A new blood test seems able to parse whether beta-interferon — the major treatment for multiple sclerosis (MS) — will work for MS patients even before therapy begins. Reporting online yesterday in Nature Medicine, a team led by Larry Steinman, a neurologist at Stanford University, found that the efficacy of the $25,000 per year drug depends on what immune cell type is involved in the disease.
“Now we have the realistic prospect that we could have a test that will tell us whether beta-interferon will work in a person with MS,” says Steinman, who explains the findings in the following video:
Other coverage:
MS study may have treatment implications (Globe and Mail)
Discovery may lead to better multiple sclerosis treatments (Business Week)
<A HREF=“https://pagingdrgupta.blogs.cnn.com/2010/03/29/scientists-find-there-may-be-two-forms-of-multiple-sclerosis/”>Scientists find there may be two forms of multiple sclerosis (CNN)
”https://voices.washingtonpost.com/checkup/2010/03/are_there_multiple_forms_of_ms.html?wprss=checkup">Multiple forms of MS? (Washington Post)
Test predicts which patients benefit from $6 dillion MS drugs (Bloomberg)
This is very interesting. I think that it is nice that Dr.s can know if it will benefit patients. It would be nice if this technology were to broaden to detected patients that will become addicted to prescription medication.