Thursday, August 31, 2017

My dream about cure

In the last days of August I want to tell you about my dream. But this is not just a dream, it is the dream of my life.

From birth I have a serious rare disease. Spinal Muscular Atrophy, since early childhood I could not walk and move but it did not stop me from my dream. I fantasized that one day in world will development magic medicine would be invented and I will be cured. A lot of time has passed since then and a miracle happened - in the beginning of 2000 was created unique drug - Gene Therapy for SMA in clinic in Colambus, Ohio, USA. In 2014 I learned that was started first phase of clinical trial of this drug for children with type 1 SMA, and now very soon will begin 2 phase of this drug for children with SMA type 2.

I do not know what awaits me in the future, but I know what I want and what I awaite. I want TO BE CURE. And this is my dream.

Monday, August 21, 2017

AAN forms Therapy pricing panel to help neurologists treat SMA and others diseases

As potentially lifesaving, but costly, therapies become available for rare genetic diseases — such as Spinraza (nusinersen) for spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) — neurologists are finding themselves in the increasingly uncomfortable position of deciding which patients are most likely to benefit, and how they can help families pay for such treatments.

In response, the Minneapolis-based American Academy of Neurology (AAN) has formed a Neurology Drug Pricing Task Force to make recommendations and provide guidance to AAN members feeling overwhelmed at these tasks.

Its goal, said Dr. Nicholas E. Johnson, a pediatric neurologist and assistant professor at the University of Utah who heads the effort, is to try to define a workable ground between “what the [treatment’s] label says” about who might receive it, and “what the insurance company says” about whom it will cover.

“It’s nearly a full-time effort for a single staff person to work through the insurance approvals,” Johnson told SMA News Today in a phone interview from Salt Lake City, where he also has a practice. “This is a national problem from the physician’s side, because these drugs provide some risk in that they have to be administered through a spinal tap, and because these drugs carry such a high cost.”
Nicholas Johnson
Nicholas Johnson, MD. (Courtesy University of Utah)

The AAN’s 18-member task force includes 16 neurologists with expertise in practice guidelines, medical economics and ethics, along with two advanced practice providers. It expects to offer guidelines in early 2018.

Spinraza received approval from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in December 2016 as the first disease-modifying treatment for all forms of SMA. Manufactured by Biogen, it has shown highly promising results in clinical trials in young children, but carries a high price tag. Treatment costs an average of $750,000 for the first year and $375,000 for every year after that.

“We’ve been trying to get this medicine for a few adults with SMA and have been denied coverage,” Johnson said. “Thankfully, Biogen’s Patient Assistance Program has stepped in to help these patients out. In the long run, the AAN is there to provide advocacy for both neurologists and the patients they care for, and to make sure patients are provided medications that have disease-modifying, life-altering effects in a sustainable fashion.”

Normally, doctors have some leeway in using new medications in various settings and on a variety of patients, Johnson said. But in Spinraza’s case, “even though it was approved for all ages and all types of SMA, there’s very limited data in adults who have SMA, so this is a real challenge for providers,” he added.

The task force hasn’t yet offered any recommendations, and those made will require AAN leadership approval before being publicized. Besides Spinraza, therapies it will look at include Brineura (cerliponase alfa) for Batten disease, estimated to cost $702,000 a year, and Exondys 51 (eteplirsen) for Duchenne muscular dystrophy, which costs an estimated $300,000 annually.

“Neurologists care for a number of patients with rare diseases, and many of them have a lot of the same challenges as SMA,” Johnson said. “Our goal is to evaluate the environment as it stands right now to essentially provide some guidance for neurologists, and who to prescribe medications for. We don’t really have a good sense of how nusinersen works in the adult population. Normally, a neurologist would start by prescribing the medication and see how it works.”

Johnson compared the current situation to 2006, when the FDA approved an enzyme replacement therapy to treat Pompe disease, an extremely rare hereditary metabolic disorder that strikes roughly one in 40,000 U.S. newborns a year.

“Clinical trials were conducted for the most severe form of the condition, and the drug was approved for all ages. Providers had the ability to prescribe for adults, and they saw over time that it had less benefit,” he said. “But that type of post-approval process is now limited. So what the task force seeks to do is provide guidance and recommendations for those providers who are stuck between what the label says and what the insurance company says.”

Johnson said his Salt Lake City clinic — which covers Utah as well as Idaho, Nevada, Wyoming, and western Colorado — has 130 SMA patients, half of whom are adults.

“Even though it’s a rare disease, there are quite a few patients out there with SMA,” he said. “Utah’s state Medicaid budget is around $100 million a year. If you consider the costs of this drug for our 130 SMA patients, it would easily dwarf the rest of the budget. So we regard this as a very urgent issue.”

