St Albert toddler has rare disease

Edmonton, AB, Canada / 630 CHED

August 02, 2013 02:51 pm
Some last minute negotiations began Friday between Alberta Health and an organization known as the Isaac Foundation, to get dire help for the family of a St Albert toddler.
Aleena Sadownyk has an extremely rare condition that has left the three year old with an enzyme deficiency, that’s breaking down her little body.

They are seeking treatment with a drug called Naglazyme.

“Alberta Health gave me a call to reiterate the fact that they’re working on this file and to tell us that they’re hopeful to have an expedited review and will render a decision soon,” said Andrew McFayden of the Isaac Foundation who has gone to bat for the family.
The Sadownyk family has been asking about the province’s Short Term Exceptional Drug Therapy program after originally turning them down through the Alberta Rare Diseases Funding Program.

“What that means I don’t know. I asked about timelines and bench marks and that sort of thing so that the family could make sure they were close to hearing the fate of their daughter buy I haven’t been able to get much of an update as far as time line.”
McFayden says the treatment has worked on seven other instances in Canada, including his own son.

Late Friday afternoon, Health Minister Fred Horne’s office issued a statement.
“My heart goes out to the Sadownyk family. I know they want to do everything they can to help their daughter. The family has contacted my office recently and were immediately put in touch with appropriate officials who could assist in supporting the family in making a funding request through appropriate programs.

As things stand, Naglazyme has not yet received general market approval through Health Canada. Because it doesn’t have federal approval, the options for funding this drug are different than for some other drugs. Albertans who need access to high-cost drug therapies not already covered by provincial programs may explore funding options through the Short-term Exceptional Drug Therapy Program. That program relies on medical experts to assess whether a specific drug will be safe and effective for a specific patient. It’s done on a case-by-case basis, so it can take a patient’s needs and particular health condition into account.

“As a politician, I don’t get directly involved in assessing which drugs would be funded through that process — and appropriately leave that assessment to medical experts. Department officials will continue to support the application process, a clinical review is underway now and I understand we expect a response soon.”

McFayden says time is of the essence.

“It’s tough that we’re going into a long weekend and to be honest with you, if I thought we could wait, we would have put this out on Tuesday, but I think the sooner a decision gets rendered the better, because even after a decision is rendered if it is a positive decision, and there’s no guarantee whatsoever the province is even going to say yes, then we’d have to ensure that the hospital staff will be trained.”

Officials from the drug supplier would come in from California to train the staff at the Stollery.

Alberta Toddler Awaiting Funding For Life-Sustaining Treatment

   Gazette Grande

Aleena Sadownyk, Age 3.  St. Albert, AB

St. Albert Toddler Diagnosed With Ultra-Rare Condition; Treatment Already Being Funded In Numerous Provinces

Alberta Health is currently considering an application for exceptional funding of an expensive life-sustaining treatment required by an Alberta toddler. Three year-old Aleena Sadownyk was recently diagnosed with MPS VI, and requires the life-sustaining treatment immediately in order to halt further progression of her devastating disease. Alberta Health has already denied funding for the treatment through the Alberta Rare Diseases Funding Program. They are now reviewing a second application through the Short Term Exceptional Drug Therapy (STEDT) program. While Aleena needs to begin treatment immediately, there has been no timeline set for a decision from Alberta Health.

Aleena suffers from a rare enzyme deficiency called MPS VI (also known as Maroteaux-Lamy Syndrome). Sufferers of MPS VI lack an enzyme in their blood that breaks down cellular waste in the body called glycosaminoglycan (GAG). These GAGs build up in the bones, tissues, organs, and muscles of affected individuals and lead to many devastating symptoms including heart and airway disease, corneal clouding, stiffening of the joints, shortened stature, and premature death. To date, there are 9 children suffering from the disease in Canada and roughly 1,100 worldwide.

