May 18, 2006
Mice With ALS Benefit From Thalidomide
Mice with a genetic form of amyotrophic lateral
sclerosis (ALS) treated with oral thalidomide or the
closely related drug lenalidomide survived slightly longer than
untreated mice, report Mahmoud Kiaei at Weill Medical College of Cornell
University in New York and colleagues. MDA grantee M. Flint Beal, at the same
institution, was on the study team.
Thalidomide appears to reduce levels of TNF-alpha, an
inflammation-associated protein. The treated mice had less TNF-alpha in their
spinal cords than did untreated mice.
Mice receiving thalidomide lived between 15 days (12 percent) and 21 days (16
percent) longer than untreated mice, and those treated with lenalidomide lived
slightly longer still.
Thalidomide is available as a drug, but it causes severe birth defects if taken
during pregnancy and must be used with meticulous contraception. |
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