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Don’t tarnish the golden age of MS

Mul­ti­ple scle­ro­sis or MS, with its flar­ing attacks across the cen­tral ner­vous sys­tem, has always been a dif­fi­cult dis­ease to pin down. For a gen­er­a­tion, the accept­ed treat­ments were steroids, painkillers and a “grin and bear it” sto­icism.

But a gold­en age of ther­a­py, forged by strik­ing sci­en­tif­ic advances, is rev­o­lu­tion­is­ing the way the con­di­tion can be treat­ed. Clin­i­cians now have a war chest to attack MS, although con­cerns about patchy access to drugs and sup­port­ing care are tar­nish­ing the shin­ing future.

MS is both an inflam­ma­to­ry and degen­er­a­tive neu­ro­log­i­cal con­di­tion punc­tu­at­ed by relaps­es occur­ring typ­i­cal­ly once a year, but the site and nature of the pain and dis­abil­i­ty vary.

Pro­fes­sor Sid­dharthan Chan­dran, a neu­rol­o­gist research­ing new MS treat­ments, sums up the chal­lenge. “Each nerve cell has its own post­code and an attack can hit 200 of them. It is very dif­fi­cult to deliv­er an answer to so many dif­fer­ent post­codes,” he says.

“MS hits many dif­fer­ent nerve sites in dif­fer­ent regions of the brain and spinal cord. It is mul­ti-focal and mul­ti-phas­ing with patholo­gies that shift over time.”

The advent of dis­ease-mod­i­fy­ing treat­ments (DMTs), which reduce relaps­es by on aver­age one third, changed the condition’s pro­file from their launch on the NHS in 2002.

Sci­en­tists have dis­cov­ered that the brain can repair the dam­age caused by MS

And there’s more to come.

“MS has gone from no ther­a­pies to an arm­ful, in less than 20 years,” adds Pro­fes­sor Chan­dran, who is direc­tor of the Cen­tre for Clin­i­cal Brain Sci­ences and clin­i­cal direc­tor of the Anne Rowl­ing Regen­er­a­tive Neu­rol­o­gy Clin­ic at the Uni­ver­si­ty of Edin­burgh.

The clin­i­cal rev­o­lu­tion has been matched by a greater aware­ness that MS main­ly affects peo­ple in their late-20s and ear­ly-30s, and although life-chang­ing, does not auto­mat­i­cal­ly or inevitably lead to a wheel­chair.

It takes two forms. The first, relaps­ing and remit­ting, is an inflam­ma­to­ry con­di­tion that affects around 85 per cent of suf­fer­ers. The major­i­ty of those with relaps­ing-remit­ting enter a pro­gres­sive phase in time. The sec­ond type is pri­ma­ry pro­gres­sive and is a degen­er­a­tive con­di­tion from the out­set.

No two MS patients are the same, so the push is for per­son­alised med­i­cines. It is a tough chal­lenge, but the pace of med­ical progress is inspir­ing. An array of DMTs is now avail­able for relaps­ing and remit­ting MS, and more than 6,000 patients have been enrolled on a UK-based tri­al to unlock the secrets of pro­gres­sive.

“You can real­ly feel the sea change because we have a greater reper­toire of drugs to use in relaps­ing and remit­ting,” says Jere­my Chat­away, a con­sul­tant neu­rol­o­gist at the Queen’s Square MS Cen­tre, the Nation­al Hos­pi­tal for Neu­rol­o­gy and Neu­ro­surgery, Uni­ver­si­ty Col­lege Lon­don. “This is a gold­en time and let’s make sure every­one with MS is expe­ri­enc­ing that and let’s makes sure we work real­ly hard on pro­gres­sive MS.”

Sci­en­tists have dis­cov­ered that the brain can repair the dam­age caused by MS and a wave of tri­als is look­ing at drugs which can boost this nat­ur­al process, with the hope the disease’s cor­ro­sive impact can be halt­ed.

Lat­est fig­ures put the num­ber of peo­ple in the UK with MS at 107,000, with between 8,000 and 10,000 relaps­es occur­ring every year. And MS costs the UK econ­o­my £1.4 bil­lion a year.

But, with 71 per cent of peo­ple with MS rely­ing on unpaid care from fam­i­ly and friends, more still needs to be done to improve lev­els of treat­ment and social sup­port.

Gavin Gio­van­noni, pro­fes­sor of neu­rol­o­gy at Barts and the Roy­al Lon­don Hos­pi­tal, believes a cul­ture change is need­ed to ensure the dis­ease is tar­get­ed ear­ly with the most potent ther­a­pies.

“If we take the approach of rheuma­tol­o­gists who treat aggres­sive­ly and ear­ly, then in 15 years we could see wheel­chairs as very rare,” he says. “But we have to act now.”

Con­sul­tants and cam­paign­ers wor­ry that the pace of struc­tur­al change in the NHS is too slow and short-term finan­cial bud­get­ing is mak­ing new drugs seem too expen­sive.

“MS is life­long. Giv­ing some­one access to the treat­ments and ther­a­pies they need now could keep them mobile, in work and able to look after their fam­i­ly, sav­ing a lot of mon­ey on care in the future,” says Pam Mac­far­lane, chief exec­u­tive of the MS Trust.

Dr Chat­away adds: “There is a need to gal­vanise patients, doc­tors, nurs­es to use these drugs more ful­ly because they are avail­able and they do cut the mus­tard.”

Equal effort has to be put into social care to man­age symp­toms and the MS Society’s far-reach­ing 2013 60th anniver­sary report, A lot­tery of treat­ment and care – MS ser­vices across the UK, calls for patients to have per­son­alised review plans linked to inte­grat­ed health and social care.

It also advo­cates bet­ter edu­ca­tion for employ­ers so they can ensure employ­ees with MS stay in work as long as pos­si­ble.

But the depress­ing sta­tis­tics are that eight in ten will have stopped work com­plete­ly with­in 15 years of diag­no­sis and 44 per cent of MS patients retire ear­ly in the UK com­pared with a Euro­pean aver­age of 35 per cent.

MS is on the thresh­old of rev­o­lu­tion­ary change, but it needs a con­sid­ered and com­pre­hen­sive strat­e­gy to ensure the advance con­tin­ues at a rapid pace.