While there is no known cure for MPS VI, a treatment does exist. Naglazyme is an Enzyme-Replacement Therapy (ERT) designed to provide patients with a synthetic version of the enzyme they are lacking by infusing small doses into the patient’s bloodstream on a weekly basis. Produced by Biomarin, the treatment for this orphan disease can range from $300,000 per year for a small individual to $1 million per year for a young adult. Due to the lack of an orphan drug policy in Canada, Naglazyme is only available to Canadian patients through the Federal Government’s Special Access Program (SAP). It is being used for patients in Ontario, British Columbia, Saskatchewan, and Quebec through the SAP and is funded by the Provincial governments respectively. Currently, Naglazyme has been approved in numerous countries worldwide, including the United States, the European Union, and Australia.

In Canada, there are numerous precedents for the life-sustaining treatment to be funded. The first approved case took place in Ontario where the parents of 9 year-old Isaac McFadyen, residents of Campbellford, Ontario, successfully lobbied the Government to fund the expensive Enzyme Replacement Therapy for him when he was diagnosed in 2006. After a very public campaign to secure funding, Isaac has been receiving his weekly infusions at The Hospital For Sick Children in Toronto for 7 years. Since then, numerous other provinces have used the precedent set by the McFadyen case and have approved the same treatment for their patients, most recently in 2012 in Saskatchewan and 2011 in Ontario.

Prior to starting treatment, Isaac suffered from severe compression of his spinal cord that required the removal of a piece of his skull and a portion of his vertebrae. In addition, Isaac endured numerous other surgeries to treat complications of the advancing disease in his body. Since beginning his weekly infusions, Isaac’s liver and spleen have reduced back down to a normal size, his rate of growth has increased, his heart function has improved, and his heart valve disease has stabilized. Furthermore, Isaac has had no further progression of his bone and joint disease, airway disease, and compression of his spinal cord.

Naturally, the Sadownyk family has been devastated by the diagnosis of their daughter, Aleena. Laura Sadownyk, Aleena’s mother, expressed her fears about the length of time the government is taking to render its decision. “It’s very agonizing to wait patiently, especially after hearing the experts in this field talk about early diagnosis and treatment being the best way to prevent the onset of a lot of the effects of this disease.”

McFadyen also notes how important it is to get children affected with MPS VI started on weekly infusions at a young age, and is also frustrated by the process put in place to review rare disease funding in the province. “We know that this treatment can slow down or even halt the disease progression in individuals so it’s very important to begin treatment as soon as possible after diagnosis. Aleena has already been approved by the Special Access Program to receive the treatment she so desperately needs. The only thing stopping her from beginning that treatment is the lack of funding by the Province.” Adds Sadownyk, “It’s heartbreaking that the fate of our daughter rests in the hands of bureaucrats.”

McFadyen believes that the time for action from the Redford government is now. “The Provincial government has the opportunity to do the right thing and ensure that Aleena receives the treatment she so desperately needs. It’s the role of government to protect and ensure fair and equitable access to Health Care for all Canadians, regardless of which Province they happen to live it. The Isaac Foundation is calling on this government to take action and save the life of this child. She can’t afford to wait.”

Fund life-saving treatment for St. Albert toddler now: Forsyth

CALGARY, AB (August 2, 2013): The PC government needs to immediately commit to funding a life-saving drug for a three-year-old Alberta girl with an extremely rare, life-threatening disease, Wildrose Health Critic Heather Forsyth said today.

The girl, Aleena Sadownyk of St. Albert, was diagnosed in April with MPS VI, an enzyme deficiency disease that occurs in one out of approximately 250,000 to 600,000 newborn babies. If left untreated, it will cause life-threatening complications including heart problems, breathing difficulties and skeletal deformations.

The treatment, Naglazyme, has proven successful in other patients suffering from MPS VI, including seven other Canadian children who are currently receiving this treatment in neighbouring provinces. It costs approximately $300,000 annually. BC, Saskatchewan, Ontario and Quebec have all agreed to fund Naglazyme for MPS VI patients.

Today, Forsyth sent a letter to Health Minister Fred Horne formally requesting he approve funding for Aleena’s treatment.

