Sneezy season

The immune system is a mysterious thing. Protective overall, and yet sometimes it backfires. A dramatic illustration of the immune system going wrong was the TGN1412 disaster: six young men given a monoclonal antibody in a clinical trial ended up in ICU with multiple organ failure. One is now showing signs of an aggressive cancer.

Less dramatic, but more aggravating to more people on a more regular basis, are your run-of-the-mill allergies. Almost everyone I know is allergic to something: peanuts, cats, dust, pineapple. I personally have some mild allergies to some animals, but a major reaction to dust mites. When I got an allergy skin test, the swelling that appeared in response to dust mites moved beyond the realm of a few millimetres, which they usually measure, and looked disturbingly like a fat worm under my skin.

It’s bewildering, too, the different things that people say about what causes allergies. It seems that no one can agree on whether it’s over- or under-exposure to the allergen that causes the immune system to go nuts and attack a harmless molecule. Now it’s been suggested that the window of opportunity for avoiding the nastiness of an allergy is pretty small: sometime between six months and nine months of age, at least for food-related allergies.

Personally I don’t think there’s a straight answer to this one and it just highlights the intricacy of the body, which can work against us or in our favour, but is fascinating regardless.

Spotlight on cystic fibrosis

This article was originally published in issue 4 of the MMIM newsletter.

Associate Professor John Wilson began his career with a science degree, followed by a medical degree and a PhD. After working in the United Kingdom for two years, he returned to Australia and is now the head of the Cystic Fibrosis Service, Department of Allergy, Immunology and Respiratory Medicine at the Alfred Hospital, Melbourne.

Cystic fibrosis (CF) is a life-limiting condition characterised by respiratory failure and malnutrition. Although it is caused by an abnormality in a single gene, the expression of the abnormality is highly variable. CF patients’ symptoms range from negligible to severe lung impairment. It follows that other factors must affect how the disease progresses. Wilson is particularly interested in how factors such as gastroesophageal reflux, nutrition, and bone density interact with the cystic fibrosis gene. For example, genes encoding proteins involved in the manufacture of advanced glycation end-products (AGE) are important in diabetic nephropathy, but they also appear to play a role in causing early kidney failure in CF.

Wilson says that MMIM is “very powerful because it helps us direct our research”, which saves time and money by “avoiding fishing expeditions” and ultimately helps his patients. Because Wilson and his colleagues are trying to balance many factors in order to optimise treatment, computer-based analysis is essential. “Constructing models helps us weight the importance of different factors,” Wilson explains.

For example, Wilson’s research team found surprising interactions between the most common mutation of the CF gene, ΔF508 (either one or two copies), and bone mineral density (BMD). Carrying this mutation and being male are “powerful risk factors” for osteoporosis, independent of pancreatic disease and vitamin D malabsorption. Because osteoporosis is considered to be predominantly a disease of women, this means that we need to be “extra-vigilant” about BMD screening for men with CF. It also has implications for children with CF, who should have BMD augmented to prevent osteoporosis before it occurs.

This type of work, Wilson says, “will improve the health of Australians” – both with CF and with other conditions. In his role at the Alfred he still sees patients regularly, and is committed to practical research that will “get to the clinical interface” and make a real difference for patients. His approach is to address current clinical guidelines with up-to-date research: it is always important to “evaluate evidence and challenge icons” and determine whether there is a better way to approach treatment.

His overall plan for management of CF is to create an electronic health record, which can be “interrogated” to retrieve information, and “injected” with management plans, creating individual goals for therapy. Treatment can be accelerated if goals are not being met, or wound back if they are ahead of schedule.

Some of the most dramatic advances in CF survival rates in the last two decades have been relatively simple changes, such as an increase to twice daily physiotherapy, and a shift from postural drainage (which causes reflux) to other techniques to clear airway secretions. By studying the current techniques and analysing them statistically (with the help of the MMIM database), Wilson and his research team can make further advances that make a real and timely difference to patients.

Suddenly suspicious journalists: a pot/kettle scenario?

Washington Post journalist Rob Stein has cited the recent drama of Woo-Suk Hwang’s data fabrication as a reason for increased skepticism among science reporters. Firstly, I find myself a little disbelieving about his statement, since (unfortunately) data fabrication is all too tempting (and hence common). Someone reading scientific media regularly would be well aware of this, and 2005 was a particularly bad year for it.

