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Showing posts with label IVIG. Show all posts
Showing posts with label IVIG. Show all posts

Saturday, 12 July 2025

Consequences of folate deficiency – treated by immunomodulators (Infliximab, IVIG, Propes and Inflamafertin) and the relevance of mutations in MTHFR, MTR, and MTRR genes in identifying those at risk. Plus the effect of rTMS and tDCS on milder autism

 

Today’s post returns to folate deficiency, but before that a quick mention of magnetic/electrical brain stimulation therapies for autism without impaired cognition.

I encountered a new term IC-ASD. It stands for intellectually capable autism spectrum disorder. Most people with autism these days seem to have IC-ASD. Some struggle and some do not.

 

The effects of rTMS and tDCS on repetitive/stereotypical behaviors,cognitive/executive functions in intellectually capable children and young adults with autism spectrum disorder: A systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials

 

Objective

This study aims to evaluate the efficacy of repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) and transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) on repetitive/stereotypical behaviors and cognitive/executive functions in children and young adults with intellectually capable autism spectrum disorder (IC-ASD).

Methods

Literature searches across PubMed, Web of Science, Cochrane Library, Embase, and Scopus were performed to identify randomized controlled trials (RCTs) evaluating the efficacy of rTMS and tDCS in children and young adults with IC-ASD. The search encompassed articles published up to April 25, 2025. The standardized mean difference (SMD) with 95 % confidence intervals (CI) was calculated and pooled. Sensitivity and subgroup analyses were conducted to assess potential sources of heterogeneity and refine the robustness of the findings.

Results

This meta-analysis included 18 RCTs involving 813 participants. Compared with sham interventions, tDCS demonstrated significant improvements in social communication, repetitive and stereotypical behaviors, cognitive and executive functions among individuals with IC-ASD (e.g., Social Responsiveness Scale: SMD = –0.48; 95 % CI: –0.75 to –0.22; p < 0.01). Similarly, rTMS improved social communication, repetitive and abnormal behaviors (Social Responsiveness Scale: SMD = –0.21; 95 % CI: –0.42 to –0.00; p < 0.05; Repetitive Behavior Scale-Revised: SMD = –0.62; 95 % CI: –1.17 to –0.07; p = 0.04; Aberrant Behavior Checklist: SMD = –0.53; 95 % CI: –0.79 to –0.26; p < 0.01). No significant heterogeneity was observed across studies.

Conclusion

tDCS and rTMS may enhance cognitive and executive functions and reduce repetitive behaviors in children and young adults with IC-ASD. However, these findings require careful interpretation due to the limited high-quality studies and variability in treatment protocols. Future research should prioritize the development of standardized protocols to address inconsistencies in stimulation parameters (including frequency, intensity, and duration) and core outcome sets. Additionally, larger-scale, rigorously blinded multi-center RCTs are necessary to accurately evaluate the clinical efficacy and applicability of these neuromodulation techniques in these populations.

 

rTMS and tDCS look like interesting non-pharmaceutical options for those with milder types of autism. How well they work in those with lower cognitive function is not addressed.

 

Back to Folate Deficiency

Stephen recently highlighted a Chinese study that looked at the relevance of mutations in the genes MTHFR, MTR, and MTRR to try and identify those most at risk of folate deficiency.

I also highlight research into treating some of the downstream consequences that occur when folate metabolism is impaired. The lack of folate disrupts the immune system causing anomalies such as low NK cells, low NKT cells, high TNF-alpha.

Immunodeficiency (Low NK and NKT cells): The deficiency in these crucial innate immune cells means the body's ability to fight off infections (particularly opportunistic ones) and perform immune surveillance (e.g., against abnormal cells) is compromised. This immunosuppression is a direct consequence of the impaired cell proliferation due to the folate cycle defect.

Systemic Inflammation (High TNF-alpha): Despite the low numbers of certain immune cells, there can be an overproduction of pro-inflammatory cytokines like TNF-alpha. This leads to chronic systemic inflammation. This phenomenon is often referred to as hypercytokinemia.

Beyond TNF-alpha, you might expect a possible overproduction of:

  • Interleukin-1 beta (IL-1β): This is a potent pro-inflammatory cytokine involved in various immune responses and neuroinflammation.
  • Interleukin-6 (IL-6): Another major pro-inflammatory cytokine that plays a role in systemic inflammation and can affect brain development and function.
  • Interferon-gamma (IFN-γ): This is a key cytokine in Th1 immune responses and is also pro-inflammatory.

 

The recent Chinese study concludes that high-dose folinic acid appears to be a promising intervention for children with autism. Its efficacy is notably associated with specific folate metabolism gene polymorphisms. The researchers suggest that high-dose folinic acid may help to improve neurodevelopmental outcomes by alleviating the folate metabolism abnormalities caused by single or combined mutations in these genes.

This research indicates that providing a metabolically active form of folate (folinic acid, calcium folinate, leucovorin etc) can be a direct approach to address the underlying metabolic challenges in a subset of people with autism who have specific genetic predispositions related to folate metabolism. Children with MTHFR A1298C or MTRR A66G mutations showed greater improvements in various developmental domains compared to those with the standard versions.

The intervention group demonstrated significantly greater improvements in social reciprocity compared to the control group.

No significant adverse effects were observed during the intervention period.