Text from: https://smanewstoday.com/2017/08/17/sma-therapies-aan-forms-drug-pricing-task-force-to-help-neurologists-sort-out-thorny-insurance-issues/

Thursday, August 17, 2017

Friday, August 11, 2017

My SMA story for August

This is my SMA story for August

My name is Monika Lemeshonok, I was born on January 27. 1986 in Belarus, city Mogilev. I was born completely healthy child and like all the children started walking at the age of 1 year, I could stand near the crib and walk when I was hold the hand, I was a very active child. But a few months, my mother began to notice how my legs began to weaken when I rested in a chair. My family showed me to a neurologist in the Minsk hospital. At the age of 1.5 years I was diagnosed with SMA type 2 (Spinal Muscular Atrophy), which was later confirmed by genetic DNA analysis. It is a terrible disease affects nerve cells in the upper part of the spinal cord that results in atrophy of the leg muscles and back and then to the loss of movement completely, the person ceases to walk and move.
But despite my disease and physical difficulties from him since childhood, my mother told me that you need to believe in miracles, live and enjoy life. And I've always believed that in one day will happen miracle and I will cure and be able to walk.
I have always admired the world and from an early age loved to draw. At first I was drawing pencils and pens cartoons heroes and then I liked to draw and paint, I painted all around. I started with the teachers of painting in art school.

From a childhood, I gave my personal exhibitions of paintings in many cities in my country and abroad, and help me in this, my mother. Many professionals and art lovers appreciate the artwork on my art exhibition; my works are in private collections in Europe, Asia and America. On one of my exhibitions have helped to me contact with famous professor and neurologist from Moscow Leonora Grinio, who was engaged in embryonic transplant of fetal tissue for people with neuromuscular diseases. The first time I got to her for treatment in 1999 at age 13, where I was made embryonic transplantation of fetal tissue using an injection under the skin. Treatment by Professor L.Grinio was a real miracle for me - I realized that I have a great chance on the way to a dream to be healthy.

I was treated by L.Grinio embryonic fetal cells from 1999 until 2003. In 2004, my professor Leonora Grinio introduced me to academician of the Russian Federation Gennady Suhih- Director of Institute Biological Medicine. And from 2004 to 2011 at the Moscow Institute of Biological Medicine I conducted transplantation of embryonic stem cells into muscle. After this treatment I got stronger muscles of the thighs, my weight began to increase, I do not get sick colds and viral diseases now never, I have always strong energy.

Thanks to this treatment in 2009 I graduated from the State University in my city, specialty Fine Arts, received Excellent diploma.
Another significant event in my life was to get acquainted with the great sculptor and artist Zurab Tsereteli - the first time in June 2003. Zurab personally invited me to their workshops on Tverskaya, the second time in 2008, I was invited to a master class in painting at the Zurab Tsereteli in Moscow on Prechistenka Street in his personal gallery.

I continue to enjoy life and now I have always a lot of inspiration and every day I paint artworks with new strength and believe in a good future.

In 2011 year I finished treatment of stem cells in Moscow, because my body has become stronger and my professor L.Grinio finished medical activities due to illness. At the time she told me about gene therapy - treatment which in the future will treat people with SMA and maybe even cure them completely. Then I did not know which country to seek this treatment, I had no contacts of doctors and clinics. But in 2014 year I saw an article on the internet about what to Nationwide Children's Hospital in Columbus, Ohio began the first phase of clinical trials of gene therapy for children with SMA type 1, which has so far been successful. I wrote message on the further conduct of gene therapy (Avexis) to Jill Jarecki - research director at Families of Spinal Muscular Atrophy (FSMA) and she said that within in three years is planning to conduct clinical trials of gene therapy for people with type 2 SMA.
In first half 2017 I wrote to neurologist John Kissel in Wexner Medical Center (Columbus, Ohio) about future planning participating in clinical trial of Gene Therapy (Avexis) and about me. He is promised that he would put my name and my contacts in the database to participate in these clinical trials in the future. It is was very happy news for me. I look forward and I hope that in the near future I will be able to be included on the clinical trials of gene therapy, because I believe in a miracle that the dream of my life has finally come true.

From October 2016 I got of medical examination and treatment every years in Italy clinic Nigrisoli (Bologna) at the Doctor M.Villanova.

Saturday, August 5, 2017

Wednesday, August 2, 2017

Month awareness of SMA

Dear, friends!
Today began August - month awareness of rare disease: Spinal Muscular Atrophy. I don't forget about it every year in my life...

Do not forget about this world problem!