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Infliximab

Infliximab (Remicade®) is a powerful drug used to treat auto-immune disorders like Crohn's disease and rheumatoid arthritis. Infliximab is known as a "chimeric monoclonal antibody" (the term "chimeric" refers to the use of both mouse and human components of the drug i.e. mouse binding VK and VH domains and human constant Fc domains). The drug reduces the amount of active TNF-α (tumour necrosis factor alpha) in the body by binding to it and preventing it from signaling the receptors for TNF-α on the surface of cells. more...

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TNF-α is one of the key cytokines that triggers and sustains the inflammation response. Remicade was invented at New York University School of Medicine and developed by Centocor, a pharmaceutical company owned by Johnson & Johnson.

Pharmacology

It is made up of part-human part mouse protein, and is administered by intravenous infusion (usually on an outpatient basis). Before infliximab is administered a test for tuberculosis must be performed, as infliximab has been shown to increase the risk of reactivation of latent tuberculosis. Other potential side effects include skin rash, fever, tiredness and difficulty breathing.

Safety

Since the drug's approval and wide-spread use, significant concerns about the safety of infliximab have been raised. After a number of studies and reports of significant adverse reactions in patients receiving infliximab therapy (including serious and sometimes fatal blood disorders, infections, lymphoma and other cancers, serious liver injury, and central nervous system disorders), the U.S. Food and Drug Administration issued a warning to doctors instructing them to screen and monitor potential patients more carefully.

Other uses

Case studies have been done into other uses of infliximab, such as to treat skin diseases. Remicade (infliximab) has been approved for treating ankylosing spondylitis, Crohn's disease, psoriatic arthritis, psoriasis (EU), rheumatoid arthritis, and ulcerative colitis.

There have been numerous case reports of the efficacy of infliximab in various inflammatory skin conditions diseases; psoriasis, in which increased TNFα has been demonstrated, is the most promising indication (Gupta and Skinner, 2004).

Read more at Wikipedia.org


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Arthritis drug fights Crohn's disease - Biomedicine - infliximab - Brief Article
From Science News, 6/8/02

The inflammation-fighting drug infliximab, which has shown promise against acute attacks of Crohn's disease, can hold off the intestinal ailment for a full year in many patients, an international group of researchers now report in the May 4 Lancet.

Not all people with Crohn's disease--marked by pain, diarrhea, and weight loss--respond to infliximab, which is mainly used against rheumatoid arthritis. Researchers identified 355 Crohn's patients in North America, Europe, and Israel who responded to a single dose and then enrolled them in a trial to test the drug's long-term effectiveness.

The patients were randomly divided into three groups. Some received a single intravenous infusion of infliximab, also called Remicade, and subsequent doses of an inert substance. Two other groups received an infusion of infliximab at the start, additional doses 2 and 6 weeks later, and further doses every 2 months for the remainder of a year. One of these groups got double doses beginning in the third month.

After 30 weeks, the disease was in remission in 21 percent of the group getting a single dose followed by placebos. The rate was 39 percent in the patients receiving a single dose bimonthly and 45 percent in the double-dose group.

There is no known cure for Crohn's disease; the symptoms are usually treated with steroids and other anti-inflammatory drugs. The new findings suggest that infliximab's effectiveness against chronic Crohn's disease might enable some patients to lessen or stop their use of steroids and avoid serious side effects, say study coauthor Stephen B. Hanauer of the University of Chicago Medical Center and his colleagues.--N.S.

COPYRIGHT 2002 Science Service, Inc.
COPYRIGHT 2002 Gale Group

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