 

How does this fit in with US research into brain folate deficiency in autism

US researchers consider an autoimmune mechanism where the body produces antibodies that specifically target the Folate Receptor Alpha (FRα). FRα is a crucial protein responsible for transporting folate across the blood-brain barrier (and into other cells).

When these antibodies bind to FRα, they block or interfere with the normal transport of folate into the cells, particularly into the brain. This results in Cerebral Folate Deficiency (CFD), where folate levels in the cerebrospinal fluid are low, despite potentially normal folate levels in the blood.

US research indicates that FRAAs are prevalent in a significant percentage of children with ASD (up to 70% in some studies) and are associated with specific physiological and behavioral characteristics.

Treatment with folinic acid/ leucovorin has been shown to be effective in many children with autism who are positive for FRAAs, improving symptoms like communication, irritability, and stereotypical behaviors. It is believed that high doses of folinic acid can overcome the transport blockade caused by the antibodies

The US and Chinese research avenues complement each other by identifying different, but potentially converging, pathways that lead to folate dysfunction in autism, both of which demonstrate the therapeutic potential of folinic acid.

Here is the Chinese paper: 

Safety and Efficacy of High-Dose Folinic Acid in Children with Autism: The Impact of Folate Metabolism Gene Polymorphisms

Background/Objectives: Research on the safety and efficacy of high-dose folinic acid in Chinese children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is limited, and the impact of folate metabolism gene polymorphisms on its efficacy remains unclear. This trial aimed to evaluate the safety and efficacy of high-dose folinic acid intervention in Chinese children with ASD and explore the association between folate metabolism gene polymorphisms and efficacy. Methods: A 12-week randomized clinical trial was conducted, including 80 eligible children with ASD, randomly assigned to an intervention group (n = 50) or a control group (n = 30). The intervention group was administered folinic acid (2 mg/kg/day, max 50 mg/day) in two divided doses. Efficacy was measured using the Psycho-Educational Profile, Third Edition (PEP-3) at baseline and 12 weeks by two trained professionals blind to the group assignments. Methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase (MTHFR C677T, MTHFR A1298C), methionine synthase (MTR A2756G), and methionine synthase reductase (MTRR A66G) were genotyped by the gold standard methods in the intervention group. Results: 49 participants in the intervention group and 27 in the control group completed this trial. Both groups showed improvements from baseline to 12 weeks across most outcome measures. The intervention group demonstrated significantly greater improvements in social reciprocity compared to the control group. Children with MTHFR A1298C or MTRR A66G mutations demonstrated greater improvements in various developmental domains than wild type. Folinic acid may be more effective in certain genotype combinations, such as MTHFR C677T and A1298C. No significant adverse effects were observed during the intervention. Conclusions: High-dose folinic acid may be a promising intervention for children with ASD, and its efficacy is associated with folate metabolism gene polymorphisms. High-dose folinic acid intervention may promote better neurodevelopmental outcomes by alleviating folate metabolism abnormalities caused by single or combined mutations in folate metabolism genes.

 

Treating the downstream consequences of low brain folate

Today’s next papers highlight Infliximab, IVIG, Propes, and Inflamafertin as immunomodulatory therapies that target the downstream consequences of folate deficiency; they do not address or improve the underlying lack of folate.

Folate Deficiency in the Brain: This means there is an inherent problem in the body's ability to process or utilize folate, even if dietary intake is sufficient. It is often due to mutations in genes encoding enzymes of the folate cycle (like MTHFR) or transporters. This leads to issues with DNA synthesis, cell proliferation, and methylation, impacting various systems, including the immune system.

 

Infliximab

Infliximab is a TNF-alpha inhibitor. It blocks the activity of TNF-alpha, a key pro-inflammatory cytokine.

It does not put more folate into the system or fix how folate is metabolized. It is like putting out a fire (inflammation) that was started because of a broken electrical wire (folate deficiency's impact on immunity).

 

IVIG (Intravenous Immunoglobulin)

IVIG is a broad-acting immunomodulatory therapy composed of pooled antibodies from thousands of healthy donors. Its mechanisms are complex and include neutralizing autoantibodies, blocking Fc receptors, modulating cytokine production, affecting T and B cell function, and influencing complement activation.

IVIG aims to rebalance a dysregulated immune system, reduce inflammation, and sometimes provide passive immunity. It is like resetting an overactive or misdirected immune alarm system. The effect may not last.

 

Propes

Propes contains alpha- and beta-defensins and has a "pronounced immunoactivating and lymphoproliferative effect." It directly stimulates the growth and activity of immune cells like NK and NKT cells. It directly addresses the numbers and activity of NK and NKT cells that are deficient due to the folate cycle problem. It makes the existing cells (or promotes the creation of new ones) work better, despite the underlying folate issue.

 

Inflamafertin

This drug, containing alarmines and adrenomedulin of placental origin, has "pronounced anti-inflammatory and immunomodulatory effects mediated by the induction of interleukin 10 synthesis." Its role is to temper the immune activation  and ensure a more balanced, anti-inflammatory environment.

 

In summary

These therapies are all symptomatic or compensatory treatments for the consequences of genetic folate deficiency on the immune system and the body. They address the resulting immunodeficiency, inflammation, and associated clinical symptoms (like behavioral issues or opportunistic infections).

