scholarly journals Socio-Medical Studies of Individuals Self-Treating with Helminths Suggest That Most Clinical Trials Assessing Helminth Therapy May Be Designed to Fail

Author(s):  
Aarushi Venkatakrishnan ◽  
Joshua Hames ◽  
Kateřina Jirků-Pomajbíková ◽  
William Parker

The virtually complete loss of intestinal worms, known as helminths, from Western society has resulted in elimination of a range of helminth-induced morbidities. Unfortunately, that loss has also led to inflammation-associated deficiencies in immune function, ultimately contributing to widespread pandemics of allergies, autoimmunity, and neuropsychiatric disorders. Several socio-medical studies have examined the effects of intentional reworming, or self-treatment with helminths, on a variety of inflammation-related disorders. In this study, the latest results from ongoing socio-medical studies are described. The results point toward two important factors that appear to be overlooked in some if not most clinical trials. Specifically, (a) the method of preparation of the helminth can have a profound effect on its therapeutic efficacy, and (b) variation between individuals in the effective therapeutic dosage apparently covers a 10-fold range, regardless of the helminth used. These results highlight current limits in our understanding of the biology of both hosts and helminths, and suggest that information from self-treatment may be critical in moving the field forward into mainstream medicine.

Author(s):  
William Parker

The virtually complete loss of intestinal worms, known as helminths, from Western society has resulted in elimination of a range of helminth-induced morbidities. Unfortunately, that loss has also led to inflammation-associated deficiencies in immune function, ultimately contributing to widespread pandemics of allergies, autoimmunity, and neuropsychiatric disorders. Several socio-medical studies have examined the effects of intentional reworming, or self-treatment with helminths, on a variety of inflammation-related disorders. In this study, the latest results from ongoing socio-medical studies are described. The results point toward two important factors that appear to be overlooked in some if not most clinical trials. Specifically, (a) the method of preparation of the helminth can have a profound effect on its therapeutic efficacy, and (b) variation between individuals in the effective therapeutic dosage apparently covers a 10-fold range, regardless of the helminth used. These results highlight current limits in our understanding of the biology of both hosts and helminths, and suggest that information from self-treatment may be critical for clinical evaluation of the benefits and limits of helminth therapy.


2021 ◽  
Vol 14 ◽  
pp. 175628642097591
Author(s):  
Thomas F. Scott ◽  
Ray Su ◽  
Kuangnan Xiong ◽  
Arman Altincatal ◽  
Carmen Castrillo-Viguera ◽  
...  

Background: Peginterferon beta-1a and glatiramer acetate (GA) are approved first-line therapies for the treatment of relapsing forms of multiple sclerosis, but their therapeutic efficacy has not been compared directly. Methods: Clinical outcomes at 2 years, including no evidence of disease activity (NEDA), for patients receiving peginterferon beta-1a 125 mcg every 2 weeks (Q2W) or GA 20 mg/ml once daily (QD) were compared by propensity score matching analysis using individual patient data from ADVANCE and CONFIRM phase III clinical trials. In addition, clinical outcomes at 1–3 years for patients receiving peginterferon beta-1a Q2W or GA 40 mg/ml three times a week (TIW) were evaluated using a matching-adjusted comparison analysis of individual patient data from ADVANCE and the ADVANCE extension study, ATTAIN, and aggregate patient data from the phase III GALA and the GALA extension studies. Results: Propensity-score-matched peginterferon beta-1a patients ( n = 336) had a significantly lower annualized relapse rate [ARR (0.204 versus 0.282); rate ratio = 0.724; p = 0.045], a significantly lower probability of 12-week confirmed disability worsening (10.0% versus 14.6%; hazard ratio = 0.625; p = 0.048), and a significantly higher rate of NEDA (20.3% versus 11.5%; p = 0.047) compared with GA 20 mg/ml QD patients after 2 years of treatment. Matching-adjusted peginterferon beta-1a patients (effective n = 276) demonstrated a similar ARR at 1 year (0.278 versus 0.318; p = 0.375) and significantly lower ARR at 2 years (0.0901 versus 0.203; p = 0.032) and 3 years (0.109 versus 0.209; p = 0.047) compared with GA 40 mg/ml TIW patients ( n = 834). Conclusion: Results from separate matching comparisons of phase III clinical trials and extension studies suggest that peginterferon beta-1a 125 mcg Q2W may provide better clinical outcomes than GA (20 mg/ml QD or 40 mg/ml TIW).


