Times Colonist

Acne drug can treat MS, study finds

- LAUREN KRUGEL

CALGARY — When Jill was 27, she woke up with tingling and numbness in her left hand that eventually spread to half her body.

The Calgary resident, who did not want her last name used, went for tests and was told there was a possibilit­y she would develop multiple sclerosis, a disease of the central nervous system.

Jill was enrolled two months later in a clinical trial led by University of Calgary researcher­s studying whether minocyclin­e, a common acne drug, could be a more affordable treatment for those in the early stages of MS. “I was happy in this case to help in any way I could,” said Jill, now 34. “It was an easy decision for me, personally.”

The results of the Phase 3 trial, published in the New England Journal of Medicine on Thursday, showed that minocyclin­e, an antibiotic, works just as well as the MS therapies that are currently available.

But instead of costing more than $20,000 a year in Canada, minocyclin­e would have an annual price tag of just $600.

Making treatment more readily accessible would be a major benefit for those early on in the disease, said Wee Yong, one of the study’s authors.

“We do know that time matters in MS. Time is brain loss in MS,” said Yong, a University of Calgary neuroscien­tist who has studied minocyclin­e as a potential MS treatment for nearly two decades.

The current treatment for MS involves injections that require frequent blood monitoring.

Minocyclin­e can be taken orally. Its most common side effects are initial dizziness and digestive upset. It has been on the market for decades and does not need further Health Canada approval to be used as an off-label drug for MS, the researcher­s say.

For the Phase 3 trial, the researcher­s studied 142 people across Canada between 18 and 60 who had recently experience­d symptoms for the first time, but had not been formally diagnosed with multiple sclerosis. About two-thirds of people who experience MS-like symptoms once — called a clinically isolated syndrome — go on to have the chronic disease diagnosed within six months, said lead researcher and University of Calgary neurologis­t Luanne Metz.

In the clinical trial, 61 per cent of participan­ts developed full-blown MS in that time. But that figure dropped to 33 per cent in those given minocyclin­e.

“Our target was to decrease the proportion that get multiple sclerosis,” Metz said. “That degree of benefit is very similar to the other therapies that are already approved for treating clinically isolated syndrome.”

The Phase 3 trial was funded with more than $4 million from the Multiple Sclerosis Society of Canada and its affiliated scientific research foundation.

Angelica Asis, the society’s acting director of research, said it would welcome larger minocyclin­e trials in the future. “More research is needed to really establish how long does the effect last or does it apply to more people with MS,” she said.

“What about people who are later in their disease versus a very early stage?”

Aside from a little stiffness in her hand, Jill said she is symptom-free and has not had full-fledged MS diagnosed. She took minocyclin­e for six and a half years, but recently decided to stop for a while to give her body a break from the antibiotic. She expects she’ll go back on at some point.

“I feel perfectly healthy now,” she said.

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