 

They do not:

  • Add more folate to the body (like folic acid or L-methylfolate supplementation would).
  • Correct the genetic defect that causes the folate cycle deficiency.
  • Improve the body's intrinsic ability to metabolize folate.


Genetic deficiency in the folate cycle disrupts fundamental cellular processes required for the normal development, proliferation, and function of NK and NKT cells, leading to their deficiency in affected children. This deficiency, in turn, contributes to the complex immune dysregulation often seen in autism.

 

Key Findings on NK Cells:

  • Initial Deficiency: A significant number of children in the study group (53 patients) had an initial deficiency of NK cells.
  • Response to Immunotherapy:
    • During the 3-month course of Propes and Inflamafertin, the average number of NK cells in the blood almost doubled.
    • NK cell counts reached the lower limit of normal in 74% (39 out of 53) of the patients with a deficiency.
    • There was a strong statistical link between the immunotherapy and NK cell normalization.
  • Sustainability: A notable finding was that the NK cell numbers returned to almost their initial level within 2 months after the immunotherapy was stopped. This suggests that the effect on NK cells might be temporary and dependent on continuous treatment.

 

Key Findings on NKT Cells:

  • Initial Deficiency: A larger proportion of children in the study group (87 patients) had an initial deficiency of NKT cells.
  • Response to Immunotherapy:
    • The average number of NKT cells in the blood increased by half during the 3-month immunotherapy course.
    • NKT cell counts were normalized in 89% (78 out of 87) of the patients with a deficiency.
    • There was an even stronger statistical link between the immunotherapy and NKT cell normalization compared to NK cells.
  • Sustainability: Importantly, the NKT cell numbers continued to grow for an additional 2 months after the discontinuation of the immunotropic drugs. This suggests a more sustained and potentially longer-lasting effect on NKT cells.

Overall Conclusions from the Study:

  • Combination immunotherapy with Propes and Inflamafertin is presented as an effective treatment strategy for the immunodeficiency (specifically NK and NKT cell deficiency) found in children with ASD linked to genetic folate deficiency.
  • Both biological drugs were able to normalize the reduced numbers of NK and NKT cells during the 3-month treatment period.
  • The study highlights that the effect on NKT cells was more frequent, stronger, and more lasting compared to the effect on NK lymphocytes.

 

The research papers:

EFFICACY OF INFLIXIMAB IN AUTISM SPECTRUM DISORDERS IN CHILDREN ASSOCIATED WITH GENETIC DEFICIENCY OF THE FOLATE CYCLE

 The notion of systemic inflammation in autism spectrum disorders in children has been established. A recent meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials published in 2019, which included a systematic review of 25 case-control studies, suggests an association between genetic deficiency of the folate cycle and autism spectrum disorders in children [18]. This evidence is consistent with an earlier meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials from 2013, which included data from 8 studies [17]. The encephalopathy that develops in children with genetic deficiency of the folate cycle and manifests as autism spectrum disorders is associated with oxidative stress. The reason for the latter can be seen in the suppression of the immune system with the development of a special form of immunodeficiency, which is based on the deficiency of natural killers, natural killer T lymphocytes and CD8 +  cytotoxic T cells [11]. Immunodeficiency mediates all three known mechanisms of brain damage in children with genetic deficiency of the folate cycle, namely the development of opportunistic infections [2, 15], autoimmune reactions against neuronal antigens [3, 6] and manifestations of systemic inflammation, which is based on the phenomenon of hypercytokinemia [13, 20]. Children with autism spectrum disorders have been shown to have overproduction of several proinflammatory cytokines, including tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha), interleukin-1beta, and interleukin-6

In SG, there was a pronounced positive dynamics in the direction of hyperactivity, hyperexcitability and stereotyped behavior, but no significant effect was noted on the stability of eye contact and the development of expressive-receptive language, while in CG some positive changes were achieved specifically in terms of expressive language and the level of eye contact, which indicates different points of action of infliximab and specialized educational programs (Table 11.1). The psychotropic effect obtained with infliximab differs from that of intravenous immunoglobulin, which has also demonstrated clinical efficacy in ASD associated with GDFC [10, 12]. The changes induced by infliximab are more pronounced and develop in a shorter time frame, but they are significantly narrower in terms of the spectrum of positive psychotropic effects compared to high-dose immunoglobulin therapy, which has a total modifying effect on the psyche of such children.

Materials and methods. This prospective controlled single-center non-randomized clinical study included 225 children diagnosed with autism spectrum disorders associated with genetic deficiency of the folate cycle. The diagnosis of autism spectrum disorders was made by psychiatrists from regional hospitals or specialized departments according to DSM–IV–TR (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of mental disorders) and ICD–10 criteria. Children were recruited into the study group (SG) in 2019–2020. These were patients from different regions of Ukraine aged 2 to 9 years, in whom elevated serum TNF-alpha concentrations were observed. As is known, the phenotype of genetic deficiency of the folate cycle includes 5 main syndromes: autism spectrum disorders, intestinal syndrome (persistent enteritis/colitis) [7], PANDAS [4, 9], epileptic syndrome [5] and signs of pyramidal tract damage.

