Two new Crohn's drugs being tested

Crohn's Disease Forum

Help Support Crohn's Disease Forum:

Joined
Apr 20, 2007
Messages
3,659
Here is something I found on Lymenet concerning Crohn's disease. Thought it may be of interest to those running out of options in the drug arena.

D Bergy



Relief in sight?

People with Crohn's disease, an inflammation of the bowel, live with embarrassment, pain and surgery. Two new drugs may soon help.

By Amber Dance, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
August 13, 2007

DANIEL GRAY'S stomach tells a story.

The gnarled lines across his abdomen are the mementos of three major surgeries on his digestive system. The slashes along each side are reminders of the time the stitches broke and the doctors put him into a drug-induced coma for seven weeks, keeping his abdomen open for repeated washes. The doctors made the slits so that they would have enough skin to stretch over the opening when they finally sewed him together.

Gray, 46, was diagnosed 24 years ago with Crohn's disease, a chronic inflammation of the bowel and intestines that afflicts nearly 1 million people worldwide. Crohn's patients suffer from diarrhea and abdominal pain, and 80% will eventually face the surgeon's knife to remove damaged portions of bowel.

Gray, who lives in Long Beach, is nearly 6 feet tall but weighs only 125 pounds -- yet his situation is better than it used to be. Lately, scientific research has started catching up with the disease, and modern treatments -- notably, anti-inflammatory medications called TNF blockers -- work for many patients.

With two new drugs poised to hit the market, and if all goes well, things should soon improve further for Crohn's patients.

On July 31, a Food and Drug Administration advisory committee recommended approval of the drug Tysabri as a medication for Crohn's. Tysabri is already in use for treatment of about 14,000 patients with multiple sclerosis, another autoimmune disease in which the body attacks the sheath surrounding nerve cells. Although the committee's decision is nonbinding, it will allow the FDA to move toward approval of Tysabri for Crohn's.

And in two studies published in the July 19 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine, researchers reported that another drug, Cimzia, was effective at treating about one-third of the studies' 1,330 patients with moderate to severe Crohn's. In addition, 62% of patients who responded to Cimzia continued to benefit from the treatment after six months.

UCB, the Belgium-based company that makes Cimzia, has begun filing paperwork with the FDA and plans to seek formal approval soon.


Blocking the inflammation
IN Crohn's disease, the immune system attacks the digestive system, most commonly the end of the small intestine and the beginning of the colon.

The inflammation can cause ulcers or swelling, damaging the walls of the digestive tract and ultimately narrowing the passageway. Sometimes, ulcers can extend through the intestinal wall, forming abnormal tunnels between the bowels and other organs or the skin.

The exact cause of Crohn's disease is unclear, but there appears to be a genetic link. A person is 10 times more likely to have Crohn's if a relative has it.

Symptoms include diarrhea, abdominal pain and bloody stool. Patients with severe Crohn's disease have to do "bathroom mapping," identifying nearby restrooms whenever they plan to go out.

In treating Crohn's, doctors and patients consider a variety of medications. Patients frequently start out with anti-inflammatory drugs such as Azulfidine and Rowasa, then progress to steroids, which are stronger but toxic and can be taken only for a short time. The long-term solution is often to suppress the immune system even further.

Since 1998, many Crohn's patients have been helped by medications called TNF blockers, which stymie the action of a molecule called TNF. TNF is produced by immune cells and activates further inflammation.

Two of these drugs, Remicade and Humira, are antibodies that bind to TNF, interfering with its function and helping to prevent symptoms.

Remicade and Humira are the first drugs to make a noticeable dent in the rates of hospitalization and surgery for Crohn's patients, says Dr. Stephen Hanauer, chief of gastroenterology at the University of Chicago.

But they don't work for everyone. Although the antibodies block TNF, they can induce a damaging immune response of their own. Some patients are allergic to them.

For others, the drugs work for a while, and then stop.

Cimzia is also a TNF blocker, but unlike the others it contains only part of the antibody -- the portion that recognizes TNF. The rest of the antibody -- the part that can induce its own immune response -- is replaced with a compound called PEG.

This PEG tail stabilizes the drug, allowing it to stay in the patient's body much longer, explains Hanauer, who was a coauthor on one of the recently published Cymzia studies.

That means patients would only require treatment every other month, as opposed to every other week with Humira.

Many of the patients in the two trials had nearly exhausted their treatment options, says Dr. William Sandborn, a gastroenterologist at the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota, who oversaw one of the studies.

"Gains that you see in those patients are particularly important and interesting," he says.

Ongoing studies are assessing Cimzia's efficacy over a longer period of time than six months, and preliminary data indicate that it can remain effective for at least 18 months.

