Verity
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
I was thinking about how it’s generally assumed that immune-suppressing treatments used for various autoimmune diseases don’t work in ME, even though there are quite a few reports of remission after chemotherapy.
We know for sure Rituximab doesn’t work. Cyclo and dara might. But what about other immune-modulating drugs that are used to treat autoimmune diseases, like CellCept or Benlysta or Imuran or high doses of steroids? Do people believe that these probably don’t work because someone would’ve noticed by now if they did, because their action is very similar to Rituximab, or for some other reason? (Or maybe actual researchers don’t assume these drugs don’t work.)
I have a personal interest in this because I have improved for months twice after hefty doses of steroids. I’m curious if some ME patients might in fact be steroid-responsive, and it’s just been assumed that we aren’t for some reason and therefore never tried. I have never seen a study on it. Are we really 100% sure that steroids used how they’re given in autoimmune disease—not low-dose daily steroids—don’t work?
We know for sure Rituximab doesn’t work. Cyclo and dara might. But what about other immune-modulating drugs that are used to treat autoimmune diseases, like CellCept or Benlysta or Imuran or high doses of steroids? Do people believe that these probably don’t work because someone would’ve noticed by now if they did, because their action is very similar to Rituximab, or for some other reason? (Or maybe actual researchers don’t assume these drugs don’t work.)
I have a personal interest in this because I have improved for months twice after hefty doses of steroids. I’m curious if some ME patients might in fact be steroid-responsive, and it’s just been assumed that we aren’t for some reason and therefore never tried. I have never seen a study on it. Are we really 100% sure that steroids used how they’re given in autoimmune disease—not low-dose daily steroids—don’t work?