• Welcome to Phoenix Rising!

    Created in 2008, Phoenix Rising is the largest and oldest forum dedicated to furthering the understanding of and finding treatments for complex chronic illnesses such as chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS), fibromyalgia (FM), long COVID, postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome (POTS), mast cell activation syndrome (MCAS), and allied diseases.

    To become a member, simply click the Register button at the top right.

News of replication of WPI XMRV study...

K

Katie

Guest
Someone calm me down and say something sensible, please, I can't get excited yet.


*dances a little*


Is that light at the end of the tunnel I see?
 

jenbooks

Guest
Messages
1,270
I wonder who he spoke with...
AZT is so toxic. The question is can you pulse some relatively nontoxic antiviral (XMRV has a low mutation rate) as a monotherapy--get it down, go off, go back on when it starts to replicate again? Or do you have to be on something toxic, with serious potential side effects of it's own, for good?
Much research to be done.
And where does chronic lyme intersect? How many of us have XMRV? And is it transmitted in ticks.
I still have so many questions...
 
A

anne

Guest
Before I get excited (which I already am), is this person trustworthy?
 
K

_Kim_

Guest
Wildaisy,

What a wonderful find! What a gift on this Thanksgiving day. I'm smiling.

Dr. Luckett - thank you!

and it will be several months before it is known which existing HIV drugs will work against XMRV - only a couple Reverse Transcriptase inhibitors, and Raltegravir have shown early promising results.

There is such surety and promise in his message. It's not a matter of "if" HIV drugs will work, but which ones.
 

jenbooks

Guest
Messages
1,270
Thanks, Daisy, I'll look it over. Wish someone would test ticks. I'm not keen on spending money on a test for XMRV until I find out if its transmissible in ticks and that there is a therapy I might consider. To my mind a two-pronged therapy is probably the best because any virus *can* mutate. Ross on his Vistide thread is saying he's going to have to go off Vistide soon. That's scary as you face a possible relapse.

I'm not saying the news isn't full of potential. I just personally have many questions in my own case.

ETA: He looked at chicoric acid in echinacea. One of my medicaments is echinacea purpurea root--freeze dried--from Eclectic Institute.
I'd just love it if we could resesarch less toxic ways to inhibit the virus. (That post of his is a few days ago).

Happy Tday
 
K

_Kim_

Guest
Before I get excited (which I already am), is this person trustworthy?

I would still put this in the category of rumor, but there's no reason to doubt Dr. Luckett's sincerity.

My research interests is retroviruses - which was an area of active research at Orchestra Therapeutics. The recent discovery of XMRV as a potential link to Chronic Fatigue Syndrome has become very much of a research interest of mine, as my younger sister is has struggled with the disorder since the age of 19.
 
K

_Kim_

Guest
Jen, he has a lot more to say, and I'm finding all of it interesting. His most recent article prior today was about Raltegravir...

His blog is well worth reading. He talks some about treatment in today's blog too.

I'm finding it interesting too. I like his hopeful prediction about anti-retroviral treatment:
I think that because XMRV is a slow virus, a 2-3 month course of anti-retroviral therapy might allow the immune system to recover enough to keep XMRV in check. That would be an excellent first step. However this is not a cure, and latent XMRV could become re-activated if the immune system is presented with a major challenge ie:: influenza, surgery, major stress.
 
Messages
13,774
I'm still a bit terrified that the XMRV research will turn out to be nonsense, and serve to further discredit CFS research generally, leaving us totally in the hands of the quacks.

Google search has become a compulsion in the last month. Any sort of confirmation would be great, even if it was only for a sub-section of sufferers that I may not be a part of. It would at least mean I could be confident things wouldn't get any worse.

Leak some preliminary data!!
 
K

_Kim_

Guest
Thanks, Daisy, I'll look it over. Wish someone would test ticks.

Jen, he's thinking about ticks:
The possibility of an insect vector cannot be ignored. Mice being a reservoir of XMRV, leads to the distinct possibility that blood sucking insects such as mosquitoes, sandflies, horse flies, and ticks could transmit the disease to humans.
 

jenbooks

Guest
Messages
1,270
Kim, yeah but...