 

Conclusions. Infliximab leads to significant improvements in hyperactivity and hyperexcitability, as well as stereotypic behavior in children with autism spectrum disorders associated with genetic deficiency of the folate cycle. Responders to immunotherapy are 76 % of patients with this pathology, which is twice as high as with standard therapy. However, there is no effect of infliximab on such manifestations of autism as the level of eye contact and language development. Psychotropic effects of infliximab immunotherapy are closely related to the normalization of previously elevated serum TNF-alpha concentrations and are probably due to the elimination of the pathological activating effect of this pro-inflammatory cytokine on CNS neurons. In parallel, there is an improvement in other clinical syndromes of genetic deficiency of the folate cycle in children with autism spectrum disorders – intestinal pathology, epileptic syndrome, and PANDAS, in the pathogenesis of which, as is known, TNF-alpha and the systemic and intracerebral inflammation induced by this cytokine are involved. However, under the influence of immunotherapy, there is no change in the dynamics of motor deficit in children with symptoms of pyramidal tract damage. Further clinical studies in this direction with a larger number of participants and randomization are necessary to obtain more convincing data.


Efficacy of combined immunotherapy with Propes and Inflamafertin in selective deficiency of NK and NKT cells in children with autism spectrum disorders associated with genetic deficiency of the folate cycle

 Objectives. The results of previous small clinical trials indicate the potential benefit of combination immunotherapy with Propes and Inflamafertin to compensate for NK and NKT cell deficiency due to genetic deficiency of the folate cycle in children with autism spectrum disorders. The purpose of the research was to study the effectiveness of combined immunotherapy with Propes and Inflamafertin in NK and NKT cell deficiency in children with autism spectrum disorders associated with genetic deficiency of the folate cycle. Material and methods. This single-center, prospective, controlled, nonrandomized clinical trial included 96 children aged 2 to 10 years with autism spectrum disorders associated with a genetic folate deficiency (study group, SG). Children of SG received Propes at a dose of 2 ml IM every other day for 3 consecutive months (45 injections), and Inflamafertin at a dose of 2 ml IM every other day for 3 months in a row, alternating with Propes (45 injections). The control group (CG) consisted of 32 children of similar age and gender distribution who suffered from autism spectrum disorders associated with genetic deficiency of the folate cycle, but who did not receive immunotherapy. Outcomes. The number of NK cells reached the lower limit of normal in 39 out of 53 patients (74% of cases), with the resulting deficiency of these lymphocytes, and the average number of NK cells in the blood in SG almost doubling during the 3-month course of immunotherapy (р ˂ 0.05; Z ˂ Z0.05). However, it returned to almost initial level in the 2 months following the discontinuation of immunotherapeutic agents (р˃0.05; Z˃Z0.05). The number of NKT cells was normalized in 78 out of 87 patients (89% of cases) with an initial deficiency of these cells, and the average number of NKT cells in the blood in the DG increased during the course of immunotherapy by half (р ˂ 0.05; Z ˂ Z0.05) and continued to grow for the next 2 months after the discontinuation of immunotropic drugs (р ˂ 0.05; Z ˂ Z0.05). There was a link between immunotherapy and normalization of NK - (χ2 = 18.016; OR = 13.929; 95%CI = 3.498-55.468) and NKT-cells (χ2 = 60.65; OR = 46.800; 95%CI = 14.415-151.937) in the blood with a strong association between these processes (criterion φ = 0.504 and 0.715 respectively; С = 0.450 and 0.581 respectively). Conclusions. Combination immunotherapy with Propes and Inflamafertin is an effective strategy for the treatment of immunodeficiency caused by genetic deficiency of the folate cycle in children with autism spectrum disorders.

 

The results obtained in this controlled non-randomized clinical trial indicate that combination immunotherapy with Propes and Inflamafertin is an effective treatment strategy for immunodeficiency caused by genetic folate deficiency in children with autism spectrum disorders. These biological immunotropic drugs are able to normalize the previously reduced number of NK and NKT cells in the blood in this category of patients during a 3-month course of immunotherapy, with a more frequent, stronger and more lasting effect on NKT cells compared to NK lymphocytes.

  

Conclusion

Folinic acid supplementation is an effective therapy for many people with autism. There are many anomalies that appear, for example those people who test positive for the folate transporter antibodies but a lumbar punction then finds normal levels of folate in the brain.  Many people report agitation or aggression when children take calcium folinate at high doses, but this does not seem to get noted in clinical trials. Nonetheless it looks like everyone with autism should at least make a trial.

Note that you should always add a vitamin B12 supplement when giving high dose calcium folinate. This is because more B12 will be required by the biological processes ongoing in the brain and deficiency will cause side effects.

Many people who respond well to calcium folinate end up needing some kind of immunotherapy on top. IVIG is extremely expensive and quite a bother if you need to take it forever. Some of the therapies from the two papers today also involve a very large number of injections, so are not really practical.  The less intrusive immunotherapies look more practical but are not cheap.

I think that rTMS and tDCS will be attractive to those seeking non-pharmaceutical options that have a scientific basis. The same applies to low level laser therapy, also known as photobiomodulation therapy.



Wednesday, 8 May 2024

Immunotherapy from the desert

 



Today’s post revisits the idea of using immunotherapies to treat autism.

Some readers of this blog are already doing this and a significant percentage of those are using IVIG.

Intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) is a pooled antibody, and a biological agent used to manage various immunodeficiency states and a plethora of other conditions, including autoimmune, infectious, and inflammatory states.

IVIG is not a precision therapy, it is more a case of when all else fails try IVIG.

In the United States it seems that many insurance companies will cover the cost of long-term IVIG therapy. In other countries the cost greatly limits the use of this therapy.

