100 Year-Old Drug Halts Progress Of Alzheimer's 108
pafischer writes "Several Australian and UK websites are running articles on this story. I'm shocked that I heard it on the Baltimore rock radio station news, but don't see it on any of the big US new websites. 'Clioquinol, developed 100 years ago, can absorb the zinc and copper compounds that concentrate in the brains of Alzheimer's sufferers before dementia sets in, the study found.' Read all about it at ABC Radio AU, The Sidney Morning Herald, and The Age." Of course, the pathology of Alzheimer's is far from fully understood.
Reason US sites aren't covering it (Score:1)
It was on the AP wire a while back.
Watch the big drug companies kill this QUICK (Score:4, Interesting)
Sorry folks. Alzheimer's won't get an effective until Pfizer is good and READY.
Re:Watch the big drug companies kill this QUICK (Score:4, Insightful)
Remember, the drug companies weren't all that hot on research to oust hormone replacement therapy(HRT) either, but the Women's Health Initiative went forward with a vengance. As a result, Wyeth-Ayerst's Primarin took a nose-dive as millions of women decided to opt out of HRT.
This 100 year old drug may become a "hot topic" in upcoming medical research. I just hope they have a few more patients in the next study.
Lithium (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Watch the big drug companies kill this QUICK (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Watch the big drug companies kill this QUICK (Score:3, Informative)
There might be little guys that offer it in the short term, but it wouldn't take long for Pfizer et. al. to swoop in and mop the scene with a "New and Improved" version just for the sake of killing the little supplier to keep them from becoming a big, competing supplier. Once the little supplier is dead, they can the "New and Improved" version and nobody else has the guts to come stomping on that territory again.
It's the same general principle as a big, rich company setting up a crappy lean-to next to an
Re:Watch the big drug companies kill this QUICK (Score:1)
Wait a minute... (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Wait a minute... (Score:2, Informative)
Not if they're in the USA, and those purposes are not approved by the FDA, and they want to continue to practice medicine legally.
Re:Wait a minute... (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Wait a minute... (Score:1)
Link 1 [obesity-news.com]
Link 2 [topicalverapamil.com]
More from Google [google.com]
Re:Wait a minute... (Score:2)
Re:Wait a minute... (Score:1)
Re:Watch the big drug companies kill this QUICK (Score:5, Insightful)
Really, drug manufacturers don't mind at all if you get better from disease A and live a bit longer, because they'll get to see you when you come down with disease B a few years later. See, the neat thing about the medical industry, from a financial standpoint, is that pretty much everyone manages to get real sick and even die sooner or later, so there's always going to be an opportunity to sell something.
Re:Watch the big drug companies kill this QUICK (Score:2)
Re:Watch the big drug companies kill this QUICK (Score:1)
Insurers, HMOs and such are scary for somewhat different reasons. Their job is to hold onto as much of your premium as they can, and keep it away from drug/device/diagnostic producers and healthcare providers unless there's no way around it. [Some plans are much more aggressive about this than others.] The bad news is that tradeoffs are being made on your behalf, between the absolute best treatment for a given problem and the lea
Re:Watch the big drug companies kill this QUICK (Score:1)
premiums + deductable > cost of treatment
Once you get something where this isn't true, you can start thanking:
a) being part of a group plan that protects you or;
b) laws that keep you on a plan.
Re:Watch the big drug companies kill this QUICK (Score:5, Insightful)
The reason is incredibly simple. The entire cost of a new medication comes from years and years of research. Not just of the medication that makes it to market, but of the ten which don't. Producing the actual pills costs virtually nothing.
So you see, it does make sense for drug companies to sell unpatented pills. They won't make a killing, but they don't need to: they invested no money in research of the medication, they have no losses to recoup. Even if they only make five cents per hundred thousand pills, it's five cents they wouldn't otherwise have.
Re:Watch the big drug companies kill this QUICK (Score:2, Insightful)
How do you suppose a drug gets approved... (Score:1)
Re:How do you suppose a drug gets approved... (Score:1)
Where drug companies can get into trouble is if an over-eager rep goes and starts touting the unapproved uses to clients. This information needs to be spread through independent channels only, or agencies like FDA get really, really pissed. Getting those agencies mad is a really poor idea.
Advert^H^H^H^H^HResearch (Score:2)
The major cost of new drugs is not research but advertising. Period. Junkets for doctors, samples, television, radio and print ads. It's an undisputed fact that the major drug companies spend twice as much on advertising as on drug development. Ever notic
Re:Watch the big drug companies kill this QUICK (Score:4, Informative)
The AC is wrong on two levels. First, the pharmaceutical industry is full of manufacturers that make generic drugs. These companies make profits through efficient manufacturing and distribution (versus through patents and R&D). Most people don't know about these makers because the companies have no reason to advertise.
