Emerging Thoughts on Lupus: From Causes to Diagnostics to Treatments

Living with Lupus can be stressful and frightening.  We at ImmunaRelief know that our patients are often left wondering why they acquired Lupus in the first place and what they can do to achieve their highest quality of life.  You are not alone – an estimated 5 million people worldwide are living with Lupus.

In this blog post, we hope to offer you some comfort by discussing some of the amazing research into causes, diagnosis, and treatment of Lupus with the goal of helping Lupus patients.

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Causes:

After receiving a Lupus diagnosis, many wonder “why did I get this?”  Current thinking suggests a combination of genetic and environmental factors leads to Lupus, though we often cannot point to a single cause.  Recent research by Melissa Wilson PhD, an evolutionary biologist at Arizona State University, attempts to explain an interesting characteristic of many autoimmune diseases such as Lupus – women are about four times as likely to be diagnosed than are men.

Through her theory termed the “pregnancy-compensation hypothesis”, Wilson suggests that a woman’s immune system evolved to engage in a complicated interplay with a potential placenta.  According to her theory, a woman’s immune system needs to tamp down its activity so as not to reject a potential placenta and developing baby.  Yet to compensate for the immune system’s decreased activity in relation to a potential placenta, other aspects of the immune system must ramp up to defend against potential infections.  According to Wilson, the female immune system was designed in this way with the expectation that women of child-bearing age would be almost constantly pregnant. 

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However, in modern society, this is often not the case.  Without a placenta and developing baby, the female immune system can get confused.  It’s as if the immune system were expecting to engage in a tug of war with the placenta, and in the placenta’s absence, the immune system might turn its pent-up strength onto itself, leading to autoimmune disease.

Wilson’s theory helps us to understand why women of child-bearing age are much more likely to acquire an autoimmune disease such as Lupus.  Excitingly, her thinking might lead to therapeutic interventions helping to prevent such autoimmune diseases.  For example, it’s plausible we could find a medical intervention that mimics aspects of the placenta to give the non-pregnant female immune system an adversary in its “tug-of-war”, such that it does not turn against itself.

For more information on Wilson’s “pregnancy-compensation hypothesis,” consult this recent article in The Atlantic.

 

Diagnostics:

Person in labcoat holding a tube of red liquid

Diagnosing Lupus is not straight-forward.  Many of our patients can likely relate to the tiring, nerve-racking process of receiving their diagnosis, where they may have seen multiple doctors over the course of months or years and been subjected to numerous diagnostic tests without clear answers.  The truth is that Lupus is a complex disease that manifests in various ways, and there is currently no one diagnostic test that pinpoints a Lupus diagnosis.

Progentec, a company out of Oklahoma City, is hoping to change this.  Progentec was recently awarded a Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) grant from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease to further study their blood test for Lupus biomarkers.  Their blood test aims to help in the initial diagnosis of Lupus, monitor a Lupus patient’s response to medical therapy, and help predict how a Lupus patient might respond to a certain therapy.

Progentec’s biomarker test has great potential to increase efficiency and effectiveness in Lupus care.  For more information about Progentec’s work, visit their company’s website:

https://www.progentec.com

Treatment:

Drawing of a DNA Helix

Many of the treatments for autoimmune diseases such as Lupus are a bit non-specific and have actually been repurposed for use in autoimmune diseases from their original indications to treat other diseases.  For example, Plaquenil was originally developed to treat Malaria; Methotrexate is a chemotherapeutic used in some cancer treatment protocols; and prednisone is a steroid with broad and systemic anti-inflammatory effects.

Given the lack of precision with current autoimmune drugs, patients are justified in hoping for more intelligently designed drugs with specificity for their unique condition and with the potential to offer fewer side effects.  Resolve Therapeutics is on a mission to provide such a solution for patients battling Lupus.

Resolve Therapeutics has recently announced that it has completed enrollment in a phase 2A clinical trial testing safety and efficacy of its potential Lupus drug RSLV-132.