An interesting observation is that IVIG products can vary significantly in their potency, depending on where they are made. Several readers of this blog have noted this.

I attended the Autism Challenges and Solutions conference recently in Abu Dhabi. I did have a chat with Laila Alayadhi, a researcher and clinician from Saudi Arabia who has been publishing papers about autoimmunity in ASD for decades. She also published a series of studies that examined the potential of camel milk as a therapy. She examined both changes in biological markers of oxidative stress and inflammation as well as measures of autism severity.

Her most recent study is here:-

 

Comparative Study on the Ameliorating Effects of Camel Milkas a Dairy Product on Inflammatory Response in Autism Spectrum Disorders

The link between nutrition and autism spectrum disorder (ASD), as a neurodevelopmental disorder exhibiting impaired social interaction, repetitive behavior, and poor communication skills, has provided a hot point of research that might help use nutritional intervention strategies for managing ASD symptoms. This study examined the possible therapeutic potency of raw and boiled camel milk in reducing neuroinflammation in relation to behavioral characteristics. A blinded study was conducted on 64 children with autism (aged 2–12 years). Group I (n = 23) consisted of children who received raw camel milk; Group II (n = 27) comprised children who received boiled camel milk; and Group III (n = 14) comprised children who received cow milk as a placebo. Changes in plasma tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α) as pro-inflammatory cytokine in relation to behavioral characteristics evaluated using the Childhood Autism Rating Scale (CARS), Social Responsiveness Scale (SRS), and gastrointestinal (GI) symptoms before and after 2 weeks of raw and boiled camel milk therapy. Significantly lower plasma levels of TNF-α were recorded after 2 weeks of camel milk consumption, accompanied by insignificant changes in CARS and significant improvements in SRS and GI symptoms. Alternatively, Group III demonstrated an insignificant TNF-α increase without changes in CARS, SRS, and GI symptoms. This study demonstrated the positive effects of both raw and boiled camel milk in reducing neuroinflammation in patients with ASD. The improvements in the SRS scores and GI symptoms are encouraging. Further trials exploring the potential benefits of camel milk consumption in patients with ASD are highly recommended.

 

 


Apparently camel milk tastes just fine, although Dr Alayadhi told us she had never tried it prior to her research. She has shown than both pasteurized and raw milk are equally effective. I did ask her about other types of milk like goat’s milk and she said they had tried other milks and that only camel milk has shown the immunomodulatory effect.  When asked how much you need to drink, the answer was three glasses a day.


The Dentist

I did chat to another Saudi professor, a pediatric dentist, who gave a presentation about treating children with ASD.  Having had some pretty bad experiences with getting dental treatment and then overcoming them, I did feel I had something in common with Ebtissam Murshid.  I did catch up with her later and shared details of the D-Termined program created by US dentist David Tesini. It is a video training program for dentists how to treat kids with autism. I have written about it previously in this blog. Tesini very much tries to make the visit to the dentist fun, with lots of distractions in his treatment room. Murshid purposefully has blank white walls, believing that autistic kids get upset by bright colors and patterns. Hopefully she watches Tesini’s videos.

Murshid has published a book to help parents prepare their children for their trip to the dentist and, like Tesini, had made a small trial to show that her method is effective.

Some dentists are naturally good at treating the most difficult kids, but most are not.  It is impossible to predict.

A really good dentist needs neither restraint, like a papoose board, or sedation. If general anesthetic is needed, then something is not being done right. Kids with severe autism can be treated with local anesthetic just like other kids, they just need to go through a familiarization training like Tesini/Murshid use.

 

Back to immunotherapy

I did have many conversations with Carmello Rizzo who is an Italian doctor interested in both diet and autoimmunity to treat autism. He is a feature at many autism conferences and is a great speaker. He was telling me about Enzyme Potentiated Desensitization (EPD), an overlooked way to treat allergy care.

EPD was invented in the 1960s by a British immunologist Dr Len McEwen, at St. Mary’s Hospital, Paddington. EPD is approved in the United Kingdom for the treatment of hay fever, food allergy and intolerance and environmental allergies.

It is an unlicensed product (i.e. not a drug), it is available only on a “named patient” basis.

EPD is not the same as allergy shots.

Allergy shots, also known as allergy immunotherapy, are injections used to treat allergies over a long period of time. They work by gradually desensitizing your body to the allergens that trigger your allergy symptoms.

Allergy shots typically involve two phases, buildup and maintenance.

It is an escalating dose immunotherapy, when you gradually increase the exposure level of the identified allergen.

The buildup phase lasts for 3 to 6 months. You receive shots 1 to 3 times a week. The doctor will gradually increase the amount of allergen in each shot to help your body build tolerance.

In the maintenance phase you need shots less frequently, usually about once a month. This phase can continue for 3 to 5 years or even longer depending on your progress.

I was never interested in allergy shots because there are so many injections needed.

I found EPD of interest because you take just two shots a year and the effect may potentially control the allergy after 2 or 3 years.

EPD is not expensive and I suppose that is why nobody wanted to invested the tens of millions of dollars to get approval by the FDA. It remains approved for use in the UK, which is ultra conservative when it comes to medicines.

Carmello Rizzo is offering EPD in Italy and elsewhere.

 

Gene therapy for autism?