Pharmaceutics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (4) ◽  
pp. 525
Author(s):  
Kwang-Soo Kim ◽  
Dong-Hwan Kim ◽  
Dong-Hyun Kim

Among various immunotherapies, natural killer (NK) cell cancer immunotherapy using adoptive transfer of NK cells takes a unique position by targeting tumor cells that evade the host immune surveillance. As the first-line innate effector cell, it has been revealed that NK cells have distinct mechanisms to both eliminate cancer cells directly and amplify the anticancer immune system. Over the last 40 years, NK cell cancer immunotherapy has shown encouraging reports in pre-clinic and clinic settings. In total, 288 clinical trials are investigating various NK cell immunotherapies to treat hematologic and solid malignancies in 2021. However, the clinical outcomes are unsatisfying, with remained challenges. The major limitation is attributed to the immune-suppressive tumor microenvironment (TME), low activity of NK cells, inadequate homing of NK cells, and limited contact frequency of NK cells with tumor cells. Innovative strategies to promote the cytolytic activity, durable persistence, activation, and tumor-infiltration of NK cells are required to advance NK cell cancer immunotherapy. As maturing nanotechnology and nanomedicine for clinical applications, there is a greater opportunity to augment NK cell therapeutic efficacy for the treatment of cancers. Active molecules/cytokine delivery, imaging, and physicochemical properties of nanoparticles are well equipped to overcome the challenges of NK cell cancer immunotherapy. Here, we discuss recent clinical trials of NK cell cancer immunotherapy, NK cell cancer immunotherapy challenges, and advances of nanoparticle-mediated NK cell therapeutic efficacy augmentation.


2007 ◽  
Vol 4 (3) ◽  
pp. 277-282 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Yoo ◽  
H. Tcheurekdjian ◽  
S. V. Lynch ◽  
M. Cabana ◽  
H. A. Boushey

2017 ◽  
Vol 52 ◽  
pp. 44-50 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhi-Jun Liu ◽  
Jing Bai ◽  
Feng-Li Liu ◽  
Xiang-Yang Zhang ◽  
Jing-Zhang Wang

Life ◽  
2022 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 62
Author(s):  
Harri Hemilä ◽  
Elizabeth Chalker

Evidence has shown unambiguously that, in certain contexts, vitamin C is effective against the common cold. However, in mainstream medicine, the views on vitamin C and infections have been determined by eminence-based medicine rather than evidence-based medicine. The rejection of the demonstrated benefits of vitamin C is largely explained by three papers published in 1975—two published in JAMA and one in the American Journal of Medicine—all of which have been standard citations in textbooks of medicine and nutrition and in nutritional recommendations. Two of the papers were authored by Thomas Chalmers, an influential expert in clinical trials, and the third was authored by Paul Meier, a famous medical statistician. In this paper, we summarize several flaws in the three papers. In addition, we describe problems with two recent randomized trial reports published in JAMA which were presented in a way that misled readers. We also discuss shortcomings in three recent JAMA editorials on vitamin C. While most of our examples are from JAMA, it is not the only journal with apparent bias against vitamin C, but it illustrates the general views in mainstream medicine. We also consider potential explanations for the widespread bias against vitamin C.


Neurosurgery ◽  
1985 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
pp. 107-110 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephen J. Haines

Abstract The three published randomized clinical trials of chymopapain injection vs. placebo injection for the treatment of herniated lumbar discs are reviewed. Despite some differences, the similarities in selection criteria, technique, and outcome assessment are great enough to justify pooling the results to obtain an overall assessment of chymopapain efficacy. These pooled results suggest that the odds of successful outcome (at least some improvement in symptoms after injection) are 2.6 times as great with chymopapain injection as those after placebo injection. This corresponds to a 50% greater probability of success with chymopapain than with placebo or a 23% increase in the number of patients successfully treated with chemonucleolysis over those successfully treated with placebo. The fact that data from 234 patients evaluated in randomized clinical trials could resolve a controversy over therapeutic efficacy that the uncontrolled evaluation of over 20,000 patients could not answer suggests that the current controversy over the relative efficacy of chymopapain and discectomy should be studied in the same way. The difficulties of such a study are discussed. (Neurosurgery 17:107-110, 1985)


