17 Manitobans with MS among recruits for liberation therapy study

Posted: Published on August 5th, 2014

This post was added by Dr Simmons

WINNIPEG A national clinical trial testing the effectiveness of a controversial treatment for multiple sclerosis is halfway to meeting its recruitment goal, and Manitobans are playing a prominent role.

Dr. Anthony Traboulsee, director of UBC Hospitals MS Centre in Vancouver, the studys lead researcher, said 17 Manitobans are among the 51 Canadians enrolled so far. He hopes to have 100 MS sufferers recruited across the country by Feb. 1.

Im pretty confident that Winnipeg could potentially be the top recruiting site, Traboulsee said in a telephone interview on Friday. All of the ducks have lined up in Manitoba beautifully.

Winnipeg is one of four sites for the $6-million national clinical trial announced in September 2012. The others are in Vancouver, Montreal and Quebec City. The Manitoba government is footing part of the cost of the research.

The clinical trial is assessing the effectiveness of the so-called liberation therapy for treating MS pioneered by Italian researcher Dr. Paolo Zamboni in 2008. It involves improving blood flow in neck veins. The Italian vascular surgeon believes a condition, dubbed chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency, or CCSVI, is the cause of the disease.

Multiple sclerosis causes the destruction of myelin, the protective sheath around nerves throughout the body, leading to progressive physical and cognitive disability. An estimated 55,000 to 75,000 Canadians have MS, and the country has one of the highest rates of the incurable disease in the world.

Some researchers and medical specialists have discounted the liberation treatment, but Traboulsee is keeping an open mind.

Research has discredited part of Zambonis theory but not all of it, Traboulsee said. Restricted blood flow in neck veins isnt unique to MS patients, as the Italian surgeon first theorized, but the jury is still out on whether improving blood flow can relieve the debilitating symptoms of the disease.

A survey of 300 people, mainly from British Columbia, who had undergone the treatment produced mixed results, Traboulsee said. About half found it to be very beneficial while half did not. So I think its important to pursue this to try to get clarity. Because if this is something beneficial we want to make sure its offered to the right people.

Each program participant will undergo the treatment over the course of two years, but they will not know when. At any one time, half will have the procedure done, while the rest will undergo a fake treatment.

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17 Manitobans with MS among recruits for liberation therapy study

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