Tag Archives: disease

Two New Treatments for IPF

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Esbriet

FDA approves Esbriet to treat idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis.

October 15, 2014

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration today approved Esbriet (pirfenidone) for the treatment of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF).

Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis is a condition in which the lungs become progressively scarred over time. As a result, patients with IPF experience shortness of breath, cough, and have difficulty participating in everyday physical activities. Current treatments for IPF include oxygen therapy, pulmonary rehabilitation, and lung transplant.

“Esbriet provides a new treatment option for patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, a serious, chronic lung disease,” said Curtis J. Rosebraugh, M.D., M.P.H., director of the Office of Drug Evaluation II in the FDA’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research. “We continue to help advance medication therapies by approving products that treat conditions that impact public health.”

The FDA granted Esbriet fast track, priority review, orphan product, and breakthrough designations. Esbriet is being approved ahead of the product’s prescription drug user fee goal date of Nov. 23, 2014, the date the agency was scheduled to complete the review of the drug application.

Esbriet acts on multiple pathways that may be involved in the scarring of lung tissue. Its safety and effectiveness were established in three clinical trials of 1,247 patients with IPF. The decline in forced vital capacity – the amount of air which can be forcibly exhaled from the lungs after taking the deepest breath possible – was significantly reduced in patients receiving Esbriet compared to patients receiving placebo.

Esbriet is not recommended for patients who have severe liver problems, end-stage kidney disease, or who require dialysis. Esbriet should be taken with food to minimize the potential for nausea and dizziness. Patients should avoid or minimize exposure to sunlight and sunlamps and wear sunscreen and protective clothing, as Esbriet may cause patients to sunburn more easily.

The most common side effects of Esbriet are nausea, rash, abdominal pain, upper respiratory tract infection, diarrhea, fatigue, headache, dyspepsia, dizziness, vomiting, decreased/loss of appetite, gastro-esophageal reflux disease, sinusitis, insomnia, decreased weight, and arthralgia.

The FDA also today approved Ofev (nintedanib) for the treatment of IPF.

Esbriet is manufactured for InterMune, Inc., Brisbane, California.

The FDA, an agency within the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, protects the public health by assuring the safety, effectiveness, and security of human and veterinary drugs, vaccines and other biological products for human use, and medical devices. The agency also is responsible for the safety and security of our nation’s food supply, cosmetics, dietary supplements, products that give off electronic radiation, and for regulating tobacco products.

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Ofev

FDA approves Ofev to treat idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis.

October 15, 2014

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration today approved Ofev (nintedanib) for the treatment of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF).

Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis is a condition in which the lungs become progressively scarred over time. As a result, patients with IPF experience shortness of breath, cough, and have difficulty participating in everyday physical activities. Current treatments for IPF include oxygen therapy, pulmonary rehabilitation, and lung transplant.

“Today’s Ofev approval expands the available treatment options for patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, a serious, chronic condition,” said Mary H. Parks, M.D., deputy director of the Office of Drug Evaluation II in the FDA’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research. “Providing health care professionals and patients with additional treatment options helps enable appropriate care decisions based on a patient’s need.”

The FDA granted Ofev fast track, priority review, orphan product, and breakthrough designations. Ofev is being approved ahead of the product’s prescription drug user fee goal date of Jan. 2, 2015, the date the agency was scheduled to complete the review of the drug application.

Ofev is a kinase inhibitor that blocks multiple pathways that may be involved in the scarring of lung tissue. Its safety and effectiveness were established in three clinical trials of 1,231 patients with IPF. The decline in forced vital capacity – the amount of air which can be forcibly exhaled from the lungs after taking the deepest breath possible – was significantly reduced in patients receiving Ofev compared to patients receiving placebo.

Ofev is not recommended for patients who have moderate to severe liver problems. Ofev can cause birth defects or death to an unborn baby. Women should not become pregnant while taking Ofev. Women who are able to get pregnant should use adequate contraception during and for at least three months after the last dose of Ofev.

The most common side effects of Ofev are diarrhea, nausea, abdominal pain, vomiting, liver enzyme elevation, decreased appetite, headache, decreased weight, and high blood pressure.

The FDA also today approved Esbriet (pirfenidone) for the treatment of IPF.

Ofev is distributed by Boehringer Ingelheim Pharmaceuticals, Inc., Ridgefield, Connecticut.

The FDA, an agency within the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, protects the public health by assuring the safety, effectiveness, and security of human and veterinary drugs, vaccines and other biological products for human use, and medical devices. The agency also is responsible for the safety and security of our nation’s food supply, cosmetics, dietary supplements, products that give off electronic radiation, and for regulating tobacco products.

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Pirfenidone

InterMune Announces Expanded Access Program for Pirfenidone to Treat Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis (IPF) in the United States

Date(s): 5/16/14 8:00 AM

For a complete listing of InterMune news releases, please click here

BRISBANE, Calif., May 16, 2014 /PRNewswire/ — InterMune, Inc. (NASDAQ: ITMN) today announced it will provide compassionate use of pirfenidone through a multi-center Expanded Access Program (EAP) in the United States to be conducted under InterMune’s U.S. IND. Pirfenidone is an investigational therapy in the U.S. and has not been approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA).

Expanded access programs provide a mechanism for early access to an investigational drug in the pre-approval period to treat patients with a serious or immediately life-threatening disease or condition that has no comparable or satisfactory alternative treatment options.

“We are pleased to offer this expanded access program for eligible patients in the U.S.,” said Jonathan Leff, M.D., Executive Vice President of Research and Development, InterMune. “This EAP provides a mechanism for eligible patients to access pirfenidone as a treatment option, following the recent successful completion of our ASCEND Phase 3 trial and prior to FDA’s final decision on the approvability of pirfenidone in the United States.”

To enroll in the EAP, a patient must meet specific clinical criteria. Eligible patients must have a clinical and radiographic diagnosis of IPF with the presence of a usual interstitial pneumonia (UIP) pattern on high-resolution computed tomography (HRCT). Additional criteria for the EAP are listed on www.clinicaltrials.gov. It is important to note that only a physician who is participating in the EAP can assess a potential patient for eligibility. The EAP protocol contains provisions for stopping enrollment of patients in the EAP upon a decision by the FDA on the approvability of a pirfenidone New Drug Application (NDA).

There are currently a limited number of sites accepting patients for enrollment to the pirfenidone EAP and InterMune expects that all sites will be participating by September of 2014. InterMune is working with the Pulmonary Fibrosis Foundation (PFF), the Coalition for Pulmonary Fibrosis (CPF) and other advocacy groups to enable patients with IPF to obtain information about the pirfenidone EAP.

For more information about the pirfenidone EAP, including eligibility criteria and participating clinical centers, contact InterMune Medical Information at 888-486-6411 or the Pulmonary Fibrosis Foundation (PFF) at 844-TalkPFF (844-825-5733) or visit www.clinicaltrials.gov.

About IPF
Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) is an irreversible and ultimately fatal disease characterized by progressive loss of lung function due to fibrosis (scarring) in the lungs, which hinders the ability of lungs to absorb oxygen. IPF inevitably causes shortness of breath, and a deterioration in lung function and exercise tolerance. IPF patients follow different and unpredictable clinical courses and it is not possible to predict if a patient will progress slowly or rapidly, or when the rate of decline may change. Periods of transient clinical stability in IPF, when they occur, inevitably give way to continued disease progression. The median survival time from diagnosis is two to five years, with a five-year survival rate of approximately 20-40 percent, which makes IPF more rapidly lethal than many malignancies, including breast, ovarian and colorectal cancers. IPF typically occurs in patients over age 45, and tends to affect slightly more men than women.

About Pirfenidone
Pirfenidone is an orally active, anti-fibrotic agent that inhibits the synthesis of TGF-beta, a chemical mediator that controls many cell functions including proliferation and differentiation, and plays a key role in fibrosis. Pirfenidone also inhibits the synthesis of TNF-alpha, a cytokine that is known to have an active role in inflammation.

About InterMune
InterMune is a biotechnology company focused on the research, development and commercialization of innovative therapies in pulmonology and orphan fibrotic diseases. In pulmonology, the company is focused on therapies for the treatment of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF), a progressive, irreversible, unpredictable and ultimately fatal lung disease. Pirfenidone is not approved for marketing in the United States. InterMune’s research programs are focused on the discovery of targeted, small-molecule therapeutics and biomarkers to treat and monitor serious pulmonary and fibrotic diseases. For additional information about InterMune and its R&D pipeline, please visit www.intermune.com.

Forward-Looking Statements
This news release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, that reflect InterMune’s judgment and involve risks and uncertainties as of the date of this release, including without limitation InterMune’s expectations regarding the availability of its Expanded Access Program for patients in the U.S. with IPF. All forward-looking statements and other information included in this press release are based on information available to InterMune as of the date hereof, and InterMune assumes no obligation to update any such forward-looking statements or information. InterMune’s actual results could differ materially from those described in InterMune’s forward-looking statements.

Other factors that could cause or contribute to such differences include, but are not limited to, those discussed in detail under the heading “Risk Factors” in InterMune’s most recent annual report on Form 10-K filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on February 24, 2014 (the “Form 10-K”) and other periodic reports filed with the SEC, including but not limited to the following: (i) the risks related to the uncertain, lengthy and expensive clinical development process for the company’s product candidates, including having no unexpected safety, toxicology, clinical or other issues and having no unexpected clinical trial results such as unexpected new clinical data and unexpected additional analysis of existing clinical data; (ii) risks related to the regulatory process for the company’s product candidates, including the possibility that the results of the new 52-week Phase 3 clinical trial (ASCEND) having an FVC endpoint may not be satisfactory to the FDA for InterMune to receive regulatory approval for pirfenidone in the United States; (iii) risks related to unexpected regulatory actions or delays or government regulation generally; and (iv) risks related to the company’s manufacturing strategy, which relies on third-party manufacturers and which exposes InterMune to additional risks where it may lose potential revenue. The risks and other factors discussed above should be considered only in connection with the fully discussed risks and other factors discussed in detail in the Form 10-K and InterMune’s other periodic reports filed with the SEC, all of which are available via InterMune’s web site at www.intermune.com.