Second, because this is a 100-year old drug, it's approved and out there. Although nobody can advertise that the drug works for Alzheimer's until somebody does all the expensive regulatory clinical studies, any doctor can prescribe the drug of any "off-label" use. If enough web-enabled family members of Alzheimer's victims learn of the drug, they will demand the treatment from doctors, find a doctor who will give this treatment, or find an online pharmacy that wil provide the drug.
The bottomline line is that we don't need the big pharma companies to create either supply or demand for a drug.
Re:Watch the big drug companies kill this QUICK (Score:2)
Obviously you never saw Johnny MNemonic?
Re:Watch the big drug companies kill this QUICK (Score:2)
Further proof, if we needed it, may be found by considering the ecstasy market.
Re:Watch the big drug companies kill this QUICK (Score:2)
I know that the pharmacos live by their patents and that's why they're willing to spend billions on R&D for a single drug.
But what cost would there be in using this drug to treat Alzheimer's? Even if cheap clones were available, why not enter the market at an already-low price point? How many people have Alzheimer's? Times pills per day for a year, divided by clone makers equals a shit ton of money, right?
If I had a safe, easy cure for cancer in my lab, I'd sell it for
Re:Watch the big drug companies kill this QUICK (Score:2)
GTRacer
- Would be happy with a thousandth of a percent of MS's total value
Re:Watch the big drug companies kill this QUICK (Score:2)
It takes at least 10 years (and more likely 15-18) from when you can last patent, to when you can fisrt sell it. During that time you are losing a lot of money. You pay the people who design the drug, the people pushing all the paperwork, make the drug (and not in an efficant assembly line yet unless you also want to pay to setup the line) the people testing the drugs. Not to mention all the taxes and utilities and such. Then very few drugs are approved, so you also have the overhead of other drugs you
Re:Watch the big drug companies kill this QUICK (Score:2)
I'm just curious why people would think the pharmacos would pass on an unpatentable drug like Clioquinol purely because it's unpatentable. There's still lots of money, and great PR to be had if someone takes it to market and puts a real dent in Alzheimer's progress.
I mean, look at aspirin, or acetaminophen, or ibuprofen. Or Tagamet and its clones. Lots-o-dough!
GTRacer
- Profit motive and humani
Re:Watch the big drug companies kill this QUICK (Score:2)
Okay, so say someone does decide to presue this. They spend 10 years getting approval. IIRC the FDA gives them 3 years to sell this with a monopoly (they won't approve anyone else to sell it to reward those who put effort into research). So they have 3 years to makeup the costs of researching it. What if early on it looks like it will only help 0.5% of the people with alzheimers, which even though they can perdict with certency who it will help, ends up being a tiny population. Basicly they won't be
It's be great to see this thing finally killed (Score:5, Insightful)
COLIN MASTERS: This is, again, a pilot study, so our next step is to take it into a much larger series of patients, either this drug or a better drug we have in development. What we have on the drawing boards is a better version of this drug which is more effective and will probably go into trials hopefully before the end of this year.
I'd like to see the results after a much more extensive study has been conducted. If this really works, which at least with these preliminary tests suggest, it'd be nice to see alzheimers start to go the way if the dodo.
Re:It's be great to see this thing finally killed (Score:5, Informative)
They aren't really that close.
If you look at the graphs associated with the original paper, which is published in Archives of Neurology if you've got a way to access it (I've got a Tufts University account that I can use) - they don't show that patients regain cognitive functioning. In fact, all patients throughout the study lose cognitive functioning as measured on their ADAS cognitive sub-scale.
Their most interesting finding, imho, is the 3 month period where patients on their drug hold relatively steady, and other patients have a slight decline (the difference is really only about 2 points on a 1-70 point rating scale, while the ADAS is 1-120).
Is this statistically significant? Yes, I think so. And practically, I think any improvement in patients is significant. But I don't think it's significant enough to claim that the disease has been eradicated.
Original Article Info, for anyone who wants to look it up:
Metal-Protein Attenuation With Iodochlorhydroxyquin (Clioquinol) Targeting A[beta] Amyloid Deposition and Toxicity in Alzheimer Disease: A Pilot Phase 2 Clinical Trial
Ritchie, Craig W. MBChB, MRCPsych; Bush, Ashley I. MBBS, PhD, FRANZCP; Mackinnon, Andrew PhD; Macfarlane, Steve MBBS; Mastwyk, Maree BN; MacGregor, Lachlan MBBS; Kiers, Lyn MBBS, FRACP; Cherny, Robert PhD; Li, Qiao-Xin PhD; Tammer, Amanda PhD; Carrington, Darryl BSc; Mavros, Christine BSc; Volitakis, Irene BSc; Xilinas, Michel MD, DSc; Ames, David MD; Davis, Stephen MD, FRACP; Beyreuther, Konrad PhD; Tanzi, Rudolph E. PhD; Masters, Colin L. MD
Volume 60(12) December 2003 p 1685-1691
Archives of Neurology
Testing testing testing - Re:It's be great to see (Score:3, Interesting)
This is just a pilot study with a small number of patients.
