(Press-News.org) A drug originally developed to prevent the rejection of transplanted organs has now been shown to dramatically reduce seizures in patients with tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC) – a genetic disease characterized by benign tumors on multiple organ systems. TSC is estimated to affect more than a million individuals throughout the world.
The study is the latest to demonstrate the effectiveness of everolimus for TSC patients. Previous studies conducted at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center showed that everolimus reduced tumors in the brain and the kidney.
The newest study, led by a physician-scientist at Cincinnati Children's in collaboration with a team at Texas Children's Hospital in Houston, has been accepted by the journal Annals of Neurology, and is available online.
"Everolimus treatment reduced seizure frequency and duration in the majority of TSC epilepsy patients whose seizures previously did not respond to treatment," says Darcy Krueger, MD, PhD, a pediatric neurologist at Cincinnati Children's and lead author of the study. "This improvement in seizure control was associated with a better quality of life, and side effects were limited. Work is already underway to confirm these results in a follow-up, phase III clinical study."
"This has been positively life-changing for the patients involved and is nothing short of transformative in the treatment of epilepsy associated with cellular growth disorders, such as TSC," says Angus Wilfong, MD, director of the comprehensive epilepsy program at Texas Children's Hospital and associate professor of pediatrics and neurology at Baylor College of Medicine.
The study included 20 patients who were treated with everolimus. Their median age was 8. Half of the patients were enrolled at Cincinnati Children's and half at Texas Children's Hospital in Houston.
The researchers found that everolimus reduced seizure frequency by at least 50 percent in 12 of the 20 participants. The drug also reduced seizures in 17 of the 20 TSC patients by a median rate of 73 percent. Four patients were free of seizures and seven had at least a 90 percent reduction in seizure frequency.
Overall quality of life, as reported by the participants' parents, also improved. Parents reported several positive changes, including attention, behavior, social interaction and physical restrictions.
Studies in the 1990s traced the cause of TSC to defects in two genes, TSC1 and TSC2. When these genes malfunction, the cell has higher activity of mTOR, a protein known to trigger uncontrolled tumor cell and blood vessel growth. Everolimus shrinks tumors by inhibiting mTORC1, and it appears to reduce seizures in TSC patients in the same way.
"It is unclear whether the benefit of everolimus in treating epilepsy might extend beyond that observed in TSC," says Dr. Krueger. "mTORC1 has been implicated in genetic and neurodevelopmental syndromes in which epilepsy is prominent and in more common types of epilepsy. Additional clinical trials might tell us whether everolimus would benefit patients with epilepsy not related to TSC."
###
Funding for the study was provided by Novartis Pharmaceuticals and the Clack Foundation.
About Cincinnati Children's
Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center ranks third in the nation among all Honor Roll hospitals in U.S.News and World Report's 2013 Best Children's Hospitals ranking. It is ranked #1 for cancer and in the top 10 for nine of 10 pediatric specialties. Cincinnati Children's is one of the top two recipients of pediatric research grants from the National Institutes of Health, and a research and teaching affiliate of the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine. The medical center is internationally recognized for improving child health and transforming delivery of care through fully integrated, globally recognized research, education and innovation. Additional information can be found at http://www.cincinnatichildrens.org. Connect on the Cincinnati Children's blog, via Facebook and on Twitter.
Drug shows dramatic reduction in seizures in patients with tuberous sclerosis complex
Further studies could determine benefit to epilepsy patients without TSC
2013-07-15
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Researchers discover new retroviruses in polar bear Knut and panda Bao Bao
2013-07-15
This news release is available in German. Following the death of the polar bear Knut at Berlin Zoo, examinations carried out at the Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research in Berlin showed that Knut was suffering from virus-induced encephalitis (acute inflammation of the brain). Researchers at Saarland University and IZW have now analysed his genetic material and discovered and characterised new sequences of endogenous retroviruses. The retroviruses were also found in another former resident of Berlin Zoo: the giant panda Bao Bao. The work of the research team ...
Path of plaque buildup in brain shows promise as early biomarker for Alzheimer's disease
2013-07-15
PHILADELPHIA—The trajectory of amyloid plaque buildup—clumps of abnormal proteins in the brain linked to Alzheimer's disease—may serve as a more powerful biomarker for early detection of cognitive decline rather than using the total amount to gauge risk, researchers from Penn Medicine's Department of Radiology suggest in a new study published online July 15 in Neurobiology of Aging.
Amyloid plaque that starts to accumulate relatively early in the temporal lobe, compared to other areas and in particular to the frontal lobe, was associated with cognitively declining participants, ...
Share robotic frogs help turn a boring mating call into a serenade
2013-07-15
VIDEO:
When choosing a potential mate, female túngara frogs listen to the sounds of the male calls, which are based on a pattern of "whines " and "chucks. " If visible, the sight...
Click here for more information.
With the help of a robotic frog, biologists at The University of Texas at Austin and Salisbury University have discovered that two wrong mating calls can make a right for female túngara frogs.
The "rather bizarre" result may be evidence ...
When diffusion depends on chronology
2013-07-15
The Internet, motorways and other transport systems, and many social and biological systems are composed of nodes connected by edges. They can therefore be represented as networks. Scientists studying diffusion over such networks over time have now identified the temporal characteristics that affect their diffusion pathways. In a paper about to be published in EPJ B, Renaud Lambiotte and Lionel Tabourier from the University of Namur, Belgium, together with Jean-Charles Delvenne from the Catholic University of Louvain, Belgium, show that one key factor that can dramatically ...