SOURCE InterMune, Inc.

Investors: Jim Goff, InterMune, Inc., 415-466-2228, [email protected], Media: Geoff Curtis, Edelman, 312-550-8138, [email protected]

SABRIL

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Lundbeck’s SABRIL® (vigabatrin) Now Approved by U.S. FDA as an Adjunctive Treatment Option for Children 10 and older with Refractory Complex Partial Seizures

Deerfield, Ill., October 28, 2013 – The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved SABRIL (vigabatrin) as add-on therapy for the treatment of refractory complex partial seizures (CPS) in children 10 years of age and older who have inadequately responded to several other treatments and if the possible benefit outweighs the risk of vision loss.1 This approval expands upon the age range of SABRIL’s previous indication as adjunctive therapy for adults with refractory CPS. SABRIL is not indicated as a first-line agent for refractory CPS.

Of the more than two million Americans affected by epilepsy,2 approximately 35 percent have CPS, which originates from a single region of the brain and can cause impaired consciousness.3 Approximately 30 to 36 percent of those with CPS continue to have seizures despite trying multiple therapies, and are considered to have refractory CPS.4,5,6

“It is crucially important for people with challenging seizures like refractory CPS to not give up and continue striving for improved seizure management, and this expanded Sabril indication provides another consideration for the treatment of those ten and older with refractory CPS,” said Philip Gattone, president and CEO of the Epilepsy Foundation. “We encourage people living with such challenging seizures and their loved ones to have ongoing conversations with their doctor about available options to help manage this intractable seizure disorder.”

When SABRIL was first approved in 2009, a patient registry was established to collect information on all patients who are prescribed SABRIL. To date, more than 5,600 patients have been treated with SABRIL, a substantial number of whom have been treated for refractory CPS.7 In evaluating whether to start SABRIL, doctors, patients and their caregivers work together to assess the risk of permanent vision loss versus the benefit of seizure reduction. There are other serious risks associated with SABRIL. Please see the important safety information below for more details.

“With so many children still having seizures due to refractory CPS, we are very pleased that the FDA has approved SABRIL for patients 10 and older who may benefit from a new add-on treatment option,” said Amy Magro, Director of Epilepsy Marketing at Lundbeck. “For those caring for a child as young as 10, we hope this new indication provides encouragement to speak with their child’s doctor about the risks and potential benefits of adding SABRIL for refractory CPS.”

In addition to its refractory CPS indication, SABRIL is approved for use in babies one month to two years of age with infantile spasms if the possible benefit outweighs the potential risk of vision loss.

For more information, please visit www.SABRIL.net.

About SABRIL® (vigabatrin) 1
SABRIL is a prescription oral antiepileptic drug developed in the United States by Lundbeck. SABRIL is available in 500-mg tablets or 500-mg packets of powder for oral suspension. Because of the risk of permanent vision loss, SABRIL is available only through a restricted program under a REMS called the SHARE Program. (1-888-45-SHARE).

Use
SABRIL (vigabatrin) is a prescription medicine used with other treatments in adults and children 10 years of age and older with refractory complex partial seizures (CPS), who have not responded well enough to several other treatments, and if the possible benefits outweigh the risk of vision loss. SABRIL should not be the first medicine used to treat CPS.

SABRIL (vigabatrin) is a prescription medicine used in babies, 1 month to 2 years old, with infantile spasms (IS), if the possible benefits outweigh the possible risk of vision loss.

Important Safety Information

WARNING: VISION LOSS

See Medication Guide and full Prescribing Information for complete information

In all people who take SABRIL:

• You are at risk for vision loss with any amount of SABRIL

• Your risk of vision loss may be higher the more SABRIL you take daily and the longer you take it

• It is not possible for your healthcare provider to know when vision loss will happen. It could happen soon after starting SABRIL or any time during treatment. It may even happen after treatment has stopped.

Please see SABRIL Medication Guide, full Prescribing Information including Boxed Warning, and Instructions for Use; go to www.sabril.net, or call toll-free 1-888-45-SHARE (1-888-457-4273).

You are encouraged to report negative side effects of prescription drugs to the FDA. Visit www.fda.gov/medwatch, or call 1-800-FDA-1088.

About Lundbeck in the U.S.
A wholly owned subsidiary of H. Lundbeck A/S of Denmark, Lundbeck in the United States is headquartered in Deerfield, Illinois, and is committed to providing innovative specialty therapies that fulfill unmet medical needs of people with central nervous system (CNS) disorders, including several therapies for people with challenging seizure disorders.

With a special commitment to the epilepsy community, Lundbeck actively supports and participates in hundreds of community-based initiatives. Learn more about our epilepsy community programs at http://www.lundbeck.com/us/our-commitment/community-involvement.

About H. Lundbeck A/S
Lundbeck is a global pharmaceutical company highly committed to improving the quality of life of people living with brain diseases. For this purpose, Lundbeck is engaged in the entire value chain throughout research, development, production, marketing and sales of pharmaceuticals across the world. The company’s products are targeted at disorders such as depression and anxiety, psychotic disorders, epilepsy, Huntington’s, Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s diseases. Lundbeck’s pipeline consists of several mid- to late-stage development programs.

Lundbeck employs more than 5,800 people worldwide, 2,000 of whom are based in Denmark. We have employees in 57 countries and our products are registered in more than 100 countries. We have research centers in Denmark, China and the United States and production facilities in Italy, France, Mexico, China and Denmark. Lundbeck generated revenue of approximately DKK 15 billion in 2012. Lundbeck’s shares are listed on the stock exchange in Copenhagen under the symbol “LUN.” Lundbeck has a sponsored Level 1 ADR programme listed in the US (OTC) under the symbol “HLUYY.” For additional information, we encourage you to visit our corporate site www.lundbeck.com.

Sources

  1. SABRIL® (vigabatrin) full Prescribing Information, Deerfield, IL. Lundbeck. 2013.
  2. Epilepsy Foundation. About Epilepsy: Statistics. http://www.epilepsyfoundation.org/aboutepilepsy/index.cfm/statistics. Accessed 10/2/13.
  3. Carroll E. Medscape. Complex Partial Seizures. http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/1183962-overview. Accessed 10/2/13.
  4. Kwan P, Brodie MJ. Early identification of refractory epilepsy. N Engl J Med. 2000; 342:314-9.
  5. Devinsky O. Patients with refractory seizures. N Engl J Med. 1999;340:1565-70.
  6. Rielo DM. Medscape. Vagus Nerve Stimulation. 2011. http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/1186123-overview. Accessed 10/2/13.
  7. Data on File.

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CONTACT:
Matt Flesch
847-282-1154

SABRIL is a registered trademark of Lundbeck.

VGB-B-00018

Opsumit

Actelion receives U.S. FDA approval of Opsumit (macitentan) for the treatment of pulmonary arterial hypertension.

Allschwil, Switzerland, October 18, 2013 – Actelion Ltd (SIX: ATLN) announced today that the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved the use of the orally available endothelin receptor antagonist Opsumit® (macitentan) 10 mg once daily for the treatment of pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) to delay disease progression.

Opsumit is indicated for the treatment of pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH, WHO Group I) to delay disease progression. Disease progression included: death, initiation of intravenous (IV) or subcutaneous prostanoids, or clinical worsening of PAH (decreased 6-minute walk distance, worsened PAH symptoms and need for additional PAH treatment). Opsumit also reduced hospitalization for PAH.

Effectiveness was established in a long-term study in PAH patients with predominantly WHO Functional Class II-III symptoms treated for an average of 2 years. Patients were treated with Opsumit® monotherapy or in combination with phosphodiesterase-5 inhibitors or inhaled prostanoids. Patients had idiopathic and heritable PAH (57%), PAH caused by connective tissue disorders (31%), and PAH caused by congenital heart disease with repaired shunts (8%).

Dr. Vallerie McLaughlin, Director of the Pulmonary Hypertension Program in the Division of Cardiovascular Medicine at the University of Michigan, commented: “Over the past twenty years, great strides have been made in treating PAH patients. However, there has been a medical need for innovative treatments that improve long-term outcomes. Opsumit® is the first clinically proven and only oral treatment option indicated to delay disease progression and reduce the need for PAH hospitalization.”

Dr. McLaughlin concluded: “These effects were demonstrated in SERAPHIN, the first and largest PAH outcome study to date, where Opsumit® was given on average for 2 years, as a monotherapy or in combination with phosphodiesterase-5 inhibitors or inhaled prostanoids. I am very pleased that PAH patients will have this new treatment option.”

Jean-Paul Clozel, M.D. and Chief Executive Officer of Actelion commented: “Today’s approval of Opsumit® by the FDA is providing the PAH community with a unique treatment option, the only oral PAH medicine that has proven to delay disease progression. Over the last 14 years, Actelion has worked tirelessly to first discover and then develop Opsumit® in the largest, longest and first-ever outcome study in PAH. I would like to express my gratitude to all the members of the PAH community. Without their contribution, Opsumit® would not have become a reality. We will now leverage our existing PAH expertise and infrastructure to bring Opsumit® to patients within the coming weeks.”

The US label for Opsumit® carries a Boxed Warning alerting patients and health care professionals that the drug should not be used in pregnant women because it can harm the developing fetus. Female patients can receive the drug only through the Opsumit REMS Program. All female patients must be enrolled in the program, comply with pregnancy testing requirements and be counselled regarding the need for contraception.

The most common adverse reactions (more frequent than placebo by 3% or more) observed in patients treated with Opsumit® were anemia, nasopharyngitis/pharyngitis, bronchitis, headache, influenza, and urinary tract infection.