Re:Testing testing testing - Re:It's be great to s (Score:2)
Though personally I'd prefer to live to 75 without alzheimers by taking a drug that kills me eventially, than live to 80, but suffer from alzheimers for the last 10.
I've known people with alzheimers. It isn't easy. Seeing people with fridges full of rotten food because the kids are coming to visit. (well they were 2 years ago when she remembers it from, and many times since, but this month they can't) Starting to drive somewhere, and half way there forget where they are going. And many more things,
Not I, but Y (just a tad offtopic) (Score:2)
As much as I hate to be a spelling vigilante, I really have to point out that it's spelt SYDNEY. It annoys me no end when people use 'i' in Sydney. Luckily, the Sydney Morning Herald get it right.
Re:Not I, but Y (just a tad offtopic) (Score:1)
Sorry I'm even offer topic....
Article title is grossly inaccurate (Score:5, Informative)
Symptoms of Alzheimers... (Score:5, Funny)
2. Confusion.
3. Short term memory loss.
Re:Symptoms of Alzheimers... (Score:3, Funny)
5. Profit!
I've never, ever posted one of these lame jokes before, I just couldn't help myself.
BTW, I'm of the opinion that if there is a disease or imbalance, there is a natural/herbal treatment for it; we may not ever find it, but I bet it is their.
Um. does anyone have a mnemonic for when to use "there" as opposed to "their" in a sentence? I've been having problems with it for like 30 years.
Re:Symptoms of Alzheimers... (Score:2, Insightful)
That will never happen because people are too arrogant and ignorant, and somehow feel that they are cheating themselves if they don't suck down mad-cow and nitrite filled hotdogs, nutritionally e
Re:Symptoms of Alzheimers... (Score:1)
Of course, Alzheimer's has also certainly increased as our lifespan increased past 30 years...
Re:Symptoms of Alzheimers... (Score:2)
I don't want to come down too hard on you, but you've just asserted an unprovable hypothesis. To say, based on no other evidence, that such treatments exist even if never found seems a remarkable leap of faith...
On the other hand, many (indeed, the vast majority) of drugs in use today are derived from so-called 'natural' sources. The chemistry is o
Re:Symptoms of Alzheimers... (Score:2)
Um. does anyone have a mnemonic for when to use "there" as opposed to "their" in a sentence? I've been having problems with it for like 30 years.
I just thought of one, so here ya' go. "Their" is the posessive of "they". Think tHEIR -> HEIR -> inHEIRitance -> ownership. Combine that with the tHERE -> HERE -> place association by another reply, and you should have a handy pair of 'em.
Re:Symptoms of Alzheimers... (Score:2)
But, it just. might. work.
The Back story: I had a Evil 6th grade Grammer teacher (at Raccoon Elementary school, Raccoon township, illinois) who insisted that unless you learned the predicates, prepositions, participles, etc, you could not survive in society. As I was reading Asimov & Niven at the time, and could write sentences that were completely understandable, I thought this was a load of crap.
So, I didn't bother paying any attention whatsoever to grammer until 12th grade, and then man
Re:Symptoms of Alzheimers... (Score:1)
I'm sure .... (Score:1)
On the other hand, Sydney did a nice job hosting the Olympic Games.
very interesting - especially considering BSE/CJD (Score:2, Interesting)
In fact, at least 13% [cyber-dyne.com] of Alzheimer's cases are indeed CJD caused by mad cow. If larger studies were done, this percentage could end up much higher.
It may turn out that Alzheimer's is due to mad cow, or its predecessor, mad sheep (scrapie).
I hope that any new studies of this drug also focus on how it works
Re:very interesting - especially considering BSE/C (Score:1)
The simplest assumption would be that there is far more mad cow in the system than anyone wants to say
This is stupid. The *simplest* assumption is that there is no mad cow in the system, and to assume that the above is an insane conspiracy theory. Perhaps the fact that there is no kn
Re:very interesting - especially considering BSE/C (Score:1)
Over 13% of Alzheimer's deaths in the US are actually caused by mad cow. Using simple logic, one can see that there must be quite a bit of mad cow in the system to cause that many deaths.
Also, that there is mad cow in the USA on the loose is the simplest assumption because close to zero testing has been done in the US -- making the situation very similar to what happened in Britain/Europe before they found major B
Re:very interesting - especially considering BSE/C (Score:2)
Re:very interesting - especially considering BSE/C (Score:2)
"In fact, at least 13% [cyber-dyne.com] of Alzheimer's cases are indeed CJD caused by mad cow. If larger studies were done, this percentage could end up much higher."
