I copied this from tets post on yahoo thanks tet...
Making Headway Against Sickle-Cell Causes Treatable for 1st Time
By Justin Gillis Washington Post Staff Writer Saturday, August 15, 1998; Page A01
Gregory McNair was draining motor oil at a Jiffy Lube in Jacksonville, Fla., when he felt a familiar dull ache start in his ankles and creep up his legs. His spirits fell. By the next day he was lying in a hospital bed, suffering another bout of the excruciating pain that has defined his life.
This time, though, he signed some papers, and a mysterious fluid began flowing into his veins. Within a couple of days he was feeling much better. It was the fastest recovery from a pain attack he's ever had.
"Normally it would take two or three weeks to get better," he said. "With the drug it takes three or four days, at least for me. I think it helps a lot."
McNair suffers from sickle-cell disease, a debilitating ailment that slowly destroys the bodies of many of its victims, sometimes slicing 20 years or more off their lives.
The treatment he received is one of several new drugs for the ailment. They are not miracle cures, but they nevertheless herald a dramatic change. It has taken science half a century to get this far, but the era has finally dawned when the causes of sickle-cell disease can be treated. Victims can now hope to claim back some of the years of life the disease steals from them.
About 72,000 people in the United States suffer from sickle-cell disease. Most are black. A few famous people, such as jazz trumpeter Miles Davis, have suffered from the ailment, and black universities such as Howard University have felt a special obligation to conduct research into it.
Over the years, some of the victims have wondered if treatments would have been so slow to arrive had the patient population been mostly white. Researchers say the relatively small number of patients tended to reduce the funds devoted to sickle-cell studies. What is changing now, in part, is rising interest among biotechnology companies in tackling what they see as a neglected problem.
Biotechnology is still a small field, but research in it has exploded over the past few years as companies use advancing knowledge of the body to find new treatments for old afflictions. Sickle-cell disease is an inherited genetic disorder, and finding treatments for it plays to the biotech industry's strength in understanding the genetic components of disease. Down the road, researchers hope that biotechnology might allow them to correct the genetic trait that causes the illness.
Researchers also credit the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda with decades of important work on sickle-cell disease. Earlier this year, in a milestone, the Food and Drug Administration approved the use of a drug called hydroxyurea that was tested partly at NIH. Taken every day as a preventive, it lessens the frequency and severity of sickle-cell attacks in many patients.
Ted Nicolas, a financial analyst from Columbia, heard about hydroxyurea before it was approved. He was wary of being a guinea pig but weary of checking himself into the hospital 20 or 25 times a year. He decided to try it and enrolled in NIH studies that helped to prove the drug works.
The hydroxyurea pills are a boon, giving him more time to spend with his wife and baby boy. "I've gone maybe five months, half a year without any serious crises," he said. "It's a big change."
Soon there may be more choices for people like him. Biotech companies in Georgia and California have entered advanced human testing with two more drugs -- including the one McNair, the Jiffy Lube worker, has taken -- that seem to help alleviate sickle-cell attacks once they start.
McNair was so thrilled the first time he got the drug last summer that he asked for it again during his next pain attack in December, even though the original study was over and the drug hadn't been approved for general use yet. With special permission from the FDA, the company gave him the drug, again with happy results.
Doctors at Harvard University are leading a study that uses a gas called nitric oxide to try to alleviate acute attacks. They caution that their evidence is sketchy -- the studies are still at an early stage -- but they have seem some "dramatic" turnarounds in patients who were at death's door.
Early human studies have begun on other drugs, and yet more are being scrutinized in the laboratory. Biotech firm MedImmune Inc. of Gaithersburg is working on a vaccine that might prevent one of the worst complications of sickle-cell disease.
With the new drugs has come a sharp change of mood among doctors who treat the ailment. "For a long time there was nothing. It was dismal," said Kenneth R. Bridges, director of the sickle-cell center at Harvard's Brigham and Women's Hospital. "I think we're entering a new frontier. There's a lot of potential to help people."
Sickle-cell disease is a genetic affliction most common among people whose ancestors lived in tropical countries. Perhaps 10 percent of black Americans and a handful of white Americans carry a gene for the disease, but most do not have the diease.
Having a single copy of the gene is an advantage in tropical countries: It makes the carrier more resistant to malaria. But inheriting two copies, one from each parent, gives a child sickle-cell disease. About 1 in 400 black babies born in the United States has the ailment.
In many people the disease is mild, but in others it is agonizing, causing lifelong pain and gradually destroying major organs.
People with the disease suffer a minute change in the structure of hemoglobin, the component of blood that carries oxygen throughout the body. Red blood cells, which contain hemoglobin, need to be flexible so they can squeeze through tiny blood vessels. But in people with sickle-cell disease the hemoglobin molecules often clump together into long chains, deforming the cell into an elongated shape often compared to a half-moon or a sickle.
These rigid, sickle-shaped cells tend to clog tiny blood vessels, interrupting blood flow and starving nearby cells of oxygen and energy. During acute attacks, the pain can be severe, and organs such as the kidneys or spleen can suffer irreparable damage. Victims are prone to many complications, including life-threatening infections.