I did go to a presentation with an interesting title:

Developing effective therapeutics for Autism Spectrum Disorder

It was not really what I was expecting. It was a young MIT researcher talking about the potential to develop gene therapies to replace mutated genes with a new ones. They are doing this in a model of autism caused by a mutated copy of the SHANK3 gene.

I called him Dr Viral Vector and did have a chat with him. The most interesting thing about his technology is that not only can he target a specific type of cell, but he can target a specific part of the brain, or indeed any part of the body.

At the moment they inject a virus carrying the new gene directly into the brain. That is not going to go down so well with human subjects. The next stage is to try injecting the virus into a vein.

I did talk about the two gene therapies for Rett syndrome now in human trials in my presentation. The ultimate problem is the likely $3 million cost. 

You can use gene therapy as an immunotherapy. 

 

Artemis

At the conference I was asked about a gene called DCLRE1C, it encodes the DCLRE1C protein, also known as Artemis.

 


Artémis (Diane), the huntress. Roman copy of a Greek statue, 2nd century. Galleria dei Candelabri

Source: By Jean-Pol GRANDMONT - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=18604889

 

The Artemis protein is named after the Greek goddess Artemis, who was associated with the hunt, wilderness, wild animals, childbirth, and protection. This connection likely comes from the crucial role Artemis plays in DNA repair, which is essential for maintaining the integrity of the genetic material, like a protector safeguarding the building blocks of life.

Complete loss of function in DCLRE1C typically causes severe combined immunodeficiency. This is called Artemis-deficient severe combined immunodeficiency (ART-SCID).

Fortunately many possible mutations only partially impair the function of the DCLRE1C gene. They can lead to a spectrum of conditions, including atypical SCID, Omenn syndrome, Hyper IgM syndrome, and even just antibody deficiency. These conditions may have milder symptoms compared to classic SCID.

IVIG is a beneficial therapy for immunodeficiency; but is very expensive and not curative.

Humans all have 2 copies of the DCLRE1C and it is theoretically possible to increase expression of the good copy. But that is another story.

 

A gene therapy already exists for full-on ART-SCID.

Lentiviral Gene Therapy for Artemis-Deficient SCID


Why not use it in less severe cases?

The problem is going to be money, both for a lifetime on IVIG or a “hopefully” one-off gene therapy.

One lady in the audience of my talk had herself taken an expensive gene therapy and was not impressed.

  

Other interesting presentations

Pierre Drapeau from McGill University spoke about trying to repurpose a cheap old drug, called Pimozide, to treat motor neuron disease /ALS.  This was interesting because the process is similar to repurposing a drug for autism.

Pimozide is an old antipsychotic drug and it seems to work in ALS through its effect on a type of calcium channel called the T-type. Yes, just as in much autism, calcium channels are misbehaving.

The drawback of Pimozide is that it also blocks dopamine receptors in the brain, which is good if you have Tourette’s, but if you have ALS you then get symptoms of Parkinson’s as a side effect.

The solution is to tinker with the molecule and find a version (an analog) that will do the business with the T channels without causing tremors.  It looks like, via trial and error, this is nearly solved.

The whole process has already been going on for many years, it will take many more.

Life expectancy with ALS is only 2-5 years and they struggle to find test subjects in Canada. It looks like they may do trials in China.

 

An eye opener

A presentation with a very hard to digest title was also an eye opener. You can take a picture of the cornea in your eye and accurately diagnose all kinds of disorders. They started with peripheral neuropathy in diabetics and most recently moved on to people with autism. Using artificial intelligence (AI) they can now make a diagnosis just based on the nerve loss they observe in the cornea. They also can potentially measure the effect of therapies by the regeneration of those nerve fibers.  This is really clever. When Rayaz Malik started down this path, all the neurologists thought he was mad. Many years later and corneal confocal microscopy is widely used around the world, but not yet for autism diagnosis.

Antonio Persico is a well known autism clinician, he appeared virtually. He was mainly talking about antipsychotics. I had expected rather more. 

 

Conclusion

Immunotherapy addresses one of the four problem areas in autism. There cannot be a one size fits all approach, but you can certainly try camel milk. Addressing food allergy and intolerance is relatively straightforward and you do not need any fancy expensive genetic testing, as Carmello Rizzo pointed out.

There are people for whom genetic testing and/or a spinal tap opens the door to a precise diagnosis and hopefully treatment. That proved to be an unexpected controversial issue in my presentation.

My talk at the conference was all about using personalized medicine to treat autism. The organizer of the event reads this blog and knows that I am rather an outsider, since I am more in treating autism than just researching it.

I had a two and a half hour time slot and I made sure to use it all. 

Advances in Personalized Medicine to Treat Autism

I should mention that I also had some long conversations with Paul Shattock, who pretty much founded the gluten and casein free diet years ago, back at the University of Sunderland. If you are interested in the history of autism, he is a great person to talk to. He is nearly 80 years old, but still has a sharp sense of humour. He has stumbled into more than his fair share of controversies. In Abu Dhabi his opinions and observations were widely shared by other speakers. One younger American speaker thought his views were dangerous; had he taken the time to talk to Paul, he would have found them pretty well thought out. I did ask Paul what has happened to his old friend Andew Wakefield – apparently making another film.

 



 

Wednesday, 8 July 2020

Immune modulatory treatments for autism spectrum disorder


Need a wizard, or your local doctor?

