Just want to add my comments to these slides as I am impressed (and hopeful)
1. slide RCT 2025?
- results Pilot study in Norway n= 10 after 1 year : promising and well tolerated
- A larger placebo controlled RCT trial is going to be planned (in 2025?)
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2. With regards to the second slide (attached)
: 2 responders + 1 non-responder
- The 3 patients seem to be Moderate ME CFS - according to steps (2000/day)
- 2 responders increase
daily steps from around 2000 to around 10,000 in 1 year ( + big increase SPF PF + DSQ score)
I am impressed by these results - basically going from
Moderate to Mild
- Maybe even severe/
moderate to very mild - as average 10,000 might allow to work
- making the assumption that the no-nonsense Norwegians Fluge & Mella know by now how to select the ‘hard-core’ ME CFS patients (long-term pre-Covid, severely disabled, Mostly housebound etc.)
I guess all Moderates would sign for that - if chances of worsening are minimal
So the only possible concerning is the 1 non-responder (with little IgG Change) dipped in steps / functionality for 4 months - and recovered to the same baseline (roughly).
Purely based on my exposure to 100s of long-term ME CFS patients anecdotes and reading research trials:
- the chances of having a crash from anything (e.g. visiting a hospital for a trial when severe-moderate) are much bigger than having a huge remission in 1 year
Still, we need to wait for the actual results and hopefully they can start the placebo RCT trial very soon.
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3. Hope they will give more data and clarity on their theory on the
relation between (a) lowering IgG and (b) A positive treatment response.
- from their presentation it seems a defining marker for them