Nicolas, the Columbia man, has lived with severe bouts of sickle-cell pain for his entire life. "I'm in pain right now," he said in an interview at his kitchen table. Tugging at his leg was Matteo, his cherubic son, too young at 19 months to understand his father's travails. (The baby has the sickle-cell trait but not the disease.) Across the table sat Marie, his wife, a nurse who decided long ago that Nicolas's ailment wouldn't stop her from marrying him.
The pain cropped up when Nicolas was a boy, then got worse during college. He is 28 now, and for years he had a hard time going a week or two without a pain attack severe enough to send him to the hospital. Once, he spent a month there when doctors discovered part of a leg bone had died. "It scared the hell out of me," he said.
Through all this he finished college and built a career in finance -- he helps a nursing-home company manage its bank accounts. He has a good doctor, but for most of his life doctors haven't had much to offer except pain killers.
But that has started to change. In 1995, learning of some promising new work, Nicolas's doctor urged him to visit the NIH.
Scientists had long known that people with sickle-cell disease do better if, through a genetic quirk, they retain high levels of the kind of hemoglobin they had as newborn babies. This "fetal hemoglobin" is structurally different from adult hemoglobin, but it seems to work perfectly well in grown-ups. And unlike adult hemoglobin, it doesn't clump together and force cells into a sickle shape.
In the mid-1980s, scientists at institutions such as NIH, Harvard and Johns Hopkins University realized they might be able to use drugs to force the body to produce high levels of fetal hemoglobin, even in people without a genetic tendency to do so. They eventually settled on hydroxyurea, an old, relatively mild cancer chemotherapy drug that appeared to have the desired effect.
Griffin Rodgers, a top NIH researcher, led a pilot study that resulted in an important paper in 1990 in the New England Journal of Medicine. This study proved that hydroxyurea could indeed raise fetal hemoglobin levels in some people.
A larger trial was mounted to discover whether the drug would actually make patients better. This work culminated, in 1995, in a dramatic announcement. The drug showed such a clear benefit that it became unethical to continue withholding it from patients, and the test was stopped early. The drug cut the number of sickle-cell attacks nearly in half and lessened other complications. And its side effects seemed manageable.
Hydroxyurea was already on the market for other purposes, so a nationwide alert advised doctors that at last, a treatment had been proven to work.
Though it doesn't help as many as a quarter of those who take it, the drug has revolutionized some people's lives. "Many of them are able to go back to work," Rodgers said. "These patients clearly have a substantial reduction in their number of crises."
Now, the news is coming fast. CytRx Corp. of Norcross, Ga., has announced positive initial results with a treatment that it calls Flocor. The treatment is a purified form of a soapy substance widely used in industry.
Given intravenously during sickle-cell attacks, the compound seems to work as a lubricant, allowing blood with sickle-shaped cells to flow more easily. There is some concern about possible kidney damage, but the company has refined its drug to try to combat that problem. In March, CytRx announced it would enroll patients in a large, definitive study of the treatment.
A California company, Cypros Pharmaceutical Corp., has also entered advanced human testing with a sickle-cell treatment, a sugary compound that it calls Cordox. This substance may allow cells to survive longer even when clogged blood vessels are starving them of oxygen and glucose. It was this treatment that seemed to offer such striking benefits to Gregory McNair, the Jiffy Lube worker in Jacksonville.
Other laboratories are looking at drugs that might be better than hydroxyurea at raising fetal hemoglobin levels. And at Harvard and other labs, work has begun on nitric oxide, a gas that might be given during acute attacks to lessen the tendency of hemoglobin molecules to clump together.
Bone-marrow transplants, a radical treatment in which a patient's marrow is destroyed and replaced to produce immune and blood cells, can cure sickle-cell disease. But the risk of death from the treatment itself is fairly high, and other problems also limit its usefulness. Some companies, including MedImmune Inc. of Gaithersburg, are looking for ways to cut the risk.
Finally, some scientists are trying to correct the genetic anomaly that leads to sickle-cell disease. The prevailing view is that this strategy will take a while to pay off, but if it ever does, it could cure the ailment with little risk.
For people like Nicolas, that day can't arrive too soon.
His battle with the ailment has been so dreadful, he said, that many people in his family did not think he would be alive in 1998. He is doing better than he has in years, but as he tussles with his son, he wonders aloud what the future holds. The statistics about shortened life expectancy unnerve him.
"This is me they're talking about," he said. "With each crisis, I'm losing a part of my body. How much do I have left?"
FOR MORE INFORMATION
People wanting more information about experimental treatments for sickle-cell disease can contact the following sources.
For studies at the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, phone 301-496-4891 or 1-800-411-1222 or send e-mail to prrc@cc.nih.gov. For information about other studies around the country, call the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute at 301-435-0055.
For information about the advanced human tests of the drug Flocor by CytRx Corp. of Norcross, Ga., call the company at 770-368-9500. For information about the advanced tests of Cordox by Cypros Pharmaceutical Corp. of Carlsbad, Calif., call the company at 1-888-297-7671.
c Copyright 1998 The Washington Post Company |