I was intrigued to come across a recent paper on immune modulatory treatments for autism by a couple of doctors from Massachusetts General Hospital for Children.  The lead author has interests in:

·      Autism spectrum disorders
·      Psychopharmacology
·      Developmental Disabilities
·      Williams syndrome
·      Angelman syndrome
·      Down syndrome

Apparently, he is an internationally-recognized expert in the neurobiology and neuropsychopharmacology of childhood-onset neuropsychiatric disorders including autistic disorder.  Sounds promising, hopefully we will learn something new.

The paper is actually a review of existing drugs, with immunomodulatory properties, that have already been suggested to be repurposed for autism. The abstract was not very insightful, so I have highlighted the final conclusions and listed the drugs, by category, that they thought should be investigated further.

All the drugs have already been covered in this blog and have already been researched in autism.

One important point raised in the conclusion relates to when the drugs are used.  Autism is a progressive condition early in life and there are so-called “critical periods” when the developing brain is highly vulnerable.

For example, Pentoxifylline has been found to be most effective in very young children.  This does not mean do not give it to a teenager with autism, it just means the sooner you treat autism the better the result will be.  This is entirely logical.

Some very clever drugs clearly do not work if given too late, for example Rapamycin analogs used in people with TSC-type autism.

Multiple Critical Periods for Rapamycin Treatment to Correct Structural Defects in Tsc-1-Suppressed Brain

Importantly, each of these developmental abnormalities that are caused by enhanced mTOR pathway has a specific window of opportunity to respond to rapamycin. Namely, dyslamination must be corrected during neurogenesis, and postnatal rapamycin treatment will not correct the cortical malformation. Similarly, exuberant branching of basal dendrites is rectifiable only during the first 2 weeks postnatally while an increase in spine density responds to rapamycin treatment thereafter.  

Back to today’s paper.


The identification of immune dysregulation in at least a subtype ASD has led to the hypothesis that immune modulatory treatments may be effective in treating the core and associated symptoms of ASD. In this article, we discussed how currently FDA-approved medications for ASD have immune modulatory properties.

“Risperidone also inhibited the expression of inflammatory signaling proteins, myelin basic protein isoform 3 (MBP1) and mitogen-activated kinase 1 (MAPK1), in a rat model of MIA. Similarly, aripiprazole has been demonstrated to inhibit expression of IL-6 and TNF-α in cultured primary human peripheral blood mononuclear cells from healthy adult donors.”

We then described emerging treatments for ASD which have been repurposed from nonpsychiatric fields of medicine including metabolic disease, infectious disease, gastroenterology, neurology, and regenerative medicine, all with immune modulatory potential. Although immune modulatory treatments are not currently the standard of care for ASD, remain experimental, and require further research to demonstrate clear safety, tolerability, and efficacy, the early positive results described above warrant further research in the context of IRB-approved clinical trials. Future research is needed to determine whether immune modulatory treatments will affect underlying pathophysiological processes affecting both the behavioral symptoms and the common immune-mediated medical co-morbidities of ASD. Identification of neuroimaging or inflammatory biomarkers that respond to immune modulatory treatment and correlate with treatment response would further support the hypothesis of an immune-mediated subtype of ASD and aid in measuring response to immune modulatory treatments. In addition, it will be important to determine if particular immune modulating treatments are best tolerated and most effective when administered at specific developmental time points across the lifespan of individuals with ASD.


Here are the drugs they listed:-

1.     Metabolic disease

Spironolactone
Pioglitazone
Pentoxifylline

Spironolactone is a cheap potassium sparing diuretic. It has secondary effects that include reducing the level of male hormones and some inflammatory cytokines.

Pioglitazone is drug for type 2 diabetes that improves insulin sensitivity.  It reduces certain inflammatory cytokines making it both an autism therapy and indeed a suggested Covid-19 therapy.

Pentoxifylline is a non-selective phosphodiesterase (PDEinhibitor, used to treat muscle pain.  PDE inhibitors are very interesting drugs with a great therapeutic potential for the treatment of immune-mediated and inflammatory diseases.  Roflumilast and Ibudilast are PDE4 inhibitors that also may improve some autism.  The limiting side effect can be nausea/vomiting, which can happen with non-selective PDE4 inhibitors.

I did try Spironolactone once; it did not seem to have any effect.  It is a good match for bumetanide because it increases potassium levels.

I do think that Pioglitazone has a helpful effect and there will be another post on that.

PDE inhibitors are used by readers of this blog. Maja is a fan of Pentoxifylline, without any side effects. Roflumilast at a low dose is supposed to raise IQ, but still makes some people want to vomit. The Japanese drug Ibudilast works for some, but nausea is listed as a possible side effect.


2.     Infectious disease

Minocycline
Vancomycin
Suramin

Minocycline is an antibiotic that crosses in to the brain.  It is known to stabilize activated microglia, the brain’s immune cells.  It is also known that tetracycline antibiotics are immunomodulatory.

Vancomycin is an antibiotic used to treat bacterial infections, if taken orally it does not go beyond the gut.  It will reduce the level of certain harmful bacteria including Clostridium difficile.

Suramin is an anti-parasite drug that Dr Naviaux is repurposing for autism, based on his theory of cell danger response.
  

3.     Neurology

Valproic acid

Valproic acid is an anti-epileptic drug.  It also has immunomodulatory and HDAC effects, these effects can both cause autism when taken by a pregnant mother and also improve autism in some people.

