BurnA
Senior Member
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@deleder2k @Valentijn
I agree with what you both say.
My point is there is no statistical evidence which can be used to deduce if you will respond to RTX or not.
@Valentijn uses the word 'some' @deleder2k uses the word 'may'.
So you are both correct - SOME people with elevated autoantibodies MAY respond to RTX.
Where does that leave us ?
Lets look at the permutations :
If i take the test and have elvated autoantibodies, I may (or may not ) respnd to RTX.
If I take the test and dont have elevated autoantibodies I may ( or may not ) respond to RTX.
How has taking the test improved my decision making process with regards to RTX. ?
On the subject of POTS or OI.
Both are easy to diagnose without identifying autoantibodies.
Regarding POTS, this paper states that of the patients they had data on the ones with POTS did NOT have elevated autoantibodies.
This subjest is discussed more in another thread - here is a summary post :
I agree with what you both say.
My point is there is no statistical evidence which can be used to deduce if you will respond to RTX or not.
@Valentijn uses the word 'some' @deleder2k uses the word 'may'.
So you are both correct - SOME people with elevated autoantibodies MAY respond to RTX.
Where does that leave us ?
Lets look at the permutations :
If i take the test and have elvated autoantibodies, I may (or may not ) respnd to RTX.
If I take the test and dont have elevated autoantibodies I may ( or may not ) respond to RTX.
How has taking the test improved my decision making process with regards to RTX. ?
On the subject of POTS or OI.
Both are easy to diagnose without identifying autoantibodies.
Regarding POTS, this paper states that of the patients they had data on the ones with POTS did NOT have elevated autoantibodies.
This subjest is discussed more in another thread - here is a summary post :
Does Dysautonomia International have a forum, by the way, similar to the www.dinet.org dysautonomia forums? And have there been many people there who have been treated with rituximab?
Indeed, where does that leave us? Let's recap:
The 2014 study on 14 patients with POTS found that:
Beta 1 adrenergic receptor autoantibodies were present in all 14 POTS patients,
Beta 2 adrenergic receptor autoantibodies were present half of these patients.
So it looks like beta 1 adrenergic receptor autoantibodies are the most predicative of POTS.
Fluge and Mella's 2015 study looked for autoantibodies to all alpha and beta adrenergic receptor subtypes, but only found beta 2 adrenergic receptor autoantibodies.
So given that Fluge and Mella had four ME/CFS patients with POTS in their cohort, you would have expected that these researchers would find beta 1 adrenergic receptor autoantibodies in these patients, but they did not.
I don't know the answer to this conundrum.