“This treatment is Aleena’s only hope,” Forsyth said. “Today, I join with the Sadownyk family in making this simple but critical request of the Alberta government: Please fund this life-saving treatment for Aleena.”

Forsyth said the Sadownyk family has attempted to raise Aleena’s extraordinary case with their local MLA and with Horne but has had little success. The government has already denied the family’s first funding request through the Alberta Rare Diseases Funding Program. A second request through the Short Term Exceptional Drug Therapy Program has received no response.

“This family is desperate to save their daughter’s life,” Forsyth said. “Aleena needs this treatment and she needs it now. Every day that access is delayed, is another day for irreversible complications to take hold. Other provinces have stepped up when their children needed this treatment. It’s time for Alberta to do the same.”

Heather Forsyth
Calgary-Fish Creek
Heather Forsyth was first elected on June 15, 1993 as the MLA for Calgary-Fish Creek, and acts as the Wildrose Health critic.

Source: http://www.wildrose.ca/feature/fund-life-saving-treatment-for-st-albert-toddler-now-forsyth/ 

 

Parents want province to fund treatment for child's rare condition

Aleena Sadowynk, 3, has a rare enzyme deficiency CBC News

Posted: Aug 2, 2013 9:52 PM MT

Last Updated: Aug 2, 2013 9:50 PM MT


A couple from St. Albert is trying to get Alberta Health to cover the expensive medication to treat their daughter’s rare medical disorder.

Aleena Sadownyk, 3, suffers from the enzyme deficiency MPS VI, a condition with fewer than ten cases in Canada.

The MPS VI is treated with an drug called Naglazyme, which can cost anywhere from $300,000 to $1 million each year.

Aleena’s parents Dane and Laura Sadownyk applied for funding months ago but were turned down because because Health Canada hadn’t given Naglazyme general market approval.

They are now awaiting a reply from Alberta Health after applying under the Short Term Exceptional Drug Therapy Program.

“We’re not taking not taking no as an answer. If we have to contact every person out there to tweet, Facebook, email, phone, [Health] Minister [Fred] Horne, we’ll do that, ” Laura Sadownyk said.

“We have lots of people supporting us and we need the support of the public.”

“It’s a child’s life. That’s the bottom line,” Dane Sadownyk said. “She deserves a future like any other child should and that’s all we want for her.”

Aleena’s case is now being reviewed by medical experts who will determine whether the drug can be funded.

In a statement sent to CBC News, Horne suggested that the delay has been caused by the fact Naglazyme doesn’t have general market approval from Health Canada.

“Because it doesn’t have federal approval, the options for funding this drug are different than for some other drugs,” he said.

Parents want province to fund treatment for child’s rare condition

Aleena Sadowynk, 3, has a rare enzyme deficiency CBC News

Posted: Aug 2, 2013 9:52 PM MT

Last Updated: Aug 2, 2013 9:50 PM MT


A couple from St. Albert is trying to get Alberta Health to cover the expensive medication to treat their daughter’s rare medical disorder.

Aleena Sadownyk, 3, suffers from the enzyme deficiency MPS VI, a condition with fewer than ten cases in Canada.

The MPS VI is treated with an drug called Naglazyme, which can cost anywhere from $300,000 to $1 million each year.

Aleena’s parents Dane and Laura Sadownyk applied for funding months ago but were turned down because because Health Canada hadn’t given Naglazyme general market approval.

They are now awaiting a reply from Alberta Health after applying under the Short Term Exceptional Drug Therapy Program.

“We’re not taking not taking no as an answer. If we have to contact every person out there to tweet, Facebook, email, phone, [Health] Minister [Fred] Horne, we’ll do that, ” Laura Sadownyk said.

“We have lots of people supporting us and we need the support of the public.”

“It’s a child’s life. That’s the bottom line,” Dane Sadownyk said. “She deserves a future like any other child should and that’s all we want for her.”

Aleena’s case is now being reviewed by medical experts who will determine whether the drug can be funded.

In a statement sent to CBC News, Horne suggested that the delay has been caused by the fact Naglazyme doesn’t have general market approval from Health Canada.