Valproic acid can have side effects. Low dose valproic acid seems to work for some people. 


4.     Gastroenterology

Fecal microbiota transplant (FMT)

FMT is currently used to treat recurrent Clostridium difficile infection and may also be of benefit for other GI conditions including IBD, obesity, metabolic syndrome, and functional GI disorders.

Altered gut bacteria (dysbiosis) is a feature of some autism which then impairs brain function.  Reversing the dysbiosis with FMT improves brain function.  


5.     Oncology

Lenalidomide
Romidepsin
  
Lenalidomide is an expensive anti-cancer drug that also has immunomodulatory effects.

Romidepsin is a potent HDAC inhibitor, making it a useful cancer therapy.  HDAC inhibitors are potential autism drugs, but only if given early enough not to miss the critical periods of brain development. 


6.     Pulmonology

N-acetylcysteine

Many people with autism respond well to NAC. You do need a lot of it, because it has a short half-life.


7.     Nutritional medicine and dietary supplements

Omega-3 fatty acids
Vitamin D
Flavonoids

Nutritional supplements can get very expensive.  In hot climates, like Egypt, some dark skinned people cover up and then lack vitamin D.  A lack of vitamin D will make autism worse.

Some people with mild brain disorders do seem to benefit from some omega-3 therapies.

Flavonoids are very good for general health, but seem to lack potency for treating brain disorders.  Quercetin and luteolin do have some benefits. 


8.     Rheumatology

Celecoxib
Corticosteroids
Intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG)


Celecoxib is a common NSAID that is particularly well tolerated (it affects COX-2 and only marginally COX-1, hence its reduced GI side effects).

NSAIDS are used by many people with autism.

Steroids do improve some people’s autism, but are unsuitable for long term use.  A short course of steroids reduces Covid-19 deaths – a very cost effective therapy.

IVIG is extremely expensive, but it does provide a benefit in some cases. IVIG is used quite often to treat autism in the US, but rarely elsewhere other than for PANS/PANDAS that might occur with autism.


9.     Regenerative medicine

Stem cell therapy

I was surprised they gave stem cell therapy a mention. I think it is still early days for stem cell therapy.


Conclusion

I have observed the ongoing Covid-19 situation with interest and in particular what use has been made of the scientific literature.

There are all sorts of interesting snippets of data. You do not want to be deficient in Zinc or vitamin D, having high cholesterol will make it easier for the virus to enter your cells.  Potassium levels may plummet and blood becomes sticky, so may form dangerous clots. A long list of drugs may be at least partially effective, meaning they speed up recovery and reduce death rates. Polytherapy, meaning taking multiple drugs, is likely to be the best choice for Covid-19.

Potential side effects of some drugs have been grossly exaggerated, as with drugs repurposed for autism.  Even in published research, people cheat and falsify the data. In the case of hydroxychloroquine, the falsified papers were quickly retracted.

The media twist the facts, to suit their narrative, as with autism.  This happens even with Covid-19. Anti-Trump media (CNN, BBC etc) is automatically anti-hydroxychloroquine, and ignores all the published research and the results achieved in countries that widely use it (small countries like China and India). 

Shutting down entire economies when only 5-10% of the population have been infected and hopefully got some immunity, does not look so smart if you are then going to reopen and let young people loose.  They will inevitably catch the virus and then infect everyone else. Permanent lockdown restrictions, if followed by everyone, until a vaccine which everyone actually agreed to take, makes sense and living with the virus makes sense, but anything in between is not going to work. After 3 months without any broad lockdown, and allowing young people to socialize, most people would have had the virus and then those people choosing to shield could safely reemerge. The death rate with the current optimal, inexpensive treatment, as used in India or South Africa is very low, in people who are not frail to start with. Time to make a choice.  Poor people in poor countries cannot afford to keep going into lockdown, they need to eat.

What hope is there for treating a highly heterogeneous condition like autism, if it is not approached entirely rationally and without preconceptions and preconditions?  In a pandemic we see that science does not drive policy and translating science into therapy is highly variable.  The science is there for those who choose to read it.

I frequently see comments from parents who have seen some of the research showing that autism has an inflammatory/auto-immune component.  They ask why this has not been followed up on in the research.  It has been followed up on.  It just has not been acted upon.

Why has it not been acted on?

This missing stage is called “translation”.  Why don’t doctors translate scientific findings into therapy for their patients?

What is common sense to some, is “experimental” to others. “Experimental” is frowned upon in modern medicine, but innovation requires experimentation.

Many people’s severe autism is unique and experimental polytherapy/polypharmacy is their only hope.

The cookie cutter approach is not going to work for autism. 

Thankfully, for many common diseases the cookie cutter approach works just fine.

Do the authors of today’s paper, Dr McDougle and Dr Thom, actually prescribe to their young patients many of the drugs that they have written about?  I doubt it and therein lies the problem.  

Time for that wizard, perhaps? 

A few years ago I did add the following tag line, under the big Epiphany at the top of the page. 

An Alternative Reality for Classic Autism - Based on Today's Science

You can choose a different Autism reality, if you do not like your current one.  I am glad I did. I didn't even need a wizard.  

There are many immuno-modulatory therapies for autism that the Massachusetts doctor duo did not mention, but it is good that they made a start.