WPI...and others, aren't. Nobody has tested ticks yet. I was going to push it but I went away, got stressed out, had too much work etc...I was going to try to get somebody to think about it, maybe Eva Sapi or better yet Ian Lipkin. Maybe I should. I'm just stressed out now.

ETA: I wrote Dr. Lipkin. At least I'll find out whether he's considering it. He's the tops in the field, no holds barred.
 

bakercape

Senior Member
Messages
210
Location
Cape Cod. Mass
Ticks need to be tested

If XMRV came from mice it would be worth looking into if ticks transferred it from mice to humans. Maybe ticks are carrying XMRV like Lyme. My whole family was bitten by ticks a lot growing up on the cape as a young child. None of us have never tested positive for Lyme and I did not get CFS until I was older and living in Maine. My whole family got CFS following an EBV infection several years removed from our life on the Cape. Could EBV have activated a ltent XMRV virus given to us by ticks who had fed on Mice? Could this explain the people who have symptoms of Lyme but do not test positive for Lyme following tick bites. These are questions worth looking into.
 
C

cold_taste_of_tears

Guest
Realistically speaking - are we talking 3 to 5 years before the masses would be allowed to try a new drug?

We've waited ages on Ampligen and never gotten anywhere with that. :(

Thank you.
 

mezombie

Senior Member
Messages
324
Location
East Coast city, USA
It's my understanding that there are a number of retroviral drugs already on the market that might be effective against XMRV. So they could be prescribed "off-label". Unlike Ampligen, they have already been approved by the FDA (Food & Drug Administration). It is up to doctors to prescribe them off-label; the FDA does not control that.

Don't be surprised if treatment turns out to be a mix of drugs. That's certainly the case for HIV/AIDS.

Now to the situation in England... (sigh). What a mess. Hopefully, should causality between XMRV and ME/CFS pan out, even your not so nice NICE will come around.
 

hvs

Senior Member
Messages
292
AZT is so toxic. The question is can you pulse some relatively nontoxic antiviral (XMRV has a low mutation rate) as a monotherapy--get it down, go off, go back on when it starts to replicate again? Or do you have to be on something toxic, with serious potential side effects of it's own, for good?
Much research to be done.
And where does chronic lyme intersect? How many of us have XMRV? And is it transmitted in ticks.
I still have so many questions...

I'd think that the fact that Peterson, Klimas, Lerner, et al can put CFS into remission for years using herpes-family antivirals hints that we would not have to be on an anti-retroviral every day the rest of our lives.
 
C

cold_taste_of_tears

Guest
Thanks, good point on the the fact these are existing drugs proposed for XMRV. :eek: I'm surprised some patients are apparently taking AZT already, that's either very brave of them or rather silly. (In the early days of HIV, many patients died of taking AZT so people with ME CFS need to be very careful).

In the UK, NICE (National Institute of Clinical Excellence) cannot come around to our side of thinking as they're in the middle of tax-payer funded state driven psychobabble - due to prove ME CFS is insanity, in 2012.

Legally they can get away with this quite happily, as they have openly stated that 'CFS/ME' is '''long term tiredness'.

NICE block people in the UK dying of HIV/AIDS to get drugs (postcode/zipcode lottery), that many other European countries hand out for Cancers and other diseases, yet the UK rations Cancer drugs until NICE approve them for 'cost effectiveness'. I cannot imagine any American walking into the WPI in years to come with a doctors note for IV anti-retrovirals and the desk clerk says, sorry it's not cost effective. :rolleyes:


Muscular Dystrophy drugs blocked

MS drugs blocked
Also here.

Alzheimer's drugs blocked

Arthritis drugs blocked

Prostate cancer drugs blocked

Cancer patients denied life saving drugs

Bowel cancer drugs blocked

Breast cancer drugs blocked, and only approved (with conditions) after EU ruling forcing it.

If they can do that, they'll never move on XMRV induced immune supression, ever. Why would we get special treatment, when we get no treatment.

Hence we're all coming to America somehow on a banana boat to import sarcasm to the state of Nevada. (Now where's that short sighted stalker I met in a Reno chat room when I need her...........) ;)