“Because it doesn’t have federal approval, the options for funding this drug are different than for some other drugs,” he said.

Tot's treatment for rare illness not covered by Alberta's government

‘The provincial government has the opportunity to do the right thing…’: family friend

BY  ,EDMONTON SUN

FIRST POSTED: | UPDATED: 

Aleena Sadownyk
St. Albert Toddler Diagnosed With Ultra-Rare Condition; Treatment Already Being Funded In Numerous Provinces Alberta Health is currently considering an application for exceptional funding of an expensive life-sustaining treatment required by an Alberta toddler. Three year-old Aleena Sadownyk was recently diagnosed with MPS VI, and requires the life-sustaining treatment immediately in order to halt further progression of her devastating disease. Alberta Health has already denied funding for the treatment through the Alberta Rare Diseases Funding Program. They are now reviewing a second application through the Short Term Exceptional Drug Therapy (STEDT) program. While Aleena needs to begin treatment immediately, there has been no timeline set for a decision from Alberta Health. Family Hand Out Photo

Three-year-old Aleena Sadownyk was recently diagnosed with a rare and fatal enzyme deficiency called Maroteaux-Lamy Syndrome or MPS VI.

The toddler is already experiencing serious symptoms — Aleena’s hands and shoulder joints have begun to seize up — and without treatment officials say the disease is likely a death sentence.

“Left untreated, children have a severely shortened life-span,” said family-friend Andrew McFayden.

“There are varying degrees of progression in children and right now it’s suspected that Aleena has a rapidly progressive form.”

McFayden is a new friend of Aleena’s parents — Laura and Dane Sadownyk.

The Sadownyk’s reached out to McFadyen after they learned about his son Isaac — who lives with the same disease their daughter was diagnosed with — and McFadyen’s fight to have the Ontario government foot his treatment bill.

Individuals with MPS VI require an enzyme replacement therapy that can cost up to $1 million per year, and the treatment must be continued once a week for the rest of their lives.

It’s already covered by provincial health care in Ontario — where McFadyen battled to have the treatment brought to Canada using the Federal Government’s Special Access Program (SAP) and paid for by the province, as well as in British Columbia, Saskatchewan and Quebec.

Now, McFadyen is hell-bent on helping Aleena get the treatment that has allowed his son — who was crippled with spinal pressure and enlarged internal organs — to burst through their back door today at a full run.

“As I’m talking to you right now he’s racing outside to play with his brothers,” said McFadyen, of Isaac, 9, who has been receiving the treatments for seven years now.

“The damage that was done to his spine, bones and joints can’t be reversed but there has been no further build up of disease.”

Though he’s grateful it wasn’t worse, he doesn’t want to see Aleena left with the same life-long damage.

“Aleena is waiting to begin treatment – her hands are beginning to claw up, she can’t lift her shoulders above her head, that’s the latest,” he said. “She needs to start treatment in order to halt any further deterioration.”

According to McFadyen — who runs a charity called the Isaac Foundation — Alberta Health has already denied funding for the treatment through the Alberta Rare Diseases Funding Program.

But officials are currently revising a second application through the Short Term Exceptional Drug Therapy (STEDT) program — with no timeline set for a decision.

It’s time Aleena doesn’t have, and McFadyen says his hope is for Premier Alison Redford to step up and expedite the process.

“The provincial government has the opportunity to do the right thing and ensure that Aleena receives the treatment she so desperately needs,” he said.