Physicians are advised to measure hemoglobin and liver enzymes prior to initiation of Opsumit® and repeat during treatment as clinically indicated.

In the United States, Actelion expects Opsumit® to become available to patients in November. Outside of the United States, Actelion continues to work with health authorities to obtain regulatory approval for Opsumit® .

The FDA approval was based in part on data from the landmark phase III SERAPHIN study. Published in the New England Journal of Medicine in August 2013, the SERAPHIN study showed the risk of the first occurrence of a morbidity or mortality event, the primary endpoint of the study, was reduced by 45% (p<0.0001) with macitentan 10 mg compared to placebo. This effect was observed irrespective of whether or not patients were already treated with other therapies for PAH. SERAPHIN also showed a risk reduction in PAH related hospitalization and death of 50% (p<0.0001) compared to placebo. [1].

Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is a chronic, life-threatening disorder characterized by abnormally high blood pressure in the arteries between the heart and lungs of an affected individual. The symptoms of PAH are non-specific and can range from mild breathlessness and fatigue during normal daily activity to symptoms of right heart failure and severe restrictions on exercise capacity and ultimately reduced life expectancy.

NOTES TO THE EDITOR
ABOUT OPSUMIT® (MACITENTAN)

Opsumit® (macitentan) is a novel dual endothelin receptor antagonist (ERA) that resulted from a tailored drug discovery process with the target of developing an ERA to address efficacy and safety [3].

ABOUT THE SERAPHIN STUDY
SERAPHIN (Study with an Endothelin Receptor Antagonist in Pulmonary arterial Hypertension to Improve cliNical outcome) was the largest and longest randomized, controlled study in PAH patients to include a clearly defined morbidity/mortality primary endpoint [2]. The pivotal Phase III study was designed to evaluate the efficacy and safety of Opsumit®(macitentan) – a novel dual endothelin receptor antagonist that resulted from a tailored drug discovery process – through the primary endpoint of time to first morbidity and all-cause mortality event in patients with symptomatic PAH.

Global enrollment was completed in December 2009 with a total of 742 patients. Patients were randomized 1:1:1 to receive two different doses of macitentan (3 mg and 10 mg once daily) or placebo. Patients were allowed to receive PAH background therapy throughout the study, either PDE-5 inhibitors or oral/inhaled prostanoids. This event-driven study was conducted in 151 centers from almost 40 countries in North America, Latin America, Europe, Asia-Pacific and Africa and was completed in the first half of 2012, with 287 patients having an adjudicated event.

Dr. McLaughlin is a consultant to Actelion and was an investigator in the SERAPHIN trial.

ABOUT SERAPHIN STUDY DATA
Patients were randomized to placebo (n=250), macitentan 3 mg (n=250), or macitentan 10 mg (n=242). The primary end point occurred in 46.4%, 38.0%, and 31.4% of the patients in these groups, respectively. The hazard ratio for macitentan 3 mg versus placebo was 0.70 (97.5% CI, 0.52 to 0.96; p=0.0108) and the hazard ratio for macitentan 10 mg versus placebo was 0.55 (97.5% CI, 0.39 to 0.76; p<0.0001). Worsening of pulmonary arterial hypertension was the most frequent primary end point event. The effect of macitentan on this end point was observed irrespective of background therapy for pulmonary arterial hypertension. [1]

ABOUT THE SAFETY AND TOLERABILITY PROFILE
Opsumit is contraindicated in pregnancy because it may harm the developing fetus. Females of reproductive potential should be counselled on the use of reliable contraception and have a negative pregnancy test prior to initiating therapy and monthly thereafter.

Other ERAs have been associated with elevations of aminotransferases, hepatotoxicity, and liver failure. Liver enzyme tests should be obtained prior to initiation of Opsumit® and repeated during treatment as clinically indicated. If clinically relevant aminotransferase elevations occur, or if elevations are accompanied by clinical symptoms of hepatoxicity, discontinue Opsumit®.

Decreases in hemoglobin concentration and hematocrit occurred following administration of other ERAs and were observed in clinical studies with OPSUMIT. The decreases occurred early and stabilized thereafter. Decreases in hemoglobin seldom require transfusion. Initiation of Opsumit® is not recommended in patients with severe anemia. Hemoglobin should be measured prior to initiation of treatment and repeat during treatment as clinically indicated.

Should signs of pulmonary edema occur, consider the possibility of associated PVOD. If confirmed, discontinue Opsumit®.

Other ERAs have been associated with adverse effects on spermatogenesis. Men should be counseled about potential effects on fertility.

The use of Opsumit® with strong CYP3A4 inducers or inhibitors should be avoided.

The most common adverse reactions (more frequent than placebo by 3% or more) observed in patients treated with Opsumit were anemia, nasopharyngitis/pharyngitis, bronchitis, headache, influenza, and urinary tract infection.

ABOUT OPSUMIT® (MACITENTAN) SUBMISSIONS TO HEALTHCARE AUTHORITIES

Approval of the new drug application for Opsumit® (macitentan) was issued by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) on 18October 2013 for the treatment of pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH, WHO Group I) to delay disease progression. Disease progression included: death, initiation of intravenous (IV) or subcutaneous prostanoids, or clinical worsening of PAH (decreased 6-minute walk distance, worsened PAH symptoms and need for additional PAH treatment). The need for PAH hospitalization was also reduced.

Regulatory reviews are ongoing in Europe, Canada, Switzerland, Australia, Taiwan, Korea and Mexico.

ABOUT PULMONARY ARTERIAL HYPERTENSION [9, 10]

Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is a chronic, life-threatening disorder characterized by abnormally high blood pressure in the arteries between the heart and lungs of an affected individual. The symptoms of PAH are non-specific and can range from mild breathlessness and fatigue during normal daily activity to symptoms of right heart failure and severe restrictions on exercise capacity and ultimately reduced life expectancy.

PAH is one group within the classification of pulmonary hypertension (PH). This group includes idiopathic PAH, heritable PAH and PAH caused by factors which include connective tissue disease, HIV infection and congenital heart disease.

The last decade has seen significant advances in the understanding of the pathophysiology of PAH, which has been paralleled with developments of treatment guidelines and new therapies. Drugs targeting the three pathways that have been established in the pathogenesis of PAH are endothelin receptor antagonists (ERAs), prostacyclins and phosphodiesterase-5 inhibitors. PAH treatments have transformed the prognosis for PAH patients from symptomatic improvements in exercise tolerance 10 years ago to delayed disease progression today. Improved disease awareness and evidence-based guidelines developed from randomized controlled clinical trial data have highlighted the need for early intervention, goal-oriented treatment and combination therapy.

In PAH, survival rates are unacceptably low and PAH remains incurable.

References

  1. Pulido T et al. Macitentan and Morbidity and Mortality in Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension. N Engl J Med 2013;369:809-18.
  2. Proceedings of the 4th world symposium on pulmonary hypertension. J Am CollCardiol 2009;54(1 Suppl).
  3. Bolli MH et al. The Discovery of N-[5-(4-Bromophenyl)-6-[2-[(5-bromo-2-pyrimidinyl)oxy]ethoxy]-4-pyrimidinyl]-N’-propylsulfamide (Macitentan), an Orally Active, Potent Dual Endothelin Receptor Antagonist. J Med Chem. 2012; 55:7849-61.
  4. Gatfield J, Mueller Grandjean C, Sasse T, Clozel M, Nayler O (2012). Slow Receptor Dissociation Kinetics Differentiate Macitentan from Other Endothelin Receptor Antagonists in Pulmonary Arterial Smooth Muscle Cells. PLOS ONE 7(10): e47662. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0047662
  5. Iglarz M et al. Pharmacology of macitentan, an orally active tissue-targeting dual endothelin receptor antagonist. J PharmacolExpTher. 2008;327(3):736-45.
  6. Sidharta PN et al. Macitentan: Entry-into-humans study with a new endothelin receptor antagonist. Eur J ClinPharmacol. 2011;67(10):977-84
  7. Bruderer S et al. Absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion of macitentan, a dual endothelin receptor antagonist, in humans. Xenobiotica. 2012 Sep;42(9):901-10
  8. Bruderer S et al. Effect of cyclosporine A and rifampin on the pharmacokinetics of macitentan, a tissue-targeting dual endothelin receptor antagonist. AAPS J. 2012;14(1):68-78.
  9. Galiè N, Hoeper MM, Humbert M, et al; ESC Committee for Practice Guidelines (CPG). Guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment of pulmonary hypertension: the Task Force for the Diagnosis and Treatment of Pulmonary Hypertension of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC) and the European Respiratory Society (ERS), endorsed by the International Society of Heart and Lung Transplantation (ISHLT). Eur Heart J 2009;30:2493-537
  10. Benza RL, Miller DP, Barst RJ, Badesch DB, Frost AE, McGoon MD. An evaluation of long-term survival from time of diagnosis in pulmonary arterial hypertension from REVEAL. Chest 2012;142:448-56.

Actelion Ltd
Actelion Ltd is a biopharmaceutical company with its corporate headquarters in Allschwil/Basel, Switzerland. Actelion’s first drug Tracleer® (bosentan), an orally available dual endothelin receptor antagonist, has been approved as a therapy for pulmonary arterial hypertension. Actelion markets Tracleer through its own subsidiaries in key markets worldwide, including the United States (based in South San Francisco), the European Union, Japan, Canada, Australia and Switzerland. Actelion, founded in late 1997, is a leading player in innovative science related to the endothelium – the single layer of cells separating every blood vessel from the blood stream. Actelion’s over 2,300 employees focus on the discovery, development and marketing of innovative drugs for significant unmet medical needs. Actelion shares are traded on the SIX Swiss Exchange (ticker symbol: ATLN) as part of the Swiss blue-chip index SMI (Swiss Market Index SMI®).

