A 2-year, controlled, double-blind trial of Dpenicillamine and hydroxychloroquine either alone or in combination was conducted on patients with progressive rheumatoid arthritis. The group given D-penicillamine alone improved most, but a linear fall-off in efficacy occurred. Surprisingly, the group receiving combination drug therapy did not fare as well as the group receiving D-penicillamine therapy. A subset of patients receiving hydroxychloroquine therapy had prolonged benefit. Toxicity, though not uncommon, was generally not severe.Drug therapy trials in rheumatology have usually consisted of evaluation of 1 agent at a time. We wondered if 2 drugs, hydroxychloroquine and D-penicillamine, given simultaneously might prove more efficacious than either alone, with no increase in toxicity. A study was designed to test this hypothesis and to assess the effectiveness of each drug during a 2-year followup period. -~_~_From the Mayo Clinic and Mayo Foundation, Rochester. Minnesota (Rheumatology Trcatment Unit. Paper # 1).
A gene that is homologous to the Ehrlichia chaffeensis groEL operon was recovered and characterized by broad-range PCR amplification of whole blood from patients with human granulocytic ehrlichiosis (HGE) and from infected HL60 cell cultures. Sequence analysis of an 820-bp DNA fragment recovered directly from human blood showed 76.5 and 76.3% identity with cognate sequences from E. chaffeensis and Cowdria ruminantium, respectively. Analysis of a 1.6-kb DNA fragment derived from an HGE agent-infected HL60 cell culture indicated a near-complete open reading frame that contained 75.6 and 75.2% sequence identity with the E. chaffeensis and C. ruminantium groEL sequences, respectively. Phylogenetic analysis of this fragment showed that the HGE agent-derived sequence was related to, but distinct from, the sequences of E. chaffeensis and C. ruminantium. Polyvalent antibody responses to a recombinant fusion protein based on the HGE agent groEL homolog were detected in three of three BALB/c mice that were infected by syringe inoculation with a Wisconsin strain of the HGE agent (WI-1) and nine of nine mice infected by Ixodes scapularis (Ixodes dammini) tick inoculation of an isolate from Nantucket Island, Mass. (NCH-1). No response was detected in mice infected with Borrelia burgdorferi or in control BALB/c mice. Further characterization of the sensitivity and specificity of immune responses to this protein will be facilitated by the use of recombinant fusion proteins or peptides based on the HGE agent-specific groEL homolog.
This paper reports the clinical and biochemical results in six patients with Hurler disease (Mucopolysaccharidosis IH; McKusick 25280), two patients with Hunter disease (Mucopolysaccharidosis II; McKusick 25285) and one patient with Sanfilippo B disease (Mucopolysaccharidosis IIIB; McKusick 25292) who were treated by fibroblast transplantation. Except for one patient who died for a coincidental reason, the patients have been studied for between 2.5 and 4.5 years. The clinical course of the disease was not materially altered. There was no evidence that the patients had developed immune responses against the transplanted fibroblasts. Transplantation did not produce measurable levels of either alpha-L-iduronidase (EC 3.2.1.76) in the leukocytes from patients with Hurler disease or of N-acetyl-alpha-D-glucosaminidase (EC 3.2.1.50) in the plasma of the patients with Sanfilippo B disease. Under the conditions used for the assay, leukocytes from the patients with Hunter disease had detectable levels of residual alpha-L-idurono-2-sulphate sulphatase activity which were increased after the transplants, although these changes were of inconstant size and their time course was not consistently related to the transplantations. Cytogenetic studies in cases where the donor was of the opposite sex detected only cells of the recipient's sex among the fibroblasts grown from biopsies of the transplantation sites. The technique used would have detected a donor to recipient cell ratio of 1:100. We found no consistent long-term trends in the excretion patterns of glycosaminoglycans and oligosaccharides from either a quantitative or qualitative point of view which could be specifically related to the transplantation. The combined administration of immunosuppressive doses of prednisolone and azathioprine was associated with an increased excretion of the lower molecular weight glycosaminoglycans. We conclude that fibroblast transplantation is not therapeutically useful in the diseases studied.
One hundred nineteen adults with active definite or classical rheumatoid arthritis were studied in a multicenter double-blind crossover study of naproxen (500 mg/day) and aspirin (3.6 Gm/day). Each drug was given in sequence for a six-week study period. Patients already receiving corticosteriod and/or gold therapy were maintained at constant dose throughout the study, but analgesics and other nonsteroidal antiinflammatory agents were discontinued at baseline. Objective and subjective evaluations by both investigator and patient were carried out at two-week intervals. No significant difference in global evaluation of efficacy or individual measures of efficacy was observed between aspirin and naproxen therapy, although physicians' global evaluation tended to favor naproxen. Sedimentation rate was lower on aspirin (naproxen 43.1 mm/hr; aspirin 38.7 mm/hr; P=0.02). Naproxen, 250 mg twice daily, was significantly better tolerated than aspirin, 900 mg four times daily. Mild, moderate, and severe side effects were less frequent with naproxen. The incidence of heartburn was significantly lower on naproxen, and significantly fewer patients terminated their six-week study period on naproxen than on aspirin. There were no significant deviations from baseline values in hematocrit, white cell or differential counts, or in tests of renal and hepatic function during the course of the study.
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