“Parents should not have to put their children’s faces on the front of newspapers in order to get the treatment they deserve.”

angelique.rodrigues@sunmedia.ca

Tot’s treatment for rare illness not covered by Alberta’s government

‘The provincial government has the opportunity to do the right thing…’: family friend

BY  ,EDMONTON SUN

FIRST POSTED: | UPDATED: 

Aleena Sadownyk
St. Albert Toddler Diagnosed With Ultra-Rare Condition; Treatment Already Being Funded In Numerous Provinces Alberta Health is currently considering an application for exceptional funding of an expensive life-sustaining treatment required by an Alberta toddler. Three year-old Aleena Sadownyk was recently diagnosed with MPS VI, and requires the life-sustaining treatment immediately in order to halt further progression of her devastating disease. Alberta Health has already denied funding for the treatment through the Alberta Rare Diseases Funding Program. They are now reviewing a second application through the Short Term Exceptional Drug Therapy (STEDT) program. While Aleena needs to begin treatment immediately, there has been no timeline set for a decision from Alberta Health. Family Hand Out Photo

Three-year-old Aleena Sadownyk was recently diagnosed with a rare and fatal enzyme deficiency called Maroteaux-Lamy Syndrome or MPS VI.

The toddler is already experiencing serious symptoms — Aleena’s hands and shoulder joints have begun to seize up — and without treatment officials say the disease is likely a death sentence.

“Left untreated, children have a severely shortened life-span,” said family-friend Andrew McFayden.

“There are varying degrees of progression in children and right now it’s suspected that Aleena has a rapidly progressive form.”

McFayden is a new friend of Aleena’s parents — Laura and Dane Sadownyk.

The Sadownyk’s reached out to McFadyen after they learned about his son Isaac — who lives with the same disease their daughter was diagnosed with — and McFadyen’s fight to have the Ontario government foot his treatment bill.

Individuals with MPS VI require an enzyme replacement therapy that can cost up to $1 million per year, and the treatment must be continued once a week for the rest of their lives.

It’s already covered by provincial health care in Ontario — where McFadyen battled to have the treatment brought to Canada using the Federal Government’s Special Access Program (SAP) and paid for by the province, as well as in British Columbia, Saskatchewan and Quebec.

Now, McFadyen is hell-bent on helping Aleena get the treatment that has allowed his son — who was crippled with spinal pressure and enlarged internal organs — to burst through their back door today at a full run.

“As I’m talking to you right now he’s racing outside to play with his brothers,” said McFadyen, of Isaac, 9, who has been receiving the treatments for seven years now.

“The damage that was done to his spine, bones and joints can’t be reversed but there has been no further build up of disease.”

Though he’s grateful it wasn’t worse, he doesn’t want to see Aleena left with the same life-long damage.

“Aleena is waiting to begin treatment – her hands are beginning to claw up, she can’t lift her shoulders above her head, that’s the latest,” he said. “She needs to start treatment in order to halt any further deterioration.”

According to McFadyen — who runs a charity called the Isaac Foundation — Alberta Health has already denied funding for the treatment through the Alberta Rare Diseases Funding Program.

But officials are currently revising a second application through the Short Term Exceptional Drug Therapy (STEDT) program — with no timeline set for a decision.

It’s time Aleena doesn’t have, and McFadyen says his hope is for Premier Alison Redford to step up and expedite the process.

“The provincial government has the opportunity to do the right thing and ensure that Aleena receives the treatment she so desperately needs,” he said.

“Parents should not have to put their children’s faces on the front of newspapers in order to get the treatment they deserve.”

angelique.rodrigues@sunmedia.ca

St. Albert family hopes province will pay for child’s expensive medical treatment

Toddler already slowed by rare disorder that worsens without therapy

BY JODIE SINNEMA, EDMONTON JOURNAL AUGUST 2, 2013
St. Albert family hopes province will pay for child’s expensive medical treatment

Aleena Sadownyk has a rare enzyme deficiency called MPS VI that causes buildup of cellular waste in their body. They need a synthetic form of the enzyme to be injected each week. Supplied by family

Photograph by: Greg Southam

St. Albert – Inside Aleena Sadownyk’s three-year-old body, cellular waste is building up in her finger joints, around a heart valve and enlarging her liver and spleen.

Without a crucial enzyme in her body called glycosaminoglycan to break down that waste, it will continue to build up, restricting her movements, clouding her eyesight and damaging her organs. Without treatment, her life expectancy will dwindle.

Aleena is already exhausted, passed out on the couch of her St. Albert home as her parents tell her story in the hopes the provincial government will listen and fund her $300,000 – to $1-million annual treatment.