For further information please contact:
Roland Haefeli
Senior Vice President, Head of Investor Relations & Public Affairs
Actelion Pharmaceuticals Ltd, Gewerbestrasse 16, CH-4123 Allschwil
+41 61 565 62 62
+1 650 624 69 36
www.actelion.com

The above information contains certain “forward-looking statements”, relating to the company’s business, which can be identified by the use of forward-looking terminology such as “estimates”, “believes”, “expects”, “may”, “are expected to”, “will”, “will continue”, “should”, “would be”, “seeks”, “pending” or “anticipates” or similar expressions, or by discussions of strategy, plans or intentions. Such statements include descriptions of the company’s investment and research and development programs and anticipated expenditures in connection therewith, descriptions of new products expected to be introduced by the company and anticipated customer demand for such products and products in the company’s existing portfolio. Such statements reflect the current views of the company with respect to future events and are subject to certain risks, uncertainties and assumptions. Many factors could cause the actual results, performance or achievements of the company to be materially different from any future results, performances or achievements that may be expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. Should one or more of these risks or uncertainties materialize, or should underlying assumptions prove incorrect, actual results may vary materially from those described herein as anticipated, believed, estimated or expected.

Adempas

News Release Intended for U.S. Media Only


FDA Approves Bayer’s New Class of Drug Adempas® (riociguat) tablets to Treat Adults with PAH and Persistent, Recurrent or Inoperable CTEPH First and only drug approved in U.S. to Treat Two Forms of Pulmonary Hypertension (WHO Group 1 and 4)


Whippany, N.J., October 8, 2013 – Bayer HealthCare announced today that the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved Adempas®  (riociguat) tablets for: (i) the treatment of adults with persistent/recurrent chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension (CTEPH) (WHO*  Group 4) after surgical treatment or inoperable CTEPH to improve exercise capacity and WHO functional class; and (ii) the treatment of adults with pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) (WHO Group 1) to improve exercise capacity, improve WHO functional class and delay clinical worsening. In PAH, efficacy was shown in patients on Adempas monotherapy or in combination with endothelin receptor antagonists (ERAs) or prostanoids (inhaled, oral or subcutaneous). Studies establishing effectiveness included predominately patients with WHO functional class II-III and etiologies of idiopathic or heritable PAH (61%) or PAH associated with connective tissue diseases (25%). Adempas is the only treatment approved in the U.S. for use in two types of pulmonary hypertension (WHO Group 1 and 4). It is the first and only FDA-approved drug therapy for persistent/recurrent CTEPH after surgical treatment or inoperable CTEPH. It is also the only approved oral therapy in PAH with efficacy shown in monotherapy or in combination with ERAs or prostanoids. For all female patients, Adempas is available only through a restricted program called the Adempas Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategy (REMS) Program.

1 World Health Organization

“CTEPH and PAH are serious and life-threatening diseases,” said Nick H. Kim, Associate Clinical Professor of Medicine, Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine; Director, Pulmonary Vascular Medicine; Director, Fellowship Program; University of California San Diego. “The approval of Adempas equips physicians with a new approach to treating PAH patients, and it gives us the first approved drug treatment for patients with inoperable CTEPH or with persistent/recurrent CTEPH after surgery. While surgery should always be considered as the first treatment option for CTEPH, the fact remains that up to forty percent of CTEPH patients are not eligible for surgery, and ten to thirty-five percent of CTEPH patients have disease that persists after surgery.” PAH is a disease characterized by elevated pressure in the pulmonary arteries. CTEPH is a form of pulmonary hypertension in which blood clots and thromboembolic occlusion of the pulmonary vessels leads to increased pressure in the pulmonary arteries. The standard treatment for CTEPH is pulmonary endarterectomy, a potentially curative surgery that clears clots and scar material from the blood vessels of the lung. “Bayer is deeply committed to bringing new treatment options to patients with life-threatening diseases. Adempas is an excellent example of this commitment, because it is the result of years of dedicated research in our Bayer laboratories into a new way of treating two forms of pulmonary hypertension,” said Pamela A. Cyrus, MD, Vice President and Head, U.S. Medical, Bayer HealthCare Pharmaceuticals. “We are pleased to bring this new class of treatment to patients with PAH or with inoperable CTEPH or persistent/recurrent CTEPH after surgical treatment.” Rino Aldrighetti, President and CEO, Pulmonary Hypertension Association added, “From a patient’s perspective, living with pulmonary hypertension remains difficult. We know that not all treatments work for all people. We get excited when there is a new treatment option for PAH patients, and we are thrilled there is finally an approved drug treatment for people living with persistent/recurrent CTEPH after surgical treatment or inoperable CTEPH.” Adempas, a stimulator of soluable guanylate cyclase (sGC), represents a new class of drug now available in the U.S. Pulmonary hypertension is associated with endothelial dysfunction, impaired synthesis of nitric oxide (NO) and insufficient stimulation of the NO-sGC-cGMP pathway. Adempas sensitizes sGC to endogenous NO by stabilizing the NO-sGC binding. Adempas also directly stimulates sGC via a different binding site independently of NO. Adempas restores the NO-sGC-cGMP pathway and leads to increased generation of cGMP with subsequent vasodialation. The most common adverse reactions occurring more frequently (>3%) on Adempas than placebo were headache (27% vs 18%), dyspepsia/gastritis (21% vs. 8%), dizziness (20% vs 13%), nausea (14% vs 11%), diarrhea (12% vs 8%), hypotension (10% vs 4%), vomiting (10% vs 7%), anemia (7% vs 2%), gastroesophageal reflux disease (5% vs 2%), and constipation (5% vs 1%). Other events that were seen more frequently in Adempas compared to placebo and potentially related to treatment were: palpitations, nasal congestion, epistaxis, dysphagia, abdominal distension and peripheral edema. About Patient Assistance Program Bayer offers patient assistance through the Adempas Aim Support Center program, which will assist with obtaining coverage and patient support of Adempas. Patients and providers may contact the program at 1-855-4ADEMPAS for additional information. IMPORTANT SAFETY INFORMATION 

WARNING: EMBRYO-FETAL TOXICITY Do not administer Adempas (riociguat) tablets to a pregnant female because it may cause fetal harm.

Females of reproductive potential: Exclude pregnancy before the start of treatment, monthly during treatment, and 1 month after stopping treatment. Prevent pregnancy during treatment and for one month after stopping treatment by using acceptable methods of contraception.

For all female patients, Adempas is available only through a restricted program called the Adempas Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategy (REMS) Program.

Contraindications. Adempas is contraindicated in:

Warnings and Precautions Embryo-Fetal Toxicity. Adempas may cause fetal harm when administered during pregnancy and is contraindicated for use in women who are pregnant. In females of reproductive potential, exclude pregnancy prior to initiation of therapy, advise use of acceptable contraception and obtain monthly pregnancy tests. For females, Adempas is only available through a restricted program under the Adempas REMS Program. Adempas REMS Program. Females can only receive Adempas through the Adempas REMS Program, a restricted distribution program. Important requirements of the Adempas REMS program include the following:

Further information, including a list of certified pharmacies, is available at www.AdempasREMS.com or 1-855-4ADEMPAS. Hypotension. Adempas reduces blood pressure. Consider the potential for symptomatic hypotension or ischemia in patients with hypovolemia, severe left ventricular outflow obstruction, resting hypotension, autonomic dysfunction, or concomitant treatment with antihypertensives or strong CYP and P-gp/BCRP inhibitors. Consider a dose reduction if patient develops signs or symptoms of hypotension. Bleeding. In the placebo-controlled clinical trials program, serious bleeding occurred in 2.4% of patients taking Adempas compared to 0% of placebo patients. Serious hemoptysis occurred in 5 (1%) patients taking Adempas compared to 0 placebo patients, including one event with fatal outcome. Serious hemorrhagic events also included 2 patients with vaginal hemorrhage, 2 with catheter site hemorrhage, and 1 each with subdural hematoma, hematemesis, and intra-abdominal hemorrhage. Pulmonary Veno-Occlusive Disease. Pulmonary vasodilators may significantly worsen the cardiovascular status of patients with pulmonary veno-occlusive disease (PVOD). Therefore, administration of Adempas to such patients is not recommended. Should signs of pulmonary edema occur, the possibility of associated PVOD should be considered and if confirmed, discontinue treatment with Adempas.  Most Common Adverse Reactions  The most common adverse reactions occurring more frequently (>3%) on Adempas than placebo were headache (27% vs 18%), dyspepsia/gastritis (21% vs. 8%), dizziness (20% vs 13%), nausea (14% vs 11%), diarrhea (12% vs 8%), hypotension (10% vs 4%), vomiting (10% vs 7%), anemia (7% vs 2%), gastroesophageal reflux disease (5% vs 2%), and constipation (5% vs 1%). Other events that were seen more frequently in Adempas compared to placebo and potentially related to treatment were: palpitations, nasal congestion, epistaxis, dysphagia, abdominal distension and peripheral edema. For important risk and use information, please see the full Prescribing Information, including Boxed Warning, at www.adempas-us.com. About Bayer HealthCare Pharmaceuticals Inc. Bayer HealthCare Pharmaceuticals Inc. is the U.S.-based pharmaceuticals business of Bayer HealthCare LLC, a subsidiary of Bayer AG. Bayer HealthCare is one of the world’s leading, innovative companies in the healthcare and medical products industry, and combines the activities of the Animal Health, Consumer Care, Medical Care, and Pharmaceuticals divisions. As a specialty pharmaceutical company, Bayer HealthCare provides products for General Medicine, Hematology, Neurology, Oncology and Women’s Healthcare. The company’s aim is to discover and manufacture products that will improve human health worldwide by diagnosing, preventing and treating diseases. Bayer® and the Bayer Cross® are registered trademarks of Bayer. Intended for U.S. media only U.S. Media Contact: Marcy Funk, Communications, Bayer HealthCare Telephone: (862) 404-5385 E-Mail: [email protected] Forward-Looking Statements This release may contain forward-looking statements based on current assumptions and forecasts made by Bayer Group or subgroup management. Various known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors could lead to material differences between the actual future results, financial situation, development or performance of the company and the estimates given here. These factors include those discussed in Bayer’s public reports which are available on the Bayer website at www.bayer.com. The company assumes no liability whatsoever to update these forward-looking statements or to conform them to future events or developments.

