November
8, 2006
Copaxone
To Be Studied in ALS Overseas
The Israeli
pharmaceutical company Teva
Neuroscience, developer
of glatiramer acetate (Copaxone),
will conduct a large-scale
trial of the drug in people
with amyotrophic
lateral sclerosis (ALS)
in five European countries,
the United Kingdom and Israel.
Copaxone, approved to treat
multiple sclerosis, is thought
to alter the immune system
and dampen the immune response.
The drug was recently found
safe and well tolerated in
ALS patients in a small pilot
study at the Eleanor and Lou
Gehrig MDA/ALS Center at Columbia
University in New York.
Paul Gordon,
the center’s co-director,
says he will wait for the
results of Teva’s trial
before conducting further
U.S. testing.
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