RSLV-132 works by attacking the very molecules that lead to inflammation and symptoms in Lupus.  In short, one of the molecular causes of Lupus includes genetic material such as DNA and RNA existing where it should not – outside of the cell for example.  The presence of this DNA and RNA can trick the immune system into fighting these molecules as if they were a foreign infection.  RSLV-132 specifically aims to destroy the misplaced RNA, in the hopes of decreasing some of the inflammatory symptoms of Lupus.

News of Resolve Therapeutics’ progress in their clinical trial should be hopeful for Lupus patients, as it represents a step towards improved treatments.  For more information on RSLV-132 and its clinical trial, consult a recent article from Business Wire:

https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20190722005093/en/Resolve-Therapeutics-Announces-Completion-Enrollment-Phase-2a

Conclusion:

Hands holding the word hope up to the clouds

Living with Lupus can be difficult.  We still have an abundance of questions about various aspects of this disease that has the potential to affect many different body parts and organ systems.  However, there is much cutting-edge research looking into how we can improve the lives of those battling Lupus.  Through this blog post exploring some of this exciting work, we aspire to give you hope for a future where we are better able to care for patients with Lupus.

 

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41 comments

  • Genetics is a main reason for autoimmune disorders in my family. I have lupus, my mother had lupus, and my maternal grandfather has lupus. I have cousins with RA and interstitial cystitis. My daughter has psoriasis and psoriatic arthritis. My son has neuropticmyelitis

    Sandra Jacques
  • I was diagnosed with Lupus,years after symptoms started, sent to many Doctors and hospitals it took years for diagnosis, once diagnosed, treatment with medication wasn’t effective as I rejected many of the medications! I’m now finding out that my organs are severely damaged, my heart is actually dead on the right side and left isn’t strong enough to keep me alive, waiting for pacemaker defibrillator to be implanted, my kidneys work when they want to so I self clathrate, the only thing that seems to be undamaged are my lungs and I’m a smoker for over 50yrs! I know my time is limited, and cure for me doubtful ,I’ve found relief in the last few years by using cannabis products! I make myself so I know exactly what is in the products I use! I replaced many of my baking,frying, and basic cooking to using the butter I make, I’ve seen it reduce my inflammation,pain and brain fog! All of which were getting to a point of being intolerable, to the point of not wanting to live! I’m a great grandmother, grandmother and mother, so believe when I say I was ready to try anything. I studied,read everything I could find, I even talked to my family about the end of life, when I started the cannabis treatment I was so desperate, I thought why not, well I’ve been doing the things I love to do again, no I’m not running races, but I’m able to do my own showering,making my bed, and the simple things I need to do for myself. I refuse pain medication always have as I get severely ill with any of them. I’m trying to survive to the best of my ability, don’t be afraid to try anything out there as our choices are limited! Love and peace to all who suffer Lupus 💜☮️

    Robin Pickens
  • Thank you for that information I suffer with lupus and fibromyalgia and arthritis ,type 2 diebetic

    Cynthia Hullaby
  • I have Lupus and Fybromiagia. Always in pain somewhere. I hope they can figure out what treatments can be done!

    Mary Agnew
  • I JUST found out that I have lupus. Also hypothyroidism.I’ve lost weight. I’m down to 93 pounds. I want to sleep ALL of the time. Im depressed. My memory is so bad. People get kinda upset when when I tell them something twice. It makes my angry and sad. I’m on anxiety medicine and medicine for depression Oh I’ve had seizures since I got pregnant with my first child. That was 22 years ago. Ive had a crainiotomy for the scar tissue I got from the mini stroke I had when I got pregnant. I take 15 seizure medicines a day. I have no idea what to do. I’m confused,depressed,people don’t understand why I’m this way,and I don’t know why I have all of these problems. All I can do is pray and give it to God.

    Stacy orndorff

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