Adempas

News Release Intended for U.S. Media Only


FDA ADVISORY COMMITTEE UNANIMOUSLY RECOMMENDS APPROVAL OF BAYER’S RIOCIGUAT IN TWO PULMONARY HYPERTENSION INDICATIONS

If approved by the FDA, riociguat will be the first treatment for inoperable CTEPH or persistent/recurrent CTEPH after surgery and a new treatment for PAH


Whippany, N.J., August 6, 2013– Bayer HealthCare today announced that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA) Cardiovascular and Renal Drugs Advisory Committee recommended approval for investigational riociguat, proposed trade name Adempas™, in two forms of pulmonary hypertension. The Committee voted 11 to 0 that riociguat should be approved for the treatment of pulmonary arterial hypertension [PAH] of WHO1 Group 1. The Committee also voted 11 to 0 that riociguat should be approved for the treatment of chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension (CTEPH) of WHO Group 4. In February 2013, Bayer submitted a new drug application for riociguat in two indications: (i) the treatment of PAH (WHO Group 1) to improve exercise capacity, improve WHO functional class and delay clinical worsening; and (ii) the treatment of persistent/recurrent CTEPH (WHO Group 4) after surgical treatment or inoperable CTEPH to improve exercise capacity and WHO functional class. “We appreciate the Committtee’s discussion today around the safe and appropriate use of riociguat and are pleased with the outcome of the votes,” said Pamela A. Cyrus, MD, Vice President and Head of U.S. Medical Affairs, Bayer HealthCare Pharmaceuticals. “If approved, riociguat will offer a new treatment option for patients with PAH and will also provide the first approved non-surgical treatment option for CTEPH patients who are inoperable or who have recurrent or persistent disease. We look forward to continued dialogue with the FDA in order to make riociguat available to patients.”

1 World Health Organization

PAH and CTEPH are both life-threatening forms of pulmonary hypertension that cause significantly increased pressure in the pulmonary arteries. Riociguat is an investigational, oral medication for the treatment of adult patients with PAH or inoperable or persistent/recurrent CTEPH. If approved by the FDA later this year, it would create a new class of therapy available in the U.S. PH is associated with endothelial dysfunction, impaired synthesis of nitric oxide (NO) and insufficient stimulation of soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC). Riociguat stimulates sGC independent of NO and increases the sensitivity of sGC to NO. Data presented at today’s advisory committee meeting included results from the global Phase 3 clinical program, which enrolled 704 patients across two Phase 3 studies. Both studies met their primary endpoint by demonstrating a statistically significant improvement in the six-minute walk test (6MWT), after 16 and 12 weeks respectively. Riociguat was also associated with improvements across multiple, relevant, secondary endpoints in the studies. The most common treatment-emergent adverse events with riociguat were headache, dizziness, dsypesia, peripheral edema, nausea, diarrhea and vomiting. The advisory committee’s vote will be taken into consideration by the FDA when making its decision on the approvability of Bayer’s NDA for riociguat, which was submitted in February 2013. After acceptance of the NDA, the FDA granted riociguat priority review designation, which is given to drugs that have the potential to offer significant improvement in treatment or provide a treatment option where no adequate therapy exists. About Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension (PAH) In PAH, a rare and life-threatening disease, the blood pressure in the pulmonary arteries (the arteries that take de-oxygenated blood to the lungs from the heart) is significantly increased. PAH is characterized by morphological changes to the endothelium of the arteries of the lungs causing remodeling of the tissue, vasoconstriction and thrombosis-in-situ. As a result of these changes, the blood vessels in the lungs are narrowed, making it difficult for the heart to pump blood through to the lungs. In most cases, PAH has no known cause and, in some cases, it can be inherited. About Chronic Thromboembolic Pulmonary Hypertension (CTEPH) CTEPH is also a rare and life-threatening disease in which it is believed that thromboembolic occlusion (organized blood clots) of pulmonary vessels gradually lead to an increased pressure in the pulmonary arteries, resulting in an overload of the right heart. CTEPH may evolve after prior episodes of acute pulmonary embolism, but the pathogenesis is not yet completely understood. The standard treatment for CTEPH is pulmonary endarterectomy (PEA), a surgical procedure in which the blood vessels of the lungs are cleared of clot and scar material. However, CTEPH is inoperable in an estimated 20 to 40 percent of patients, and, in some cases, the disease persists or reoccurs after surgery. About Bayer HealthCare Pharmaceuticals Inc.Bayer HealthCare Pharmaceuticals Inc. is the U.S.-based pharmaceuticals business of Bayer HealthCare LLC, a subsidiary of Bayer AG. Bayer HealthCare is one of the world’s leading, innovative companies in the healthcare and medical products industry, and combines the activities of the Animal Health, Consumer Care, Medical Care, and Pharmaceuticals divisions. As a specialty pharmaceutical company, Bayer HealthCare provides products for General Medicine, Hematology, Neurology, Oncology and Women’s Healthcare. The company’s aim is to discover and manufacture products that will improve human health worldwide by diagnosing, preventing and treating diseases. Bayer® and the Bayer Cross® are registered trademarks of Bayer.

Intended for U.S. media only Media Contact: Marcy Funk, Communications, Bayer HealthCare Telephone: (862) 404-5385 E-Mail: [email protected]

Forward-Looking Statements This release may contain forward-looking statements based on current assumptions and forecasts made by Bayer Group or subgroup management. Various known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors could lead to material differences between the actual future results, financial situation, development or performance of the company and the estimates given here. These factors include those discussed in Bayer’s public reports which are available on the Bayer website at www.bayer.com. The company assumes no liability whatsoever to update these forward-looking statements or to conform them to future events or developments.

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Learning to Live with Pulmonary Hypertension

Posted on by Charlie

48-year-old Mari Jackson had worked since the age of 12. But last year, a diagnosis of pulmonary arterial hypertension forced her to slow down and approach life differently.

Mari Jackson and her husband, William.

Mari Jackson and her husband, William. Photo by Anthony Nesossis

I got diagnosed with pulmonary hypertension last March. The symptoms started in February of last year, right around my husband’s birthday. It was like something out of the blue.

We had gone to dinner to celebrate his birthday and came home, and I said, “I’m going to get ready for work.”

I went upstairs to take a shower, and when I got off the bed to walk towards the bathroom, I just blacked out. When I woke up, I was on the floor, and I was face down by the sink.

I called my husband, and he and my son came running up the stairs, and my husband said, “What are you doing on the floor?”

I said, “I have no idea. I just blacked out.” My body had just shut down. I was so embarrassed.

But I didn’t pay it any attention. I worked for a mortgage company. Believe it or not, Monday through Friday, I drove every day to work—44 miles round trip. I worked anywhere from 10 to 12 hours a day, and I worked weekends and overtime.

I had an episode every weekend. I would pass out. I actually had a seizure one night. My husband noticed that every time I would go upstairs, I would get really, really light-headed and either fall backwards or lose my balance.

So, one night he came upstairs with me and said, “Let me just help you into the room.” I was using the bathroom, and I was sliding off the seat. I had a seizure, and he was right there to catch me, and I bit my tongue, and it was so weird because I had never had that happen.

He took me to the ER, and they ran a lot of tests. They said, “We don’t see anything, but we do see that you have pneumonia.” So, they gave me antibiotics for that, and I went home.

The first Saturday in March, I went to work. I got upset about something, and the whole left side of my arm turned ice cold. It was numb, and I kept shaking it. Then, I started sweating.

I told my manager, “I’m going home. I’m not going to be able to stay.” My manager said, “You don’t look well,” and he called my husband.

My husband came and got me and took me to the emergency room. My blood pressure was 280 over 190. They said, “You’re not going anywhere, so get comfortable.” I ended up having to be admitted. They ran some more tests, and I stayed there for a week.

They did a lung biopsy, and then a right heart catheter. They did a crash blood pressure drop on me, and they would give me blood pressure medication three times a day. I felt like somebody was coming in and beating me.

I said, “Why do I feel this way?” They said, “We have to get your blood pressure down.” I had no idea, because my pressure was always high.

Once I got all the test results back, I met with my pulmonologist. He told me I had pulmonary arterial hypertension, that basically, my heart and lungs are not friends right now. I had no idea that my life was going to change.

I was devastated. I wanted to go back to work. And I couldn’t. I couldn’t even go up the stairs in my house. I either stayed upstairs or downstairs. To walk from my kitchen to my bathroom, I was gassed out. If I got up too fast, I fell out. If I dropped my head too long to tie my shoe, I passed out.

I couldn’t understand it. I got mad. I questioned myself. I questioned God, and I know that wasn’t the right thing to do, but I didn’t know what else to do. I wanted answers. I prayed for understanding.

Then I just started learning. I got on the websites and started learning about PH. There were things I had to do differently. I was confined to my room for six weeks because I couldn’t go up and down the stairs. I had to sit on the stairs and go up backwards. I was a very independent person. Then to have to rely on someone to cook me breakfast, to get me water, I thought, ‘This is unreal.’

I had to reform my thinking. My doctor told me I had to lose weight. And I thought, ‘Well, how is that going to happen if I can’t exercise?’

So I had to learn how to cut back on carbs, sodium, and to fall in love with water. I was 325 pounds, and now I’m 260, and I feel much better than I did a year ago. My doctor actually told me last week, “Compared to how you were last year, you would have never known.”

It just happened. I have had asthma since I was a little girl, but I only had one flare up as an adult. PAH hides behind asthma, and then it explodes all of the sudden. People with asthma have to be very careful and have things checked out extensively. There were no gradual signs.