Blood ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 114 (22) ◽  
pp. 2767-2767
Author(s):  
Kate Burbury ◽  
Peter Gambell ◽  
Neil Came ◽  
Kevin Lynch ◽  
John F. Seymour ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 2767 Poster Board II-743 Introduction: The availability of effective disease-modifying therapies for patients with MDS, means standardised criteria for diagnosis, classification, prognostication and evaluation of treatment response are increasingly important. This has been achieved in part by the 2008 WHO classification. FC is now included as a co-criterion for diagnosis in the MDS consensus statement (Leuk Res 2007). Our aim was to explore the role of FC as a sensitive and objective tool for assessment of therapeutic efficacy. Patients and Methods: We prospectively and sequentially assessed the utility of FC during therapy, as part of two phase-II clinical trials incorporating 5-Azacytidine/Thalidomide and Lenalidomide/Stem-cell factor, respectively. Four-color FC analysis was performed on bone marrow samples using a defined antibody panel assessing blast and myelomonocytic populations. Antigen maturation patterns were evaluated by two independent assessors, comparing to healthy volunteers and normal patient controls (n=30), and assigned both a Wells FC score (wFCS) from 0–8 (Blood 2003) and Stachurski-FC score (sFCS) – denoted as positive, intermediate or negative for the presence of antigenic aberrancy and/or asynchrony (Leuk Res 2008). Results: 31 patients, 20 males, median age 66 (range: 43–89) were included in the analysis. Within this cohort, there have been 112 FC assessments (incorporating both scores for each). There was good correlation of scoring between the 2 independent assessors with concordance of both FCS in 67/112 (61%) of evaluations. With regards to wFCS there was a discrepancy of 1 point between assessors in 38/112 (34%) of evaluations and 2 points in 2 evaluations (1.7%). For sFCS, there was a discrepancy in only 8/112 (7%) assays. WHO categories comprised: RA (n=1), RCMD (7), RAEB-I/II (13), CMML-I/II (4), 5q- (3), MDS-U (1), AML (2). IPSS cytogenetic risk categories: good – 21, intermediate - 4, poor - 4 and 2 non-assessable. According to WHO-Prognostic Scoring System (WPSS), no patient was at very low risk, 8 were low risk, and the majority classified with at least intermediate (n=6), high (n=12) and very high risk (n=6) disease. 30/31 (97%) were transfusion requiring at enrolment (29 red cell, 1 platelet), with median hemoglobin 92g/L (range 61–118), neutrophil count 2.13 (range 0.23–42), platelet count 195 (range 7–606) and marrow blasts 6% (range 1–28). Pre-treatment median wFCS was 6 (range: 3–9); and by sFCS, 24 were positive, 6 intermediate and 1 negative. At trial entry, the WFCS correlated with the percentage of marrow blasts (r=0.483, p=0.006) and the WPSS (r=0.35, p=0.055). 30 patients (97%) have been re-evaluated on therapy; median time to best clinical response (IWG-2008 criteria) was 77 days (range: 27–511), consistent with previous observations (Fenaux et al, Lancet Oncol 2009). Twenty (65%) achieved at least a PR by conventional criteria. Of these, 15 (75%) showed a concordant improvement in FCS (defined as a reduction in points allocated) in either or both of the wFCS and sFCS. Of these 11/15 showed a reduction in the wFCS (median reduction in score 2, range 1–3); 4 showed a concordant improvement in the assigned sFCS (from positive to intermediate, n=2; or intermediate to negative, n=2). Of those who achieved a response by conventional criteria, 2 patients showed no change in either FCS's and 3 patients (CR=1; PR=2) showed an increase in both FCS's, suggestive of early progression, 2 of whom have subsequently progressed clinically by conventional criteria. Of the 20 that achieved a response 18 (90%) have had further assessments. 5/18 (28%) have since progressed, with 80% showing concordant FCS deterioration. Of those who maintained stable disease by conventional criteria (10/31), 7 showed improvement in the either or both of the FCS. Two have since progressed and both showed a concordant deterioration in FCS. Conclusions: These data indicate that FC may offer a more subtle and dynamic objective assessment for sequential disease monitoring, and may aid MDS treatment response evaluation. Further large prospective clinical trials utilising immunophenotyping as a co-criterion to measure response are required to validate these findings. Disclosures: Lynch: Celgene Pty Ltd: Employment, Equity Ownership. Seymour:Celgene: Consultancy, Honoraria, Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees, Research Funding, Speakers Bureau.


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