Her cause is being championed by Wildrose MLA and health critic Heather Forsyth who has written the government asking it to help.

“It’s devastating,” said her father Dane Sadownyk, speaking both of his daughter’s diagnosis of the rare Maroteaux-Lamy Syndrome and of waiting for the provincial health department to review the case and decide if it will cover the cost.

“You’re on pins and needles,” Dane said. “You know there’s a treatment there and it’s just a matter of her being able to receive it.”

While there is no cure, a synthetic enzyme called Naglazyme is approved in the United States. Through weekly hours-long infusions, Naglazyme can break down the cellular waste building in up a patient’s body. Patients need to be on the enzyme-replacement therapy for life, but symptoms won’t worsen.

Even though it isn’t yet approved for use in Canada, seven other children with MPS VI are receiving the treatment after their families successfully lobbied their governments in B.C., Saskatchewan, Ontario and Quebec to cover the cost. The provinces only gave coverage after public awareness campaigns, said Andrew McFadyen, whose son Isaac was diagnosed when he was 18 months old.

It took six months to get funding for Isaac’s treatment which stopped the progression of the disorder, made his skin and hair soft again, and shrunk down his swollen organs. But the treatment won’t reverse the damage already done to Isaac’s eyes, give his shoulders full range of motion or allow his hands to make a fist, since his fingers clawed up.

“It was tough,” McFadyen said from Ontario. The Sadownyk family contacted him for help when their request for funding through the Alberta Rare Disease Funding Program was turned down. “The only thing that works is public advocacy campaigns. Once the public understands that the public health system has the ability to look after a very sick child and they’re not, then action gets demanded.”

Isaac is now nine and heading into Grade 4. This type of enzyme deficiency doesn’t cause compounds to build up in the brain. McFadyen wants Aleena to have a chance to grow up too.

“I have all the hope in the world that this will shift things and prompt a decision,” he said.

The province currently has a funding application from the family through the Short-term Exceptional Drug Therapy Program, which provides six months of treatment.

“My heart goes out to the Sadownyk family. I know they want to do everything they can to help their daughter,” Health Minister Fred Horne said in a statement. “As a politician, I don’t get directly involved in assessing which drugs would be funded through that process — and appropriately leave that assessment to medical experts. Department officials will continue to support the application process, a clinical review is underway now and I understand we expect a response soon.”

It can’t come soon enough for the Sadownyks. Aleena was in gymnastics this past spring and couldn’t grip the bars or kneel on all fours because of stiffness in her hands and knees. Nor can she properly grasp a crayon.

“It’s traumatizing for her,” said her mother Laura Sadownyk. Aleena doesn’t fully understand her condition, but she certainly doesn’t enjoy all the doctor appointments.

“We don’t know how fast it will progress in her,” Laura said. “We need the minister to accept the funding request.”

jsinnema@edmontonjournal.com

twitter.com/jodiesinnema

© Copyright (c) The Edmonton Journal

Alberta Toddler Awaiting Funding For Life Sustaining Treatment

ALBERTA TODDLER AWAITING FUNDING FOR LIFE-SUSTAINING TREATMENT

St. Albert Toddler Diagnosed With Ultra-Rare Condition; Treatment Already Being Funded In Numerous Provinces

Alberta Health is currently considering an application for exceptional funding of an expensive life-sustaining treatment required by an Alberta toddler.  Three year-old Aleena Sadownyk was recently diagnosed with MPS VI, and requires the life-sustaining treatment immediately in order to halt further progression of her devastating disease.  Alberta Health has already denied funding for the treatment through the Alberta Rare Diseases Funding Program.  They are now reviewing a second application through the Short Term Exceptional Drug Therapy (STEDT) program.  While Aleena needs to begin treatment immediately, there has been no timeline set for a decision from Alberta Health.

