I edited my comment before seeing your reply because I saw you edit of the comment above mine haha. Thanks for the info!
I edited my comment before seeing your reply because I saw you edit of the comment above mine haha. Thanks for the info!
Well, think of it as risk transfer. If you donate you are transferring risk to a patient who is willing to risk treatment and able to do so by participating in the trial, but the patient is getting the treatment FoC. Whereas if you are a patient willing to risk treatment but unable to participate in the study because you are not in Norway...Yes, people that think of donating to a phase 2/3 study as being "you get treatment vs I get treatment" probably won't be donating, but I have hope that there are enough ME/CFS patients that are sensible enough to understand that this is not what is occuring and that understand that the point of such a study is to deliver answers that don't exist without it.
Could it be the people running MEA (not sure how they got there in the first place) are using it as a grift to earn money? I don't know the history of MEA, but unless it was ran by people with actual ME, you would risk having people that are self-serving.The response to my email on the issues I found were dismissive. They are going to keep pushing this garbage through and its going to be used to hurt people again. The MEA once again blessing harm for patients while refusing to acknowledge the sheer scale of the problem nor the levels of suffering and death this disease is causing.
The risk may or may not be the same. But the benefit is exponentially higher.Well, think of it as risk transfer. If you donate you are transferring risk to a patient who is willing to risk treatment and able to do so by participating in the trial, but the patient is getting the treatment FoC. Whereas if you are a patient willing to risk treatment but unable to participate in the study because you are not in Norway...
The risk are unlikely to be the same and maybe not even the benefits for the individual even if the treatment eventually turns out to be effective.Well, think of it as risk transfer. If you donate you are transferring risk to a patient who is willing to risk treatment and able to do so by participating in the trial, but the patient is getting the treatment FoC. Whereas if you are a patient willing to risk treatment but unable to participate in the study because you are not in Norway...
We already have a phase 1 study that’s essentially 10 consecutive case studies. There is no need for anyone to do more of them, and F&M are already planning a phase 2.In my opinion, off-label case studies (n=1 trials) have their merit, as long as they’re properly documented and monitored by a Doctor Who knows ME and how the medicine works - in this case Dara - and what to monitor.
Sadly, not all specialists do know what they’re doing, do meticulous monitoring or write down proper case studies.
But 10 case studies give us a lot of information and in medical history this is often what has led to starting a pilot study.
- also it fills up the gap between today and appr. 3 years when we have the results from Phase 2 Norway.
It’s the Norwegian ME Association with 7k members.
I think a plea in English might be better - the English literacy is decent in Norway. I can help finding all of the email adresses if anyone needs them.
Leader of the ME-fund: Bjørn K Getz Wold – bkw@ssb.no@Utsikt I've emailed them using the contact button on the fundraiser's homepage, but haven't heard back yet. Do you mind sharing the relevant email addresses so I can follow up next week?
The chance of gaining data or any value with off-label treatments is minuscule.
I should have been clearer:Define minuscule.
Fluge & Mella started their research from a handful of anecdotal case studies (ME remission from cancer)
Consequently they started various offlabel mini-pilots n=3 case studies.
Daratumumab for auto immune diseases started with n=1 off-label case studies.
So «more of the same» is mostly redundant.
None of the people prescribing -mabs for ME/CFS off-label are doing that.
The situation is quite different though. F&M observations on Rituximab came at a point where they were not setting out making observations about ME/CFS. That tends to give such observations far more meaning due to the role of the observer. If someone sets out to see what they want to see, they are much likely to report so in studies due to various complex reasons. Daratumumab for auto immune disease presumably started because one person on this forum together with his colleagues worked things out and others caught up to that.Define minuscule.
Fluge & Mella started their research from a handful of anecdotal case studies (ME remission from cancer)
Consequently they started various offlabel mini-pilots n=3 case studies.
Daratumumab for auto immune diseases started with n=1 off-label case studies.
My assertion is that the data doesn’t have sufficient quality to be of any value.I think more data = much better. As long as it’s quality data.
It isn’t that hard to do a proper trial. Instead of doing that, they continue prescribing off-label treatments, usually with some reference to how patients are suffering and need treatments now. But they never actually check if their treatments are helping.But it’s too simplistic to say it’s vulture behavior.
Two wrongs doesn’t make a right. And some of the biobabble people are just as bad as the BPS crowd. Some are even worse, because their treatments are far more expensive and e.g. -mabs can be fatal or lead to severe lifelong issues.PS I would look the other way and blame BPS crowd for more vulture like behavior.
we're already getting real data soon
My assertion is that the data doesn’t have sufficient quality to be of any value.
It isn’t that hard to do a proper trial
We can’t go below the bare minimum.Do we lower our standards (a bit) - or do we keep the same standards and except an absolute minimum of data ?
Because I have no personal experience, I’m going off of JE’s descriptions.Actually, very hard if you follow some of the ME scientists.
- even in this thread, we’ve discussed the lack of funding
Soon w.r.t. research timelines, not w.r.t to the immense suffering that ME/CFS causes.Define ‘soon’ ?
- minimum 3 years if not longer
Because I have no personal experience, I’m going off of JE’s descriptions.