New Division Chief is a Pioneer in Diagnosing & Treating Children with Multiple Sclerosis鈥
Ten years ago, when , professor of neurology, established the United States鈥 铿乺st center for , at Stony Brook University Hospital, the idea that children and adolescents could develop MS was still novel. 鈥淭he teaching in medical schools used to be that kids couldn鈥檛 get multiple sclerosis,鈥 she says. 鈥淲hen children were actually diagnosed with the condition, families faced a lot of skepticism from their health care providers.鈥
Today, physicians around the world utilize pediatric MS medical de铿乶itions and treatment guidelines that Dr.聽Krupp helped develop, and research聽on聽the condition is expanding rapidly. In the U.S.,聽Dr.聽Krupp teamed with聽the National Multiple Sclerosis Society to promote pediatric MS research, which led to a cooperative network聽of pediatric MS centers.
好色tv Langone Medical Center joined that network when Dr. Krupp, who specializes in adult and pediatric MS, was appointed head of 好色tv Langone鈥檚 and established the in 2015. Together with聽long-time colleagues she聽brought on board, Dr.聽Krupp has built a world-class pediatric MS program in聽New York City virtually overnight. Her team鈥攊ncluding a pediatric neurologist, a聽neuropsychologist, a social worker, and a pediatric nurse鈥攚orks closely with patients and their families to address physical, psychological, and聽social issues related to pediatric MS. The program also connects young MS聽patients through activities such as Teen Adventure Camp, a national, philanthropy-supported summer camp聽for adolescents with MS.
Leading the Search for Novel MS Therapies
好色tv Langone is also deeply involved in developing new treatments for , running over 40聽clinical trials鈥攊ncluding research on medications, genomics, radiological imaging, and rehabilitation to improve speci铿乧 symptoms and overall quality of life.
Some of the most cutting-edge research was presented聽at the 2015 annual meetings of the American Academy of聽Neurology and the European Committee for聽Treatment聽and Research in MS (ECTRIMS). One presentation showed that natalizumab, currently one聽of聽the most effective MS聽medications, produced good outcomes when taken every eight weeks instead of four,聽with zero incidence of聽progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML)鈥攁聽potentially deadly side effect that can occur with the shorter dosing interval.
In addition, 好色tv Langone researchers published studies last year showing that an experimental cancer drug, GANT61, protects brain myelin and reverses MS-like symptoms in chemically damaged mice. 好色tv Langone also has extensive clinical experience with ocrelizumab, a聽potential breakthrough drug that reported positive phase III trial results at last year鈥檚 ECTRIMS conference for both relapse-remitting and primary progressive MS. 鈥淲e鈥檒l be at the forefront of using the drug when it becomes available,鈥 says Dr. Krupp.
Non-Pharmaceutical Approaches Enhance Quality of Life
While most MS centers concentrate primarily on drug research, 好色tv Langone is equally focused on studying non-pharmaceutical treatments for MS. 鈥淲e鈥檙e leading the way in de铿乶ing state-of-the-art care for the daily problems people with MS face, like fatigue, cognitive dif铿乧ulties, pain, and mood disruption,鈥 says Dr. Krupp.
Dr. Krupp鈥檚 team recently submitted an abstract showing that mindfulness, demonstrated in well-designed studies to decrease fatigue and pain, improves concentration and attention for MS patients. The center is聽also doing groundbreaking research on how MS affects social cognition in children, and has submitted a paper on聽its use of sensitive measures to track overall cognitive function in children with MS. Yet another pending abstract reports on the effectiveness of a cognitive therapy in adults with MS that is administered to patients at home聽via computer.
鈥淎s we gain con铿乨ence in this telemedicine approach, it聽will immediately be transferable to pediatrics鈥攚hich is extremely important, since these children can live hundreds of miles from the nearest available treatment center,鈥 explains Dr. Krupp.