Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Disease. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Disease. Mostrar todas las entradas

Marco’s story is typical of a movie script. From his birth, to the tenacity of his mother, Aurora Mateos, to bring together an international group of experts to promote a new therapy against Menkes disease tested in animal models in research at the University of Texas (USA) and whose results, published in the journal “Science”, are relevant.

The Sant Joan de Déu Hospital in Barcelona, ​​with the pediatrician and geneticist Francesc Palau in front, is carrying out this exceptional treatment, without prior clinical trial, and which has the authorization of the Spanish Agency for Medicines and Health Products (AEMPS) for a child who lives against the clock.

They have only been in therapy for four weeks, but the doctors are already seeing improvements in Marco. They do not want to throw the bells on the fly, since there is still no data to prove it, but the fact is that in this time he has managed to crawl and stand up with help, something that at his age he could not do due to severe hypotonia (muscle weakness). , among other symptoms of the disease.

“Marco did not crawl and has started to do so. This can also respond to the natural history of the child and, instead of having a regression, he is advanced ”, he comments cautiously to EFE. Dr. Palau, director of the Pediatric Institute for Rare Diseases and head of the Genetics Service at Hospital Sant Joan de Déu.

What is Menkes disease?

Menkes disease is a serious multisystemic syndrome of copper metabolism that affects 1 in 300,000 newborns in Europe, according to data from the Orphanet rare disease portal.

It is characterized by progressive systemic degeneration and connective tissue abnormalities due to poor copper distribution that does not reach the brain and other organs.

This disorder is due to the absence or alteration of the ATP7A gene, which is located on the X chromosome, and this means that women are healthy carriers, they do not develop the disease, but they can transmit it to their sons, although boys can also being born with a “novo” mutation, with no family history.

The key is not only to provide the copper that Marco’s body lacks, but also for this mineral necessary for life to cross the blood-brain barrier and reach the brain.

Until now no drug does that function. Only one, the copper histidinateis used as palliative treatment but fails to cross the brain barrier.

Marco, a child with an early diagnosis

When the coronavirus pandemic hit Aurora Mateos She was working provisionally in Rome for the United Nations and had to give birth to Marco in that city, in June 2020.

“When someone sees a Menkes child, they don’t forget it,” says the mother, who explains that they are born with curly hair and very white skin, characteristics for a first suspected diagnosis.

He was immediately transferred to the Bambino Gesù Pediatric Hospital in Rome where there is a copper unit, something unusual, and that made it easier for the child to have a diagnosis at five days of life and at the time he was injected with copper histidinate, an orphan drug.

“It seems that in the first days of birth the brain barrier is softer and it is possible that the copper could have entered. Perhaps for this reason, Marco improves his mobility, he does not have seizures, his outward appearance is so beautiful… ”, the mother tells EFE, who emphasizes that he is an “intelligent and alert” baby.

Menkes
Photo: Paula Bustos

Despite early diagnosis, one of the challenges of rare diseases, Menkes disease has run its course: “It is a lethal disease, Marco has lung, bladder, neurological problems… it is a multi-system affectation,” he explains. .

When the pandemic allowed it, Marco’s family moved to live in Malaga and in the Maternal-Children’s Hospital in that city they do clinical follow-up of the child.

“Our life is medicalized, visiting the hospital at least twice a week, we cannot travel to a place where there is no center prepared to care for Marco…”, says Aurora Mateos.

The little boy is immunosuppressed, “he is a crystal child, he cannot go to daycare and you have to protect yourself with a mask to touch him… the family is afraid to come and that is hard when you need support,” laments the mother.

Special care in times of coronavirus: “He is a child who frequently goes to the emergency room and with the pandemic you don’t know how to get it right.” Sometimes the collapsed emergency has given them a scare.

“I did not sit idly by”

Menkes
Marco and his mother Aurora Mateos. Photo: Paula Bustos.

After the diagnosis, “I didn’t sit idly by,” says Aurora Mateos.

As a struggling mother, supported by her family, and with her experience as a consultant at the United Nations, she has managed not only to organize the association “Menkes International”but to promote a committee with twenty experts (doctors, biologists, pharmacists, lawyers…) from twelve countries that has managed the complex protocol of this exceptional treatment.

