The Canadian Press - ONLINE EDITION
Give foreign 'liberation' clinics a miss, Quebec doctors groups tell MS patients
By: Sheryl Ubelacker, Health Reporter, The Canadian Press
The Quebec College of Physicians is warning multiple sclerosis patients not to seek the "liberation" treatment at clinics
outside Canada because the procedure remains scientifically unproven and
may have unknown risks.
At the same time, the professional doctors organization assured MS patients that anyone who develops complications after taking
part in such medical tourism would be cared for by doctors at home.
A growing wave of Canadians with the debilitating neurological disorder are travelling to clinics in the United States, Europe, India
and elsewhere for the so-called liberation treatment, which is based on
an Italian vascular specialist's hypothesis that MS is linked to blocked
and twisted neck veins.
Dr. Paolo Zamboni believes these vein anomalies, which he calls chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency, or CCSVI, allow
blood-borne iron deposits to damage brain cells. He argues that opening
blockages in the veins with a tiny balloon can alleviate MS symptoms.
MS has long been considered an autoimmune disease. But since late last year, when Zamboni's procedure first made headlines, an
untold number of MS patients have sought out private clinics abroad,
paying thousands of dollars apiece for the treatment.
"I have received numerous messages from patients afflicted with multiple sclerosis ... and I understand their need to
know where science stands with respect to this subject," college
president and CEO Dr. Charles Bernard told a Montreal news conference
Tuesday. "The college is saying to them today that we need to wait for
the results of studies that are currently underway before generalizing
Professor Zamboni's treatments.
"In particular, we are recommending to these individuals that they refrain from consulting any medical tourism clinics offering
these treatments prematurely with little regard for their effectiveness
and side-effects."
Liberation therapy is not available in Canada, and Health Minister Leona Aglukkaq announced three months ago that the federal
government is awaiting results of several studies now underway before
deciding whether pan-Canadian clinical trials should go ahead.
The Quebec College of Physicians is also taking the wait-and-see approach, said the group's secretary, Dr. Yves Robert.
"Our message is a message of caution," Robert said in an interview. "Before saying it is a magical treatment, we have to have
more scientific evidence within a controlled framework."
Robert said balloon angioplasty — a long-used technique for widening coronary arteries to prevent heart attack and stroke — may
have poorly documented risks when used in thinner-walled veins, which
are more vulnerable to damage and hence to blood clots.
"So there are complications," he said. "And the link between the occlusion (blockage) of the veins and multiple sclerosis has
not been conclusive."
In fact, several international studies have found that narrowed neck veins can occur in people without MS, said Dr. Marc
Girard, president of the Quebec Association of Neurologists. And among
people with the disease, such venous blockages are not always present
when symptoms begin.
"According to preliminary data generated by current research, it would also seem that the venous obstructions appear late
into the progression of the illness," Girard said. "As such, these
findings show that the obstructions are not the cause of multiple
sclerosis, as Professor Zamboni's hypothesis suggests."
In other words, no one knows whether blocked neck veins cause MS, are a result of MS or have no association with the disease at
all.
"So in our view, for the medical community, it raises many more questions than it provides answers," said Robert.
Results from North American studies funded by the Canadian and American MS societies, and now underway, should answer some
of those questions and help determine how research aimed at validating
the procedure should go forward.
College director Dr. Guy Dumas, who has had MS for more than 20 years, said he understands too well the hope that Zamboni's
proposed treatment has generated among patients.
"However, I urge them to exercise prudence," he said. "Patients should not be abandoning their current medications in favour
of pursuing an unrecognized treatment. We must be sensible and patient.
We must wait for the results of the research presently being carried out
before taking any other action."
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