Aleena suffers from a rare enzyme deficiency called MPS VI (also known as Maroteaux-Lamy Syndrome).  Sufferers of MPS VI lack an enzyme in their blood that breaks down cellular waste in the body called glycosaminoglycan (GAG).  These GAGs build up in the bones, tissues, organs, and muscles of affected individuals and lead to many devastating symptoms including heart and airway disease, corneal clouding, stiffening of the joints, shortened stature, and premature death.  To date, there are 9 children suffering from the disease in Canada and roughly 1,100 worldwide.

While there is no known cure for MPS VI, a treatment does exist.  Naglazyme is an Enzyme-Replacement Therapy (ERT) designed to provide patients with a synthetic version of the enzyme they are lacking by infusing small doses into the patient’s bloodstream on a weekly basis.  Produced by Biomarin, the treatment for this orphan disease can range from $300,000 per year for a small individual to $1 million per year for a young adult.  Due to the lack of an orphan drug policy in Canada, Naglazyme is only available to Canadian patients through the Federal Government’s Special Access Program (SAP).  It is being used for patients in Ontario, British Columbia, Saskatchewan, and Quebec through the SAP and is funded by the Provincial governments respectively.  Currently, Naglazyme has been approved in numerous countries worldwide, including the United States, the European Union, and Australia.

In Canada, there are numerous precedents for the life-sustaining treatment to be funded.  The first approved case took place in Ontario where the parents of 9 year-old Isaac McFadyen, residents of Campbellford, Ontario, successfully lobbied the Government to fund the expensive Enzyme Replacement Therapy for him when he was diagnosed in 2006.  After a very public campaign to secure funding, Isaac has been receiving his weekly infusions at The Hospital For Sick Children in Toronto for 7 years.  Since then, numerous other provinces have used the precedent set by the McFadyen case and have approved the same treatment for their patients, most recently in 2012 in Saskatchewan and 2011 in Ontario.

Prior to starting treatment, Isaac suffered from severe compression of his spinal cord that required the removal of a piece of his skull and a portion of his vertebrae.  In addition, Isaac endured numerous other surgeries to treat complications of the advancing disease in his body.   Since beginning his weekly infusions, Isaac’s liver and spleen have reduced back down to a normal size, his rate of growth has increased, his heart function has improved, and his heart valve disease has stabilized.  Furthermore, Isaac has had no further progression of his bone and joint disease, airway disease, and compression of his spinal cord.

Naturally, the Sadownyk family has been devastated by the diagnosis of their daughter, Aleena.  Laura Sadownyk, Aleena’s mother, expressed her fears about the length of time the government is taking to render its decision.  “It’s very agonizing to wait patiently, especially after hearing the experts in this field talk about early diagnosis and treatment being the best way to prevent the onset of a lot of the effects of this disease.”

McFadyen also notes how important it is to get children affected with MPS VI started on weekly infusions at a young age, and is also frustrated by the process put in place to review rare disease funding in the province.  “We know that this treatment can slow down or even halt the disease progression in individuals so it’s very important to begin treatment as soon as possible after diagnosis.  Aleena has already been approved by the Special Access Program to receive the treatment she so desperately needs.  The only thing stopping her from beginning that treatment is the lack of funding by the Province.”  Adds Sadownyk, “It’s heartbreaking that the fate of our daughter rests in the hands of bureaucrats.”

McFadyen believes that the time for action from the Redford government is now.  “The Provincial government has the opportunity to do the right thing and ensure that Aleena receives the treatment she so desperately needs.  It’s the role of government to protect and ensure fair and equitable access to Health Care for all Canadians, regardless of which Province they happen to live it.  The Isaac Foundation is calling on this government to take action and save the life of this child.  She can’t afford to wait.”

#  #  #

For more information about this topic, or to schedule an interview to discuss, please call Andrew at 613-328-9136 or email Andrew at mcfadyena@me.com.