The starting point is in the study with animal models from the University of Texas, led by James Sacchettini and published in May 2020 in “Science”, in which one molecule is used, elesclomolto transport copper and cross the brain of mice with ATP7A gene deficiency.

“The results are striking, with two doses the mouse changed completely in terms of mobility, hair and survival. From only living twenty days to reaching almost 190, which in a mouse is a lot”, explains Dr. Francesc Palau, who coordinates the aforementioned scientific committee.

The scientist James Sachettini was involved from the beginning in getting this drug to Marco. The following steps were complex until elesclomol-copper was synthesized in a laboratory in India.

The Spanish Medicines Agency authorized the importation of the drug and the design of the “exceptional treatment” for Marco at the Sant Joan de Déu Hospital, with experience in previously caring for seven other patients and with an open line of research on this rare disease.

Every week, since January 31, Marco and his family travel from Malaga to Barcelona so that the little boy receives a subcutaneous dose of elesclomol-copper.

“We have started with very low doses, subtherapeutic, to gradually reach therapeutic but non-toxic ones. At the same time, we measure copper in the blood to see if we are raising elesclomol-copper and lowering histidinate”, explains Palau, also former director of the CIBER for Rare Diseases.

A clinical trial on the horizon

After a few months, data will be obtained that will determine the efficacy of this treatment in Marco and then a clinical trial will be opened that must be authorized by the regulatory agencies and whose objective will be to test the efficacy and safety of the therapy.

“I have a commitment to the Medicines Agency to design this trial. We are in contact with the North American company that owns the drug, which is interested,” says the researcher.

One of the keys is to select the candidate patients: “If it worked in Marco, it doesn’t mean that it works in all patients, we have to be careful,” says the doctor, who is already receiving calls from hospitals in other European and Latin American countries.

The hope is that this therapy pioneered by Marco can pave the way for other children with Menkes disease.

“Marco is what I love the most and we are going to fight this war until the end, no matter how many battles there are, no one is going to give up,” concludes Aurora Mateos.

Actions and campaigns from different health organizations with the aim of raising awareness about rare diseases, making visible and focusing on the essential needs of patients to improve their quality of life and that of their families or caregivers. February 28, World Day

Rare diseases are a challenge for more than 3 million patients, families and caregivers in Spain.

Facing the diagnosis, as well as access to treatments and the routines of daily life, leads to commemorating World Rare Disease Day every February 28 to highlight and claim greater social awareness of these pathologies.

Diagnosis and research, two challenges on the table

According to the World Health Organization, it is estimated that there are more than 300 million people living with some type of rare disease.

Detection and investigation are the main challenges faced by these patients.

The diagnosis arrives for 50% of patients after four years of waiting, and for 20% after ten years.

according to data from the Study ‘ENSerious, quality of life’ of the Spanish Federation of Rare Diseases.

This delay negatively influences access to treatment. In the case of patients who need therapeutic interventions as soon as possible, this delay means that in 31% cases of disease worsen.

Another of the claims made by patients focuses on the need to promote research and accessibility to treatments.

The 47% of people with rare or infrequent diseases have no treatment or, if you have it, it is not the right one.

In addition, 66% of patients indicate that their disease prevents them from carrying out daily activities that allow them to be autonomous, to a great extent or quite a bit, according to FEDER.

More than 40% are not satisfied with their situation regarding leisure and free time activities and, in general, with the quality of life that their disease allows them to have.

collects the study ‘Social and Health Needs of people with Rare Diseases in Spain’ (Study ENSerio, quality of life’) of FEDER.

‘The Rares’

Within the framework of this World Day, the pharmaceutical company Pzifer and FEDER have joined forces to launch the ‘Las Raras’ brand.

T-shirts to make rare diseases visible
T-shirts to make rare diseases visible from the Pzifer and FEDER campaign

With it, they invite society to put themselves in the shoes of people who live with this type of rare pathology.

This line has a collection of t-shirts and tote bags with the brand logo.

For each order, the buyer will receive their purchase at home along with a card where they can learn relevant data about rare diseases.

An example of relevant data: There are more than 6,000 types of rare diseases and only 5% have an approved treatment.