Every time I would go to the doctor, my blood pressure would be high, and they would ask, “Do you have high blood pressure in your family?” And I would say, “Yes.” And they would ask, “Well, how do you feel?” And I would say, “I feel fine.”

But passing out and having seizures, never had I experienced that before. I was going through my own thing.

I didn’t really want to talk to people, because I couldn’t talk. I was gassing out. The longer I talked, the worse it got. You could hear I was struggling to talk. Last year, I was in a wheelchair.

I was scared, because you read things on the internet about your life expectancy. Then you read about all the new medications that have been FDA-approved. You’re hoping and praying that one of those will work for you.

This year is like a complete turnaround. I have a lot to be thankful for. I’m able to walk distances at my own pace. I still use a wheelchair in big places. I don’t do the mall. I get anxiety around a lot of people, because I feel like, if something happens, I’m not going to be able to get out. I try not to go to a lot of places by myself, and if I go somewhere by myself, I let someone know where I am. I have a Life Alert.

When I walk, I do so at my own pace. If I get tired, I stop. I do all right. [Recently] I went to the doctor by myself. I walked in on my own. But I took my time.

I can’t work anymore—that was the biggest thing. My husband’s work is seasonal. Financially it’s very hard. So, I communicate a lot with other PAH patients. I’m on the website with them. I try to get other ideas from people about what they’re doing.

If I could do volunteer work, that would be good. It’s difficult, because I like working with people with disabilities. But I have to be real cautious about my surroundings. If I catch something, I can’t take anything over the counter.

I have two grown children; they’re 20 and 27. My husband has five. I have four grandchildren who live in Washington, D.C. Last year I couldn’t travel because I was sick. Maybe this year, if the weather and my health permit, we’ll take a little road trip to see them. My parents live in Seattle, but I can’t really visit them because of the altitude of a flight.

My youngest son was here for a year, and he was very helpful, but at the same time, he was a teenager, and I didn’t want him to be stuck in the house with me all summer. He ended up going back to California.

I’ve been working ever since I was 12. I don’t know what a hobby is. After I had kids, I went right back into the workplace.

I have a friend, and we’ll get together and have lunch once a month, and it’s nice. I do like to read. I like romance novels. I really got into talking with other people with PAH in my area. I want to look into a chapter here in Charlotte. Maybe I could do something with them.

My husband was and still is a very big part of my healing process. He always makes sure that my needs are taken care of, no matter what, even cooking dinner after working an eight-hour day. I really do appreciate my husband, and I thank God for him.

To the newly diagnosed, I would say, “It’s going to work out. Don’t get upset, because being upset starts a lot of things, like stress.” I still do that, but I really try not to.

Sometimes I think, ‘What if this gets turned off? What if I lose my house?’ I realized when I was doing that, it was making me worse.

I went through a point where I didn’t want to be bothered with anybody. I was mad. I thought, ‘Why can’t I work?’ I thought my life was done.

Now, I just take everything one day at a time. I don’t let anything bother me. I keep it moving. I want to be able to grab, absorb and use everything you give me to the best of my abilities.

I still call myself a newbie. To the newly diagnosed I would say, “Life still goes on. It’s just that you have to take it slow. It’s about you. Nobody else. That’s how it is.”

Posted in Diseases, Featured, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 8 Comments

Family Medicine

Posted on by CVCinfo

The role of genetics—in researching, predicting, diagnosing, preventing, and treating rare and chronic illness—is dramatically expanding. Community asked leaders in genetic medicine what that means for you and your loved ones. Eva Leonard reports.

The Immortal Life of Henrietta LacksSince the 1990 initiation of the Human Genome Project to map the human genome, and its completion in 2003, the pace of genetic research has steadily accelerated. Most diseases have a genetic component, but, according to the CDC, “researchers have identified only a small fraction of the genetic component of most diseases.”

Perhaps nothing better illustrates the surge in public interest in genetics than the best-selling status of 2010’s “The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks,” in which author Rebecca Skloots compellingly chronicles the true story of Lacks, a young woman with cervical cancer, whose tumor cells were taken and cultured by a researcher, without her knowledge or permission.

Lacks died in 1951 at the age of 31, and in the six decades since, her tumor cells—which are “immortal,” and unusual in that, unlike most cells, they keep growing and multiplying in lab culture—have been used to establish the HeLa (for Henrietta Lacks) cell line. The HeLa cell line has helped researchers study and develop treatments for diseases including polio, cancer, hemophilia, AIDS, Parkinson’s disease, and leukemia, It’s estimated that more than 50 million metric tons of HeLa cells have been grown for use in invaluable lifesaving medical research worldwide since Lacks’ death.

HeLa cells. Photos: NIH

(Top, left) Cover of “The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks.” (Above) HeLa cells. Photos: NIH (Below) Dr. Kevin Strauss (right) and Dr. Holmes Morton (center) of the Clinic for Special Children, and a young Menonnite patient (left) at a Shippensburg, Pennsylvania benefit auction for the clinic. Photo: Matthew Sware

Dr. Kevin Strauss (right) and Dr. Holmes Morton (center) of the Clinic for Special Children, and a young Menonnite patient (left) at a Shippensburg, Pennsylvania benefit auction for the clinic. Photo: Matthew Sware

Lacks’ family was unaware that the HeLa cells were being used for research until the 1970s. In August 2013, NIH and the Lacks family announced an agreement allowing biomedical researchers controlled access to the data gathered from study of the HeLa genome, and the Lacks family a role in the work being done. Researchers who use or generate data from HeLa cells will now be asked to include in their publications an acknowledgement and expression of gratitude to the Lacks family for their contributions.

Lacks’ story has generated so much interest that Oprah Winfrey plans to produce an HBO screenplay adaptation of the book. Beyond Hollywood, this prompts the question: How do genetics affect patients and families living with chronic and rare diseases?

Personal Power

Sharon Terry, President and CEO of the nonprofit health advocacy organization, Genetic Alliance, found herself drawn into genetic research advocacy when her own children were diagnosed with the rare genetic condition pseudoxanthoma elasticum (PXE) in 1994.

Their children’s diagnosis led Terry and her husband Patrick to found the research advocacy organization, PXE International, eventually resulting in the discovery of the gene associated with PXE. Terry recalled, “My husband and I felt that if we didn’t do something, nothing would be done.”

Terry believes that genetic research will have a profound impact on health care over the next decades. “We will have a much better understanding of disease,” she said. “We’re also going to be able to understand what role environment plays.”

“We all have some things in our genome that are not perfect. We believe that the individual needs to be empowered. We offer tools to help them deal with it,” Terry said, and tools to answer the question, “‘How do I get involved in research?’”

Genetic Alliance’s goal, Terry said, is “that we get better at finding ways of empowering people. We want treatments for all of these diseases. We want to accelerate people getting the services they need.”

Family History

When Venezuelan physician Americo Negrette arrived in San Luis, Venezuela in 1952 to begin his rural internship, he observed the uncontrolled movements and unsteady gait of many of the residents of several insolated, impoverished villages along the shores of Venezuela’s Lake Maracaibo. Negrette initially thought they were intoxicated. Locals called the condition “el mal de San Vito” (the sickness of St. Vitus).

Negrette was intrigued and began researching the illness among the local population. Through his studies, Negrette determined that “el mal” was in fact Huntington’s disease.

In 1968, psychoanalyst Milton Wexler founded the Hereditary Disease Foundation when his wife, Leonore, was diagnosed with Huntington’s disease. Four years later, Negrette’s colleague, Ramon Avila-Giron, presented a film about one of the Venezuelan HD villages to attendees of a Huntington’s disease symposium. The audience was astounded, having never before seen such a large concentration of Huntington’s patients. Leonore and Milton Wexler’s daughter, Nancy, was in the audience.

Leonore Wexler succumbed to Huntington’s disease in 1978. The next year, Nancy Wexler began a 20-year study of the families living around Lake Maracaibo. They would later become known as the world’s largest Huntington’s disease family.

The Clinic for Special Children, Strasburg, Pennsylvania. Dr. Holmes Morton speaking at a Mifflinburg, Pennsylvania benefit auction for the Clinic for Special Children. Photo by Matthew Sware Over the course of the next decades, Wexler and her team studied more than 18,000 residents of the area, mapping their vast family tree, and collecting more than 4,000 blood samples. They ultimately traced the gene’s origins in the region to one common ancestor, Maria Concepción Soto, who died from Huntington’s disease in 1880, and who might have inherited the HD gene from a European sailor who was her father.

(Above) The Clinic for Special Children, Strasburg, Pennsylvania. (Below) Dr. Holmes Morton speaking at a Mifflinburg, Pennsylvania benefit auction for the Clinic for Special Children. Photos by Matthew Sware

Dr. Holmes Morton speaking at a Mifflinburg, Pennsylvania benefit auction for the Clinic for Special Children. Photo by Matthew Sware

In 1983, as a result of their research on the Venezuelan families, Wexler and her team discovered the location of the gene that causes Huntington’s disease, and in 1993 they isolated the Huntington’s gene.

The discovery of the HD gene led to the development of the HD test, which can determine whether pre-symptomatic individuals will develop the disease. The blood samples collected by Wexler have also helped map genes for diseases including familial Alzheimer’s disease, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), and kidney cancer.

Modern Family

Today, modern genetic technology is helping treat communities whose ways of life are deeply rooted in tradition. Built and supported by Amish and Mennonite families, the Clinic for Special Children was founded in 1989 in Strasburg, Pennsylvania by D. Holmes Morton, M.D., and his wife, Caroline.

During Dr. Morton’s research fellowship at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, his diagnosis of an Amish boy’s illness led to the discovery of 16 other Amish children in the same community with the same rare disorder, known as “Amish cerebral palsy,” which was actually glutaric aciduria type 1 (GA1).