Wayne State University scientists identify neural origins of hot flashes in menopausal women
2013-07-15
DETROIT — A new study from neuroscientists at the Wayne State University School of Medicine provides the first novel insights into the neural origins of hot flashes in menopausal women in years. The study may inform and eventually lead to new treatments for those who experience the sudden but temporary episodes of body warmth, flushing and sweating.
The paper, "Temporal Sequencing of Brain Activations During Naturally Occurring Thermoregulatory Events," by Robert Freedman, Ph.D., professor of psychiatry and behavioral neurosciences, founder of the Behavioral Medicine ...
Attractive and successful
2013-07-15
This news release is available in German.
Female social dominance over males is rare among mammal species. Bonobos, one of our closest living relatives, are known for females holding relatively high social statuses when compared to males; though this is puzzling as the males are often bigger and stronger than the females. Researchers of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany, have now analyzed the dominance relations between male and female wild bonobos and took particular interest in the high social status ranking of some females. ...
Medicaid patients at higher risk of complications after spine surgery
2013-07-15
Philadelphia, Pa. (July 15, 2013) - Among patients undergoing spinal surgery, Medicaid beneficiaries are at higher risk of experiencing any type of complication, compared to privately insured patients, reports a study in the July 15 issue of of Spine. The journal is published by Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, a part of Wolters Kluwer Health.
"Medicaid insurance status is a risk factor for perioperative complications," according to the research by Dr Jacques Henri Hacquebord of University of Washington, Seattle, and colleagues. They believe their study draws attention ...
Solving DNA puzzles is overwhelming computer systems, researchers warn
2013-07-15
Imagine millions of jigsaw puzzle pieces scattered across a football field, with too few people and too little time available to assemble the picture.
Scientists in the new but fast-growing field of computational genomics are facing a similar dilemma. In recent decades, these researchers have begun to assemble the chemical blueprints of the DNA found in humans, animals, plants and microbes, unlocking a door that will likely lead to better healthcare and greatly expanded life-science knowledge. But a major obstacle now threatens the speedy movement of DNA's secrets into ...
Distorted GPS signals reveal hurricane wind speeds
2013-07-15
WASHINGTON, DC— By pinpointing locations on Earth from space, GPS systems have long shown drivers the shortest route home and guided airline pilots across oceans. Now, by figuring out how messed up GPS satellite signals get when bouncing around in a storm, researchers have found a way to do something completely different with GPS: measure and map the wind speeds of hurricanes.
Improved wind speed measurements could help meteorologists better predict the severity of storms and where they might be headed, said Stephen Katzberg, a Distinguished Research Associate at the ...
How cranberries impact infection-causing bacteria
2013-07-15
Consuming cranberry products has been anecdotally associated with prevention of urinary tract infections (UTIs) for over 100 years. But is this popular belief a myth, or scientific fact?
In recent years, some studies have suggested that cranberries prevent UTIs by hindering bacteria from sticking to the walls of the urinary tract, thanks to phytochemicals known as proanthocyanidins (PACs). Yet the mechanisms by which cranberry materials may alter bacterial behaviour have not been fully understood.
Now, researchers in McGill University's Department of Chemical Engineering ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Millions of men could benefit from faster scan to diagnose prostate cancer
Simulations solve centuries-old cosmic mystery – and discover new class of ancient star systems
MIT study explains how a rare gene variant contributes to Alzheimer’s disease
Race, ethnicity, insurance payer, and pediatric cardiac arrest survival
High-intensity exercise and hippocampal integrity in adults with cannabis use disorder
“Brain dial” for consumption found in mice
Lung cancer rewires immune cells in the bone marrow to weaken body’s defenses
Researchers find key to Antarctic ice loss blowing in the north wind
Ten years after the discovery, gravitational waves verify Stephen Hawking's Black Hole Area Theorem
Researchers uncover potential biosignatures on Mars
Built to learn: how early brain structure primes the brain to learn efficiently
Cells use electricity to eliminate their ‘weakest’ neighbours to maintain healthy protective barriers
New motion-compensation approach delivers sharper single-pixel imaging for dynamic scenes
Journal of Psychiatry and Neuroscience now officially part of the Canadian Science Publishing portfolio
What motivates runners? Focusing on the “how” rather than the “why”
Researchers capture new antibiotic resistance mechanisms with trace amounts of DNA
New research in JNCCN offers a simplified way to identify harmful medications in older adults with cancer
State school finance reforms increased racial and ethnic funding inequities, new study finds
Endocrine Society honors endocrinology field’s leaders with 2026 Laureate Awards
Decoding high-grade endometrial cancer: a molecular-histologic integration using the Cancer Genome Atlas framework
An exploding black hole could reveal the foundations of the universe
Childhood traumatic events and transgender identity are strongly associated with suicidal thoughts and behaviors in university students
UVA to test if MRI can reveal undetected brain injuries in soldiers
Mount Sinai Morningside unveils new, state-of-the-art facility for patients who need inpatient rehabilitation
BD² announces new funding opportunities focused on biology of bipolar disorder
“Want to, but can’t”: A new model to explain the gap in waste separation behavior
Highly sensitive, next-generation wearable pressure sensors inspired by cat whiskers
Breaking the code of sperm motion: Two proteins found to be vital for male fertility
UC Irvine poll: Californians support stricter tech regulations for children
Study finds critically endangered sharks being sold as food in U.S. grocery stores
[Press-News.org] Drug shows dramatic reduction in seizures in patients with tuberous sclerosis complexFurther studies could determine benefit to epilepsy patients without TSC