Treatment Options for Myasthenia Gravis

23 mar 2022 · 13 min. 23 sec.
Treatment Options for Myasthenia Gravis
Descrizione

James Howard Jr., MD, Distinguished Professor of Neuromuscular Disease and Professor of Neurology and Medicine at UNC School of Medicine, reviews the treatment landscape for myasthenia gravis. Myasthenia gravis is...

mostra di più
James Howard Jr., MD, Distinguished Professor of Neuromuscular Disease and Professor of Neurology and Medicine at UNC School of Medicine, reviews the treatment landscape for myasthenia gravis.

Myasthenia gravis is a chronic autoimmune neuromuscular disease characterized by weakness of the skeletal muscles. Common symptoms include weakness of the muscles that control the eyes, eyelids, facial expressions, chewing, talking, and swallowing. The condition is usually due to the presence of antibodies against acetylcholine receptors in the neuromuscular junction.

As Dr. Howard explains, due to the variety of ways this rare disease can present, treatment of myasthenia gravis is individualized to each patient based on their specific symptoms and unique comorbidities. In addition, the financial situation of each patient is taken into account.
Acetylcholinesterase inhibitors are often used as bridge therapies. Corticosteroids are also common bridge therapies in younger patients, while steroid sparing agents are more common in older patients or in patients with contraindications to steroids. In patients under the age of 60 with generalized disease and who are anti-acetylcholine receptor (AChR) antibody positive, the removal of the thymus gland is common.

Dr. Howard goes on to discuss approved treatments for myasthenia gravis. In 2017, eculizumab, a complement inhibitor, was approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for the treatment of generalized myasthenia gravis in adult patients who are anti-acetylcholine receptor (AChR) antibody positive.

More recently, in December 2021, the FDA approved efgartigimod alfa, an FcRn inhibitor, for the treatment of this same patient population. This approval was based on positive results from the global phase 3 ADAPT trial, which were published in the July 2021 issue of The Lancet Neurology. While Dr. Howard stresses the need for individualized treatment for all myasthenia gravis patients, he is optimistic about the future of FcRn inhibitors in the treatment of myasthenia gravis.
mostra meno
Informazioni
Autore Peter Ciszewski, CheckRare
Sito -
Tag

Sembra che non tu non abbia alcun episodio attivo

Sfoglia il catalogo di Spreaker per scoprire nuovi contenuti

Corrente

Copertina del podcast

Sembra che non ci sia nessun episodio nella tua coda

Sfoglia il catalogo di Spreaker per scoprire nuovi contenuti

Successivo

Copertina dell'episodio Copertina dell'episodio

Che silenzio che c’è...

È tempo di scoprire nuovi episodi!

Scopri
La tua Libreria
Cerca