Showing posts with label Interferon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Interferon. Show all posts

Saturday, April 10, 2010

Medicare OKs Interferon for Glioblastoma Treatment

UPDATE: 28 April, 2010

Brain tumor growth linked to lowered expression of hundreds of immune function genes

ScienceDaily (2010-04-28) -- A new study links progression of a lethal type of brain tumor with reduced expression of more than 600 immune system genes, suggesting how complex the immune response is to the cancer and the resulting difficulty in targeting specific immune system proteins for treatment.  ... > read full article

While this is a good response from Medicare, the risks of kidney and liver failure with interferon are very high.

Natural Interferon exists, contact us for that information.

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Medicare Reversal Ignites Hope for Glioblastoma Patient
By John Fauber, Reporter, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel/MedPage Today
April 09, 2010
Paula Oertel's brain tumor disappeared for nine years while she was on a drug not approved for her condition. The tumor returned when a move to a new home triggered a Medicare review -- and subsequent denial of coverage for the experimental treatment.

Now Medicare officials have decided she will be allowed to go back on the drug.

"I am hoping that it will help," Oertel said Friday. "I am hoping it will shrink the tumor and that my body can take over and fight it."

Oertel, 40, who now lives in Wautoma, Wis., with her mother, said she will begin giving herself interferon-beta injections on Saturday.

The decision to resume paying for the drug -- which is approved for treating multiple sclerosis, but not brain cancer -- comes after her story was told March 21 in the Journal Sentinel and MedPage Today.

Medicare officials were not available for comment Friday, but a letter Thursday to Oertel's doctor, Mark Malkin, MD, chief of neuro-oncology at Froedtert Hospital in Milwaukee says that after an independent review, Medicare will begin paying for the drug, which costs about $8,000 a month (see attached pdf).

"We read the entire case file very carefully," said the letter from Maximus Federal Services in New York, a company hired by Medicare to review Oertel's case. "Avonex (interferon) has been determined to be reasonable and necessary for this patient who has shown prolonged response to the drug in the past and who has no other appropriate treatment options at this time."

The big question: Will the drug have the same effect now that it did in the past?

Oertel's tumor is growing. Just in the last six weeks it has moved from her left frontal lobe to the right frontal lobe, said Malkin.

And the tumor's biology may have changed as well, allowing it to develop resistance to interferon.

"The tumor has never been bigger," said Malkin, who is also a professor of neurology at the Medical College of Wisconsin. "That's what the delay has resulted in."

Oertel was first diagnosed with glioblastoma multiforme 12 years ago when she was 29. The tumor is the same kind that killed U.S. Sen. Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts last year.

Oertel twice had undergone surgery and radiation, and both times the tumor returned within months.

At the time there were no approved drugs to treat the condition. As a last resort, doctors tried interferon, which has shown some promise but is not approved to treat brain cancer.

Within months the tumor disappeared, and for nine years there was no sign of it on repeated brain scans.

Medicare paid for the drug for those nine years.

Due to a mix up, Oertel temporarily lost her Medicare coverage when she moved from one county to another.

It was restored after a few months.

In the meantime, two drugs had been approved to treat glioblastoma. Doctors tried those first, but the tumor did not respond. When they tried to put her back on interferon, the local Medicare carrier refused to cover the drug. It provided no explanation.

Calls and e-mails by Malkin and his staff to various public officials and government offices failed to resolve the situation.

However, after Oertel's story appeared in the Journal Sentinel and MedPage Today, Malkin got a call from the office of U.S. Rep. Thomas Petri (R-Fond du Lac), Oertel's congressman.

The Congressman's representative went to Oertel's home and got her to sign a form that led to the appeal to Maximus Federal Services, Malkin said.

"They (Maximus) asked if it was true that interferon is the only alternative for her," Malkin said.

Malkin cited the fact that it had worked so well for nine years.

"Paula is the only patient in my experience where it has worked that well," he said.

Last month, Malkin estimated that, without treatment, Oertel had only about five months to live.

He said it likely will take another month or two to know if the interferon is having an effect on the tumor.

There are three possibilities, Malkin said: It may be too late because the tumor has evolved so that interferon no longer has an effect; it could have partial benefit by shrinking the tumor and allowing Oertel to remain stable for a while; or it could allow her to go into remission indefinitely.

"I don't have a clue," Malkin said.

Even if Oertel eventually goes into remission, she is likely to get worse before she gets better, he said.

Oertel has been experiencing headaches and verbal and memory problems along with weakness on her right side. She walks with a cane.

"The tumor has a certain momentum of growth," Malkin said. "It may take the interferon a while to catch up with that."
See also Avastin
Search for 'glioma' related articles, there are 6 on Natural Health News.

Monday, December 8, 2008

Interferon Treatment for Hepatitis C depletes B Vitamin and Iron

I for one am very pleased to see this report.

I have worked over many years with people who have Hepatitis C. During this course of time I found it very clear that people with Hep C (PWHC) have an extraordinarily high need for B vitamins. This large amount is not supported by typically available B vitamin products sold today.

Successfully used to provide B complex in a form that is usable by PWHC is our BioSupplemente Naturalle.

One of our key projects for 2009 is to re-manufacture BioSupplemente in the powder form. It will be sold as a bulk powder for human and companion animal use, as it had been in the past. At this time I do not forsee that we will be manufacuring a capsule form.

Currently only the homeopathic liquid form of this product is available as RK BioDrops.
Drug Treatment for Hepatitis C depletes B Vitamin and Iron Stores

Reference: "Vitamins B depletion, lower iron status and decreased antioxidative defense in patients with chronic hepatitis C treated by pegylated interferon alfa and ribavirin," Lin CC, Yin MC, et al, Clin Nutr, 2008 Nov 28; [Epub ahead of print]. (Address: Department of Internal Medicine, Chung Shan Medical University Hospital, Taichung City, Taiwan, Republic of China).

Summary: In a study involving 152 healthy subjects and 109 patients infected with hepatitis C (HCV), treatment with pegylated interferon combined with ribavirin was found to decrease levels of vitamin B6, vitamin B1, vitamin B2 and iron. Infection with HCV was associated with reduced levels of vitamin B6 and folate, and the drug treatment further diminished B vitamin status, and was associated with a higher percentage of patients with insufficient iron status. Furthermore, HCV infection was associated with higher plasma levels of malondialdehyde and 8-isoprostane; drug treatment for HCV further exacerbated lipid oxidation. HCV infection was also associated with significantly lower vitamin C and glutathione levels; drug treatment was found to reduce alpha-tocopherol level and activity of glutathione peroxidase and superoxide dismutase. These results suggest that supplementation with B vitamins, iron, and vitamin C may be beneficial to patients with HCV, particularly those treated with pegylated interferon alfa and ribavirin. Additional research is warranted.


Generally people are not provided with the information about Interferon that supports the damaging end result of its use such as liver and kidney failure.

There are also other nutritional needs we have found that are critical for PWHC. Again this information is not provided by mainstream medical providers.

While Interferon is a genetically modified product, properly prepared herbal extracts of St. John's Wort offers its use as an anti-viral and natural form of interferon.