Trials.

Everyone can get involved to support research investment, or advocate so that Congress provides funding for MS research and supports other efforts such as understanding incidence and prevalence

 

Participate in a Clinical Trial

Clinical trials help to determine if treatments and other interventions are safe and effective. Studies enrolling diverse populations are monitored to ensure that the rights and safety of all participants are protected. Without the participation of people with MS, it would be impossible to develop new and better solutions.

Learn More

Surveys and Other Research Studies

Conducted by investigators seeking to answer scientific or health policy questions about MS, or by pharmaceutical or medical device companies aiming to develop or improve products for people with MS.

Participate Now

Participate in Genetic Studies

By donating DNA from blood samples, you are helping research that could lead to ending MS forever. Learn more about genetic studies and how you can participate.

Give DNA

Donate to Tissue Banks

People living with MS may hold the key to finding a cure. Learn more about tissue banks and donating brain and spinal cord tissue for researchers studying MS.

Read More

COVID-19 Studies Recruiting People with MS

Explore opportunities for participation in research studies seeking to understand the impacts of COVID-19 and how the vaccine can affect people living with MS.

Learn More

Research Studies: Newly Diagnosed with MS

If you are new to MS, you have the chance to help advancements in MS research. Discover studies researching the earliest stages of MS looking for participants.

Learn More

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NARCOMS Patient Registry

Register as a willing MS research participant to facilitate multicenter studies. Initiated by the Consortium of MS Centers.

Visit NARCOMS

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iConquerMS™ Online Portal

Share information and ideas for research topics important to you. Each contribution and suggestion brings us closer to faster diagnoses and improved treatments.

Visit iConquerMS™