The study that the poster is quoting has nothing to do with the statement that mad cow disease could be a cause of CJD. That study merely claims (and probably rightly so) that a certain small percentage of diagnoses of Alzheimer's disease turned out to be CJD instead. No mention is mad
Re:very interesting - especially considering BSE/C (Score:1)
As the article says, it's possible that tens of thousands of cases of CJD in the US are going unrecognized.
Modern research is showing that prion-like proteins are involved with memory according to this article [dementia.com] (note the links to Cell at the end).
There's a lot more information out there. It's not to say that everything is 100% understood at this point in time. What we do know...
Re:very interesting - especially considering BSE/C (Score:2)
As with most mainstream media, the news article cited no references, leaving the public sitting anywhere between apathy and hysteria with no real way to verify facts and separate those facts from mere unbased assertions.
The other link to dementia.com is very interesting. But that's only because it indicates that prions may play a normal role i
Re:by the way.. (Score:1)
As for work being stolen, that goes on all the time and has been a mainstay of higher eduction for hundreds of years. I'm not saying I a
Re:very interesting - especially considering BSE/C (Score:2)
This is stupid. The *simplest* assumption is that there is no mad cow in the system, and to assume that the above is an insane conspiracy theory. Perhaps the fact that there is no known mad cow in the system holds less weight with you than it should.
Inflamatory, perhaps. Stupid... who made you the bearer of all knowledge?
If one downer has Mad Cow Disease out of the 20,500 downers tested and there w
Re:very interesting - especially considering BSE/C (Score:3, Interesting)
I hate to follow up this kind of drivel, but... (Score:2)
A citation. Please. A *real* one, not the drivel that appears on that website you linked to, which I can only presume is your own. Go on, find that article in PubMed [nih.gov] and let us read more than that. That's not evidence, it's a statement. I'm convinced that you're a hysterical idiot without the first bloody idea what you're on about. You might just convince me that your brains aren't completely rotted if you
Re:I hate to follow up this kind of drivel, but... (Score:2)
The abstract is listed in PubMed [nih.gov], but does not purport to make any statements on mad cow/BSE.
Re:I hate to follow up this kind of drivel, but... (Score:1)
As you are going into some sort of medical field, I hope you learn how to be a pro-active thinking sort of person, not just a reactive "lose your rag" naysayer.
Let me remind you from your study
Re:I hate to follow up this kind of drivel, but... (Score:2)
He (or she) asked for a source for your claims, giving her an article citation that proved or even claimed linkage between the two wouldn't have been out of the question. Ranting about his (or her) scientific shortcomings was completely unneccessary. In all areas of science background reading or citations are provided with all claims of proof or fact.
Re:I hate to follow up this kind of drivel, but... (Score:1)
Additionally this person hypocritically didn't offer any information herself, didn't put an oun
Re:I hate to follow up this kind of drivel, but... (Score:2)
The *point* of the post was that you had no scientific evidence in the post. Posting some wouldn't be that hard.
Re:I hate to follow up this kind of drivel, but... (Score:1)
If you read the link I originally posted, there are excerpts from many medical publications. No, the references are not hyperlinked. But they are in text form, so it is a small step for the reader to highlight any particular publication reference and right click "Web search" (in Mozilla). Thus with a miniscule effort, the nasty naysayer could have explored all the medical publications. Note that many online medical journals
Re:I hate to follow up this kind of drivel, but... (Score:1)
Sorry, but someone had to say it.
This is garbage. If you want to talk science... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:This is garbage. If you want to talk science... (Score:1)
There was violent resistance to the very concept of "mad cow" in the first place... resistance that caused many more people and cows to die.
No one understands 100% how Alzheimer's works or how people get CJD. Initial reports have shown that CJD does come from mad cow and that CJD does have many of the same sym
Re:haha (Score:1)
If much of the beef is indeed infected with BSE, it offers something interesting to look into. As you know many people getting diabetes are quite young which provides a further reason to track down your brilliant correlation.
Good thinking! It's a healthy sign to see someone who isn't dismissive when he or she doesn't know all the facts.
Re:you clearly demonstrate a lack of (Score:1)
First of all, it is incredibly uncommon for strict vegetarians (those who don't drink milk) to get diabetes. Try looking at the health of people around the world who are even mostly vegetarians and you will find very very low incidences of
Re:Who said I set any trap? (Score:1)
Obviously for such steps to be taken mad cow must be more than the fantasy disease that you
Re:while we're at it... (Score:1)
Maybe there is some very good reason the cow is sacred in India, eh?
Are these items possibly related? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Are these items possibly related? (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Are these items possibly related? (Score:1)
Some advice (Score:1)
Be nice if... (Score:1)