Stars against intolerance and inequality

Rare diseases have little visibility, a fact that leads patients to experience lack of tolerance and inequality.

More than 30% of people with rare diseases have experienced discrimination in their education due to their disease.

points out the ‘Study ENserio’ of 2017 by FEDER.

The difficulties that these people face not only affect those who suffer from it, but everyone around them.

Their families and caregivers suffer an economic impact due to expenses and reduced working hours, according to the aforementioned study.

Another FEDER project on this World Rare Disease Day FEDER is in alliance with Alexion Pharma Spain.

Together they have launched a virtual challenge to make visible people who live with this type of disease: #IlluminatedbyRareDiseases.

Illuminate for Rare Diseases
Ilumina Challenge for Rare Diseases / ERDF and Alexion Pharma Spain Campaign

The challenge invites society to help build a constellation of virtual stars of the FEDER symbol: a four-leaf clover.

Once the challenge is complete, Alexion agrees to donate 18,000 euros to FEDER to carry out these three star projects to improve the needs, education, awareness, equity and research of rare diseases.

“There are millions of people in Spain who live an extraordinary life every day: a life with a rare disease. Those affected are the hidden stars and deserve recognition beyond their medical needs, as many experience socioeconomic challenges in their daily lives.”

declares Juan Carrión, president of FEDER.

The key to multidisciplinary research

The Spanish Multidisciplinary Society of Systemic Autoimmune Diseases (SEMAIS) vindicates research with the motto ‘Research is our hope’.

«Research in the field of rare diseases is the present and the future of these pathologies, many of which are little known. It allows us to characterize patients, assess risk and prognostic factors and possible new therapeutic targets. Multidisciplinary management through functional units, committees and consultations with circuits shared by all specialties is another of the fundamental pillars in the care of patients with rare diseases”.

emphasizes Dr. Patricia Fanlo, president of SEMAIS.

The importance of collaborating between different specialties to help assess rare diseases is another of the objectives pursued by this society.

miguel servet hospital icu
EFE/Javier Belver

The doctor Carmen Pilar Simeón, scientific director of SEMAISvalues ​​the importance of clinical research as fundamental.

«Necessary to define groups of patients with similar characteristics and, thus, be able to define the different subgroups with the same clinical profile. On the other hand, basic research is essential to define the genetic characteristics and the different biomarkers».

Carmen Pilar Simeón, scientific director of SEMAIS.

For its part, the Spanish Federation of Neuromuscular Diseases (ASEM) calls for the public authorities to increase “the incentives for biomedical research and multidisciplinary health care for rare diseases with specific resources”.

«Treatment orphans, rare because infrequent»

Within rare diseases, some types of cancers called “rare” are collected.

On this type of pathology acts the State Transversal Group of Orphan and Rare Tumors (GETTHI) that today, more than ever, dedicates all its efforts to fighting cancers “orphans of treatment and rare because they are infrequent”.

And it is that this type of tumors, which account for 24% of the European totalmay not be “so strange when we take into account their molecular biology,” they point out from GETTHI.

research drugs rare diseases
A researcher in a laboratory working on the so-called “orphan drugs” of rare diseases. EFE / Julio Munoz

Frequent and infrequent tumors can share molecular alterations that make them a common “target” for targeted pharmacological treatments, “what we commonly know as precision oncology”.

“It has been seen that a sequenced tumor sample can identify a wide range of mutations that can be triggered by different drugs. In general, around 50% of patients who undergo massive data sequencing (NGS) have at least one target mutation with potential targeted therapy.”

explain from the GETTHI Group.

This perspective offered by GETTHI makes it possible to increase the chances of survival and a better prognosis for thousands of patients affected by rare cancers.

For this reason, this group has launched a project that offers a transversal and free service to professionals from all over Spain.

“The creation of ‘National Transversal Molecular Tumor Board’ It is completed with the case registration platform that has been launched to collect information at a Spanish and international level. All this to increase knowledge and improve the approach to all types of cancer, not just the most common ones.”

With all these entities, and others, fighting hand in hand for research, improvement of diagnosis and treatment, as well as for improving the quality of life of patients and their survival, World Rare Disease Day brings a solidary course, scientific, human and social.

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