Tysabri, the second new approach to Crohn's, works by interfering with a different part of the immune response.

During inflammation, infection-fighting white blood cells of the immune system cruise through capillaries, searching for infection. When tissues are infected, they put out signals to slow down the blood cells and coax them to enter the tissue. "They're kind of like the exit signs on the expressway," Hanauer says.

Tysabri binds to those exit signs -- blocking them from recognition by the immune cells that are causing the Crohn's. So the white blood cells keep on moving, and the course of inflammation is stopped.

Two clinical trials involving 848 patients published in the New England Journal of Medicine in 2005 and 2007 reported that Tysabri was effective for about one-third of Crohn's patients, and 59% of those patients continued to see benefits after one year.

However, three patients out of 3,000 in clinical trials for Crohn's or MS, developed a viral infection in the brain -- and two died. Because of this, Tysabri use is closely monitored.

Lars Ekman, president of global research and development at Elan Pharmaceuticals, which markets Tysabri, noted that the viral infections occurred when Tysabri was used with other immunosuppressants. He recommends that Tysabri be taken only on its own.

"With multiple sclerosis, we have been very successful in screening out the patients that are at risk," he says.

Gray no longer has to worry about mapping bathrooms -- by 2001 his condition had become so serious that surgeons had to remove his colon and rectum. Instead, waste drains into a pouch he wears on the front of his abdomen.

With Remicade, his condition is more manageable than it has been in years. Although he has been on disability for a decade, he hopes to return to work soon.

"It's much better to get Crohn's disease in 2007 than 1987," Sandborn says. "I think the future looks very different for these groups of patients."
 
Last edited:
Thanks for posting this D. I wonder where Amber Dance got some of her info? I particulary interested in her statement (and w/o stating/crediting her sources) that "The exact cause of Crohn's disease is unclear, but there appears to be a genetic link. A person is 10 times more likely to have Crohn's if a relative has it."
I think this may be in error. I was told the increased risk that genetics played is a 10 % increase, NOT a ten fold (X times) increase. I wonder which is correct?
 
I bet Old Hat knows the answer to that. Going by my family medical history I would not be surprised if it was 10X.

D Bergy
 
I also got a copy of that article in our local paper. I noticed that the Tysabri was effective for 1/3 of the test population and then after a year only 59% of those were still effective -- that's roughly 1/6 of the people taking it are improved for any length of time. Blatantly, that is dumb and a waste of ink to talk about. This further confirms my opinion that medicine is searching for things off-label and otherwise grasping at straws because they really have nothing that just flat-out solves the problem. The rate of this illness is increasing and the meds they offer are not super effective or bring horrible side effects or a sundry of other things that make them unacceptable or ineffective. I mean, hey guys, thanks for trying to bring out new meds, but don't bug me until you nail it really well with limited side effects. However, it did bring publicity to the illness and when I state I have it, people are more educated. Maybe they will let me in the restroom without lengthy discussion (for instance . . . my husband's band plays a gig where they have bladder busters, $.50 beer til someone hits the head. I had to get dispensation from the Pope to be exempt, just in case. Would have been easier if people knew more about the illness). But I digress . . . since they found a genetic marker, then maybe they should hit it that way . . .
 
I hope you are not participating in the alcoholic frenzy. I am sure you are aware that alcohol does not help out symptoms. It has the "Red Bean" effect.

I agree that there has probably never been an actual Crohn's drug yet. I am not sure, but I think virtually all of the drugs available are off label or started out that way.

But, if one sixth of the chronic Crohn's population can be helped and are aware of the risks, so be it. I hope it works more than a few years but that probably is unknown at this point. If nothing else worked I might try it. But I would not want to be in that uncomfortable position.

You have been awfully quite lately. I am glad to see you back in the thick of it.

Best Regards

Dan Bergman
 
Kev said:
Thanks for posting this D. I wonder where Amber Dance got some of her info? I particulary interested in her statement (and w/o stating/crediting her sources) that "The exact cause of Crohn's disease is unclear, but there appears to be a genetic link. A person is 10 times more likely to have Crohn's if a relative has it."
I think this may be in error. I was told the increased risk that genetics played is a 10 % increase, NOT a ten fold (X times) increase. I wonder which is correct?

If a sibling has CD the risk is actually 30x higher. The increased risk for having a close relative with CD is indeed 10x.
 
Yeah, I have been awfully quiet lately. I just don't think 1/6th is a good number, esp. on such a small clinical trial to begin with. I don't like seeing them just throwing meds. at an illness trying to find something off-label that might help. A good portion of people will go into remission on their own and I don't see that particular drug much better than one's own response.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top