Attached Photo – Aleena Sadownyk, Age 3.  St. Albert, AB
4d5f8030f60e11e2ad2b22000ae80c6b_7

Foundation Calls For Commitment of Timely and Accessible Outcome for Families

Mt. Sinai Takes Steps To Develop Potential Treatment for MPS I Patients

Foundation Calls For Commitment of Timely and Accessible Outcome for Families 

Isaac Foundation Logo - Red and Blue - Hi-Res copy

On this International MPS Awareness Day, The Icahn School of Medicine at Mt. Sinai announced a partnership agreement with bene pharmaChem to conduct clinical studies on the use of pentosan polysulfate (PPS) in patients suffering from MPS I disease.  With this announcement, The Isaac Foundation is calling on Mt. Sinai and bene pharmaChem to immediately commit to ensuring that such studies take place in a timely fashion and that any marketed treatment is made readily available, accessible, and affordable for children and adult MPS sufferers alike.

Sufferers of MPS lack an enzyme in their blood that breaks down cellular waste in the body called glycosaminoglycan (GAG).  These GAGs build up in the bones, tissues, organs, and muscles of affected individuals and lead to many devastating symptoms including heart and airway disease, corneal clouding, stiffening of the joints, shortened stature, and premature death.

PPS has been shown to reduce the chronic inflammation associated with the majority of MPS cases; inflammation that leads to many devastating physical symptoms for sufferers.  The major research on PPS was completed by Dr. Cologera Simonaro at Mt. Sinai University and supported in part by grants from The Isaac Foundation for MPS Treatment and Research.

The Isaac Foundation has taken an active role in ensuring an in-depth and proper study be conducted on the potential use of PPS as an adjunct therapy for patients suffering from all MPS diseases and has led the advocacy efforts to bring pharmaceutical giant Johnson & Johnson on board to help with such study.  As a direct result of these advocacy efforts, Johnson & Johnson created an advisory panel consisting of the top MPS clinicians and researchers in North America.  This panel is set to meet on May 20th with an aim to look at the data compiled by Dr. Simonaro and thoroughly discuss the potential impact of PPS on the patient community worldwide.

With today’s announcement by Mt. Sinai, Andrew McFadyen, the Executive Director of The Isaac Foundation, wants to ensure that the best interests of MPS sufferers remain at the forefront of any discussion and advancement of PPS as a treatment option.  McFadyen states, “We’re being very cautious about today’s news for a number of reasons.  All along, we have felt the best path forward was through a collaborative and very scientific approach to the current data, especially given the fact that there is already an FDA approved medication, albeit for a different indication, and it is among the least invasive administrations, oral administration.  We received assurances from Johnson & Johnson that their commitment to the study of PPS would always be patient focused, and all decisions made moving forward would be based on a patient-centered model.  Essentially, they committed to moving forward based on best science for our kids and without a marketing and profit-taking strategy.  With this announcement from Mt. Sinai today, we’re calling on them to publicly commit to the same goals.”

In the United States, under the Orphan Drug Act, new treatments for rare diseases receive years of market exclusivity, which leads to the marketing of some of the most expensive drugs on the planet.  McFadyen wants to ensure this doesn’t become the case for any marketed PPS treatment: “While it’s fantastic to see movement on the clinical trial front for these treatments, it won’t do patients any good if the development is lengthy, the administration is burdensome, and the medication is approved and marketed at an unaffordable price point. Reformulation of approved drugs via changes in administration or dosing accompanied by exponential price increases has been seen before. Those are the circumstances we were trying to avoid in seeking to work with Johnson & Johnson and their already approved drug Elmiron®. On just the price point issue alone, for an adjunct therapy (MPS I, II, and VI already have approved high dollar therapies), in Canada, it could come down to fighting Provincial governments to approve yet another expensive treatment, while in the United States it will be up to families to fight with their insurance providers.”

McFadyen sums up his request simply.  “The lives of our kids should never hinge on dollars and cents.  This is why we are calling on Mt. Sinai to commit, in the same manner that Johnson & Johnson did, to ensuring any marketed treatment for our patients is accessible and affordable.  If moving forward is truly and solely patient focused, I’m sure Mt. Sinai would be happy to make such a commitment for our kids.”

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For more information about this topic, or to talk with The Isaac Foundation, please call Andrew at 613-328-9136 or email Andrew at andrew@theisaacfoundation.com.