Learning that Amish and Menonnite children can be particularly vulnerable to certain genetic disorders, including alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency and complex partial epilepsy, the Mortons decided to establish the Clinic for Special Children. The clinic is dedicated to researching and treating the rare diseases found in these communities, aiming to prevent disability and early death, and to do so locally and inexpensively, with state-of-the-art technology.

Community spoke with Kevin A. Strauss, M.D., Medical Director of the Clinic for Special Children about the clinic’s genesis and mission.

Kevin A. Strauss, M.D., Medical Director, the Clinic for Special Children

(Above) Kevin A. Strauss, M.D., Medical Director, the Clinic for Special Children

After the clinic set up local pediatric services, it very quickly became clear that a number of other diseases in this population would be amenable to this kind of approach. We deal with more than 140 rare genetic diseases, and we discover on average four genetic diseases every year.

We’re supported by, and here to serve, uninsured Amish and Mennonite patients. We’re trying to find the most robust, affordable and rapid technologies for our populations.

One of our guiding principles is that we’re continually trying to utilize biomedical diagnostics to deliver better services to patients. We have a Ph.D. molecular geneticist on staff and can do very affordable molecular testing.

For our alpha-1 patients, we do a 45-minute test for $50, using light scanner technology and thermocycling for high-res genotyping analysis. It’s a very simple DNA-based test, and it’s cheaper than doing serum enzyme testing. I don’t think a lot of people are using this technology.

Alpha-1 is more common in the Amish and Mennonite communities than what you would find in the general population. The Amish and Mennonites are what you call ‘founder populations.’ In the late 1600s, they began migrating from Switzerland to the U.S., but very few of them survived the voyage.

Father and child, Shippensburg, Pennsylvania benefit auction for the Clinic for Special Children. Photo: Matthew Sware, the Clinic for Special Children

(Left) Father and child, Shippensburg, Pennsylvania benefit auction for the Clinic for Special Children. Photo: Matthew Sware, the Clinic for Special Children

Approximately 100 couples are the sole genetic stock for the approximately 30,000 Amish in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. They’re small gene pools for large populations. There is a higher incidence of some diseases within these populations, because carrier status gets carried on.

Complex partial epilepsy is not a single entity, but multiple different genes and it’s probably the fourth or fifth most common diagnosis in our patients.

There are different genetic risks based on ethnicity. There are also certain genetic diseases they don’t get. Cystic fibrosis, for example, is unheard of in Amish and Mennonite patients.

Although the Amish and Mennonite are averse to technologies that are divisive, like iPods, they are accepting of technologies that are life-affirming and beneficial to the children and the community. They are very willing to participate in clinical research. More than 70 published papers have come out of research that we have done here.

What I find most striking about the clinic is that it’s a model for traditional old-fashioned medicine, caring for the individual on a local, low-cost basis, during the most astonishing revolution in human biology. At no other time in modern medicine have we had this opportunity to determine a person’s health risk before they develop symptoms. All of that progress can be leveraged to benefit the patient. The communities we serve are providing us with lessons about how we can choose to use technology, and how our values guide our science.

Genetic Counseling

The CDC reports that, “genetic tests have been developed for more than 2,200 diseases, of which 2,000 are currently available for use in clinical settings.” Community spoke with Rebecca J. Nagy, President of the National Society of Genetic Counselors about the importance of genetic counseling for those undergoing genetic testing.

What are the different types of genetic counseling?

Genetic counselors care for patients and families with a variety of conditions that cover the entire lifespan. Prenatal genetic counselors work with individuals who have concerns around a pregnancy that may be at increased risk based on family history, exposures or the mother’s age.

Pediatric genetic counselors work closely with physicians and see infants and children who may have a genetic condition. The physician works to obtain the correct diagnosis, and the genetic counselor is there to help the family understand what this diagnosis means for the child and the family, for future pregnancies and other family members.

Some genetic counselors work in the adult setting, seeing patients who have concerns about a family history of heart disease, cancer or other adult onset conditions. All of these clinical genetic counselors (prenatal, pediatric and adult) provide support and resources to the family while they are coping with and adjusting to their diagnosis.

Finally, there are many genetic counselors who work outside of the clinical setting. Some work in laboratories and serve as a conduit between the lab and physicians, helping them understand what specific test results might mean. Many genetic counselors are involved in research, public health or administration.

Rebecca Nagy

(Above) Rebecca J. Nagy, President, the
National Society of Genetic Counselors

When should genetic testing for rare and chronic diseases be accompanied by genetic counseling, and why?

Learning that you or your child has a genetic condition can be difficult and emotional. It may also have implications for other family members.

By seeing a genetic counselor before testing, individuals and families can make an informed decision about whether testing is the right choice for them and can also be provided with information about the likelihood that their condition is hereditary and whether or not genetic testing would be helpful.

If genetic testing is ordered, genetic counselors can help the individual/family understand what the results mean for them and their family, and they can work together with the physician to make sure proper medical management recommendations and/or treatment plans are put in place.

Genetic counselors can also provide the family with support and resources to help them cope with the diagnosis, if necessary. For example, genetic counselors can help the family identify other families who have a child or family member with the same diagnosis and can identify advocacy and support groups that can provide ongoing information and support.

They can also coordinate referrals to other specialists and can be an ongoing resource if new developments are made in the field. Many of my patients will check back in with me each year to see if there is anything new that they should know about their diagnosis or the treatment for their condition.

What should patients, families, and caregivers look for when selecting a genetic counselor?

You can find a genetic counselor in your area by going to NSGC.org and clicking on the Find a Counselor tool. This provides a listing of board certified/board eligible genetic counselors.

Board eligible counselors have completed training at an accredited genetic counseling training program and are eligible to sit for their certification exam, which is offered twice a year. Board certified genetic counselors have also graduated from an accredited program and have passed this certification exam.

What tips can you provide for talking to family members about the need for genetic testing and counseling?

When approaching family members about the need for genetic counseling or testing, it is important to understand that not everyone in your family will want to undergo testing and counseling. And those that do undergo testing may not make the same decisions about what they wish to do with the information.

Sharing the information with family members and helping them find a genetic counselor is enough. Family members can then make their own choices about whether testing and counseling is right for them.

Blood samples at the Clinic for Special Children. Photo: Matthew Sware

(Above) Blood samples at the Clinic for Special Children. Photo: Matthew Sware

Many times, genetic counselors will provide patients with a family letter that explains what testing has been done, what it might mean for family members and how to find genetics professionals in their area. This is an easy way to communicate with family members and it takes the burden off of the patient to have to contact everyone by phone and have what may be a difficult or awkward conversation.

What role do you see genetic testing and counseling playing in medicine over the next 10 to 20 years?

The demand for genetic counseling and testing will continue to rise. Genetic testing is now a part of mainstream medicine and is already being used to help diagnose and treat diseases differently than we did even five to 10 years ago.

I see this trend continuing and expanding out into other areas. Given new testing technologies such as whole exome and whole genome sequencing, genetic tests are so much more complex, which makes the interpretation of test results more difficult. It will be critical for individuals and their families to have access to genetics professionals who can interpret this complex information for them.

Look for Part II of “Family Medicine” in the Spring 2014 issue of Community, featuring interviews with rare disease specialists, including Columbia University’s Wendy Chung, M.D., who discusses genetic research on pulmonary hypertension.

Genetic Medicine Resources

The Genetic and Rare Diseases Information Center (GARD)
Created by NIH in 2002 to help people find useful information about genetic and rare diseases, GARD provides immediate, virtually round-the-clock access to experienced information specialists who can furnish current and accurate information—in both English and Spanish.

GARD has information on:

The Genetic and Rare Diseases Information Center (GARD)
P.O. Box 8126
Gaithersburg, MD 20898-8126
Toll-free: 1-888-205-3223
http://rarediseases.info.nih.gov/GARD
E-mail: [email protected]

Genetic Alliance
This nonprofit health advocacy organization is committed to transforming health through genetics and promoting an environment of openness. Genetic Alliance’s www.genesinlife.org website provides information about health and genetics. Genetic Alliance offers “Does It Run in the Family?” a free online booklet that families and communities can download at www.familyhealthhistory.org and customize to use in collecting family health history.

National Human Genome Research Institute
Communications and Public Liaison Branch
National Institutes of Health
Building 31, Room 4B09
31 Center Drive, MSC 2152
9000 Rockville Pike
Bethesda, MD 20892-2152
Tel. 301-402-0911
www.genome.gov/Patients

National Society of Genetic Counselors
330 N. Wabash Avenue, Suite 2000
Chicago, IL 60611
Tel. 312-321-6834
www.nsgc.org

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Low-Intensity, High-Benefit Exercise and Movement Part 1

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Many believe the “No pain, no gain” exercise mantra, when, in fact, the opposite is true. Regular low-impact, low-intensity exercise, like walking, and slow, gentle, meditative movement practices, like tai chi, can have substantial health benefits including:

Advantages of many of these activities are that they:

If you’re considering starting a new type of activity, make sure to ask your physician about its:

Popular, low-impact, low-intensity, and low-cost (or no-cost) options that can be beneficial include:

Walking

It’s easy to underestimate the benefits of walking, but studies have shown that even slow walking can improve health, as can home-based walking exercise programs.

Thirty minutes of slow walking can benefit the elderly and the disabled as much as 30 minutes of more intense exercise can benefit those who are younger, suggests a Harvard University study. And you don’t have to take it outside to benefit. A recent Northwestern University study of nearly 200 participants with peripheral artery disease (PAD) found that a home-based walking program could improve pain-free walking time, physical activity, speed, and endurance.

The National Institute of Health’s Weight-control Information Network website offers info on what to know before you go walking, how to walk safely, stretches for walking, proper form for walking, and a sample daily walking program. For details, go to www.win.niddk.nih.gov/publications/walking.htm#firststep

Ask your physician if you’d like more information and recommendations on walking and on home-based walking programs.

