Treatment Quandaries
Recovering from HSCT in 2010, the last time I treated my MS. |
Grumble, grumble, grumble. No, that’s not my tummy
pre-breakfast urging me to consume multiple doughnuts (mmm, doughnuts). It’s
just me, grumbling about my MS, which has gotten feisty again. After more than
five years of being medication free following my stem cell transplant for my particularly
aggressive form of multiple sclerosis, I recently was tasked with choosing my
next form of treatment. And boy has the treatment landscape changed since 2010
when I got my HSCT.
Back in 1993, the decision of what MS drug to take
was moot—Betaseron was our only option. But now it’s like picking out a salad
dressing at the grocery store. So many choices! Do I go with the garlic
peppercorn ranch with an outside risk of PML or do I try the balsamic
vinaigrette that may hose my thyroid? Or do I skip the dressing entirely? Deciding
what to do can be so taxing. Here’s how I broke it down, and how I came to a
(sorta) satisfying answer.
Right now my disease feels like it is in the slow
burn stages. Nowhere near the inferno of the fall of 2009, thankfully, but it’s
been swiping my mobility like those people who nosh on grapes in the grocery
store. Popping one or two grapes isn’t noticeable, but after a while, a bunch
is suddenly gone. Am I rolling into secondary progressive? That’s a very real
possibility and another piece I had to factor into my decision.
For starters, I eliminated treatments I had
failed: Copaxone, interferons and Tysabri (and I am JC positive to boot). That
part was easy. So was saying no to Novantrone—far too many risks with far too little
benefit; doctors are rarely prescribing it these days anyway. Then because of
the fuzziness of my MS (no relapses in over five years) I nixed treatments that
were generally ineffective in secondary progressive trials, so Gilenya, a
powerful RRMS oral drug, was out as was Tecfidera, which also showed
inconsistent performance in progressive MS.
What about Lemtrada? It’s a big gun, and a
treatment I tried to get on in 2009 as part of a clinical trial, but there would
be a few issues with taking it now. It works best in the relapse-remitting
phase of the disease, the first infusion in New Mexico just took place last
week so the waiting time would be lengthy, and my stem cell transplant took a
not so dissimilar path as both are immune system reboots. Also Lemtrada does
come with a host of side effects, something I might be more willing to overlook
if my MS was raging, but it’s not.
Off label options? Rituxan seemed like a logical,
no-brainer path, especially after the recent announcement of ocrelizumab’s success
in treating the primary progressive form of our disease. Ah, but lack of FDA
approval, likely to happen in 2016, means insurance will not cover the
medication—despite me asking nicely. I won one big fight in this department,
but two? Wasn’t going to happen, especially since I would not be taking the
drug as part of a clinical trial. And finally, another stem cell transplant,
the biggest gun (and one I have zero regrets using) seemed like too drastic of
a step for a treatment that lasted me fewer than five years and one that would
cost me personally six figures. So by process of elimination, that leaves me
with one lone salad dressing on the shelf: Aubagio.
No, Aubagio might not have the same oomph in
preventing relapses as the other orals, but it does have a wild card: it
targets both T and B cells. And B cells, as has been shown in ocrelizumab/Rituxan
trials, just may be a key part in treating secondary progressive MS. Plus, its
side-effect profile is relatively mellow compared to most other DMDs, although
you have to have your liver checked regularly.
So there you have it. Choosing a salad dressing
isn’t easy, but if you stand there and stare at the shelf long enough, one
usually stands out. Or you throw your hands up in frustration and just go home
and make your own: whisk up three parts oil, one part vinegar, a touch of Dijon
mustard, salt and pepper to taste, bam!
Comments
I moved to secondary progressive in 2009. I appreciate your blog and above all your honesty. I am on tysabi (seemingly without any effect) and soon I may move on to
It is frustrating and one feels the need to be pleasant and upbeat when you have an appointment (or is that because I'm a Canadian ?) so thank you and carry on the good fight!
LMH
Stay strong!
Jamie
I too finished HSCT last year in Florence, full BEAM cocktail. But when I did it, I was possibly early SPMS already. Tough to say when Tysabri may have covered up any active inflammation on MRI. I'm only one year post transplant, but the treatment affected my foot drop, which is worse now. Or was it progression? You are correct, Rituximab may not be covered, although I have been wanting to get on it due its anti-b cell properties. Interesting and timely read on Aubagio. I did not know it had effect on b cells. So, until Ocrelizumab is out next year, Augbagio it is. Thanks for the post and insight.