Secondly, it’s usually the general media’s fault that science is grossly misrepresented to the public. Any glance through the health and science sections of so-called quality media (such as Time magazine) will reveal poor understanding and explanation of scientific issues. In Australia, at least, reliance on press releases is common, as is sensationalist reporting of preliminary trials (usually ones run by pharmaceutical companies). The media doctor website keeps track of several Australian publications’ health articles.

However, Stein is correct in stating that journal editors are often hard-pressed to detect fabrication. Realistically, scientists will fabricate data if they feel they can get away with it, so maybe what’s needed is more verification of data (by independent researchers) before we get all excited and hail the next cloning god.

Agricultural revolution

Nationals Senator Ron Boswell recently dissed CSIRO for cutting funding to rural industry research by 5%.

(On a petty note, I’m wondering what the difference between the “livestock and wool industry”. Aren’t sheep livestock? But that’s not really the point…)

I agree with him that there should be more research funding, not less, dedicated to renewable resources. But I feel it’s a little incongruous to call for more research into agriculture as it currently exists in Australia at the same time as preaching about renewable resources. There aren’t many crops in Australia that are actually suitable to our arid climate. Cattle and sheep die in the drought; farms require subsidies for water and nitrogen and phosphate fertilisers to be economically viable; and many crops grown in Australia (such as cotton and rice) are extremely water-thirsty.

As mentioned in a post last year, Professor Michael Archer (Dean of Science, UNSW) is a fan of harnessing native flora and fauna for economic gain, rather than continuing to pound our unique environment with European crops. He goes into great detail in his book Going Native (co-written with Bob Beale, ISBN 0733615228). From kangaroo meat (despite some unresolved issues) to native grains as crops (kurrajong and several wattle species are just a few examples), agriculture in Australia needs to change.

So maybe Boswell is right and agriculture does need more research funding. It just shouldn’t focus on maintaining the status quo — we need an agricultural revolution.

Still in the Stone Age down under

Debate is heating up in Australia about the use of mifepristone (RU-486) for medical (as opposed to surgical) abortions. Tony Abbott, who is clearly highly qualified to have an opinion about (a) medicine (he has an Economics/Law double degree) and (b) women (he quite obviously isn’t one), has decided that he should be more cautious than the Australian Medical Association, the Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists, and the World Health Organization and keep mifepristone off the shelves in Australia. Well, that’s his story, anyway. Unfortunately for Mr Abbott, people aren’t stupid and are quite able to see that his views on mifepristone are just thinly veiled anti-abortion views (which go hand in hand with his anti-stem cell research views).

All research and medical opinion points to mifepristone’s safety and efficacy in inducing termination, when combined with a prostaglandin analogue such as misoprostol (which is already available in Australia for other uses). From the reading I’ve done, I can’t see how medical abortion is any less safe than a spontaneous abortion. Both can lead to complications, such as incomplete abortion, which can be taken care of with medical help.

It’s insulting to doctors for Abbott to suggest that they would not be able to deal with the complications that can arise. If they can deal with a miscarriage, they can deal with a medical abortion too. And it’s insulting to suggest that they would prescribe mifepristone unwisely. Any doctor prescribing it would, of course, be there to deal with any adverse effects, same as they would be for any medication they prescribed. Rural doctors, in particular, should be offended at the implication that they can’t handle complications of pregnancy, when they can probably deal with them better than some over-specialised urban doctors. Should they be recommending that all female regional inhabitants relocate to cities for pregnancy care?

Abortion isn’t nice or pleasant but it’s a reality that some women find themselves facing for a variety of reasons. Whether the underlying cause is their own stupidity or the cruelty of rape, no woman should find herself facing the alternative of an unsafe abortion, or an unwanted pregnancy that will produce an unwanted child, who might never receive adequate care or love. And medical abortion makes it easier — some might say too easy, but I feel that the option needs to be there for women in remote areas, or from communities where abortion is not acceptable, and going to the doctor for a pill and pretending that you’ve had a miscarriage might be your only option.

It’s just mind-boggling that this decision is in the hands of one man who’s clearly biased, rather than where it belongs: in the hands of each individual woman.