Meditative Movement Practices

Tai Chi and Qi Gong

Tai-ChiBoth tai chi (pronounced “tai chee”) and qi gong (pronounced “chee gung”) are meditative movement practices that started in China and have become increasingly popular in the U.S. Both involve gentle movement, mental focus, deep breathing, and relaxation.

Both tai chi and qi gong can be adapted to many physical conditions and can also be practiced, sitting, standing, or lying down. Movements are slow and never forced.

Yang-style tai chi (named after Yang Lu-ch’an, the 19th century founder of the style) is the most popular style used in the U.S. Its popularity stems from its physical benefits, such as improved balance, flexibility, strength, and aerobic endurance, and psychosocial benefits, including decreased depression, anxiety, and stress.

A University of Arizona study showed that yang-style tai chi reduced falls among adult stroke survivors, helping them to achieve and maintain balance.  The results were striking: Those practicing tai chi experienced only approximately one-third as many falls as those in other groups.

During the 12-week trial, those in a group of 30 practicing tai chi reported five falls, while those in a usual care group of 28 people reported 15 falls, and those in a group of 31 participating in the SilverSneakers fitness program reported 14 falls.

Tai chi can also increase strength and flexibility, and benefit the immune system, bones, heart, nerves, muscles, and mind, suggests research by Harvard Medical School, which published The Harvard Medical School Guide to Tai Chi this year. The guide features practical tips for integrating tai chi into everyday activities, along with a simplified program, illustrated with more than 50 photographs. (It can be ordered online at barnesandnoble.com)

The National Institutes of Health is exploring the benefits of tai chi and qi gong and has produced a video, led by Adeline Ge, M.D., demonstrating and explaining both practices. To view it, go to www.nccam.nih.gov/video/taichidvd-full

Click here to read Part Two of CVC’s story on Low-Intensity, High-Benefit Exercise and Movement, featuring info on yoga, and exercises for those in manual and power wheelchairs.

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May Is Huntington’s Disease Awareness Month

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Jean Wittie shared her story with us back in November of 2012 for our special edition of Community magazine, In Their Words. Her story detailed how Huntington’s disease has affected her family. Below is her story.

Jean Wittie, directly right of the groom, with members of her family on the Oregon Coast

My husband Frank and I have been married for over 30 years. We have a blended family of seven children, six grand children and five great grandchildren. The two oldest boys are my boys from my first marriage, and they are the ones who have been diagnosed.

Todd is the younger one, he’s 43. He began having some problems – facial twitching and jerking – in 2009. He’d always had problems with his thyroid, and his doctor at the time thought all of Todd’s problems were related to that. The doctor kept raising and raising the medication, until he took Todd completely off it. Nothing worked.

I finally took him to my doctor, who thought he had MS. We went to see a neurologist who ordered an MRI and genetic tests. When the diagnosis came back, it blindsided us. We had no idea that there was anything like this anywhere.

After Todd was diagnosed, his doctor ordered testing for Todd’s older brother, Dale. Dale had some symptoms, but they weren’t very pronounced, so he thought he was home free. But just before Christmas 2010, his diagnosis came back as positive for HD.

So I set out to learn as much as I could about Huntington’s. I found the UC San Diego Autism Center of Excellence and they were so encouraging. They invited Todd and myself to their research symposium, where we met researchers, officials with the Huntington’s Disease Society of America, and families with HD. It was all very encouraging.

As a result of that symposium, we were finally able to get both Todd and Dale on a medication that helped restore their quality of life.

Dale lives in his own home with his adult son, daughter and her family. Dale’s daughter and her family moved back to Oregon to be closer to Dale and help out.

Unfortunately, Dale’s daughter was diagnosed positive in March. Dale’s son, and Todd’s two daughters have not yet been tested. Todd’s two girls live in Alaska and want to be tested but they are working their way through the state’s medical system now. Dale’s son is practicing avoidance behavior – he’ll get to it, but for right now, he does not want to be tested.

My husband Frank has always been supportive of the boys and of me. He’s the one that keeps reminding me to be patient when I need to be.

What is Huntington's Disease sidebarI still work and I go to school, so Todd is at home alone during the day. I make meals that will be easy for him to eat, he takes care of the yard, feeds the dogs… both my husband and I want Todd to have as normal a life while he still can.

Our extended family is huge, and Todd and Dale have all of the love and support our family can offer. Various family members have attended the conferences, support groups, walks – everyone in the family is there for Todd and Dale.

I truly feel that if I stay positive and persevere, then there will be a cure. We all have to have the courage and the hope to keep going. You have to keep fighting.

So that’s my story.

This article first appeared in the winter edition of Caring Voice Community magazine.

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Living with HD: Treat Your Brain to a Spa Day

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We spend a fortune every year on clothing, buying the right foods, beauty products, and other things to take care of our physical bodies.  Huntington’s Disease certainly wreaks havoc on our physical well-being, but it is a neurological disorder.  When was the last time that you did something nice for your brain?

There are many things that you can do to help you deal with HD and improve your ability to function.

If you or a loved one has been diagnosed with HD you will be dealing with stress.  There is the stress over whether or not you’ve passed on the gene, the stress about your prognosis, and the stress about what your level of care will be.  A leading cause of death for HD sufferers is heart failure.  A major contributor to heart-related issues is, you guessed it, stress.  Evaluate how you deal with stress.

Verbalizing what is causing stress can become difficult.  Woody Guthrie was probably the most famous sufferer of HD.  As his symptoms became more advanced, his wife designed a series of flash cards to facilitate their discussions.  She presented him with a series of words and images that he could choose from to communicate his feelings.  In addition to “yes” and “no” he was given the option of a face showing a smile or a face showing a frown.  He could sort through the cards to better express what he was feeling.

HD brings with it a loss of control.  Many will present with “anosognia” which is a lack of awareness of one’s condition.  A patient with anosognia may still seem to be functioning at a relatively high level but be oblivious about things like communicating feelings, about personal hygiene, or about eating.

Someone in the early stages of HD may be unaware of their hunger or lack of suitable food.  As the disease progresses they may find it difficult to swallow, or medications may make calorie absorption a problem.  If you have HD, you get a free pass when New Year’s resolutions come around.  You get to go on a reverse-diet.  Increase your caloric intake!  A diet high in protein has been shown to slow the deterioration of cognitive ability.  Many of the physical aspects of the disease (chorea, spasms) also cause HD patients to burn calories at a very high level.

The posturing and chorea that comes with HD can make daily activity a chore.  Many report that trying to remain motionless is an exercise in futility.  For an exercise in non-futility, try to establish a good walking regimen as soon as possible.  HD sufferers have reported that walking eases some of the physical symptoms of the disease, it has therapeutic benefits in dealing with stress, and it’s good exercise for the heart!  People who’ve done this have also reported better sleeping habits.

Life can be difficult without a good night’s rest.  Lack of sleep leads to fatigue, higher levels of stress, confusion, moodiness, and loss of coordination.  Does this sound like Huntington’s?  Chorea, a poor diet, and stress can all rob you of valuable rest.  Instead of looking at this as a revolving door of issues, tackle it head on.  Talk to your doctors about medications that will help lessen the physical effects.   Your doctor may also prescribe something to help you deal with stress or depression.

Finally, a spiritual approach.

Studies have shown that Buddhist monks have the ability to regulate breathing, heart rate, and now brain activity, through the use of meditation.  Monks who have trained for a number of years showed neural activity that was considerably more responsive and synchronized than the scans of people who had never practiced.

We’re not suggesting that everyone become monks, but 15 to 20 minutes of practice per day can’t hurt.  All that you need is some quiet, and a cue to clean your mind.  Some use a chant, or “mantra.” For some it is a visual cue, like a candle.  For some, it is the image of a river.  You just allow your thoughts to flow down the river.  It is very easy to get caught in a pool or eddy, but concentrate on flowing down the river.

So get creative about verbalizing your stress, and feed your brain with good proteins.  Use social interaction to give it a good workout, and meditation to give it a good rest.  Treat your brain to a spa day!

 

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A New Program for Narcolepsy Patients

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Caring Voice Coalition, Inc. (CVC), a non-profit organization that provides financial assistance and insurance advocacy for persons with specific chronic illnesses, is pleased to announce a new program to assist patients diagnosed with Narcolepsy.

Narcolepsy is a chronic sleep disorder characterized by excessive daytime sleepiness (EDS) in which a person experiences extreme fatigue and possibly falls asleep at inappropriate times, such as work or at school. Narcoleptics usually experience disturbed nocturnal sleep and an abnormal daytime sleep pattern, which is often confused with insomnia. Narcolepsy is often associated with cataplexy, a sudden loss of muscle tone often triggered by intense emotions, sleep paralysis and hypnogogic hallucinations. While medications often help to manage the signs and symptoms of Narcolepsy, there is currently no cure.

This announcement represents an expansion of CVC’s current programs which include Pulmonary Hypertension; Alpha-1 Antitrypsin Deficiency; Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis; Chronic Granulomatous Disease; Complex Partial Seizures; Infantile Spasms and Huntington’s disease.

“CVC is very excited to offer this new program,” said Samantha Harris, Vice President of CVC. “We strive to improve the lives of our patients every day and look forward to expanding our assistance to the Narcolepsy Community.”

Tim Robertson, Senior Director of Patient Services, adds, “The rising costs of healthcare prevents many patients diagnosed with chronic illnesses from beginning or remaining on therapy. CVC’s new program will provide financial support to help qualified patients afford the out of pocket costs related to their prescribed therapy for Narcolepsy.”

About the Caring Voice Coalition:
Caring Voice Coalition, Inc. (CVC)is a national 501(c)(3) non-profit, charitable organization established in 2003 to provide financial, insurance education and patient support to individuals diagnosed with specific chronic or life-threatening diseases. CVC seeks to empower these patients by providing comprehensive programs delivered through a holistic approach by a staff of knowledgeable, dedicated and caring individuals.

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