Berliner Boersenzeitung - Research on multiple sclerosis wins 'Oscars of science'

EUR -
AED 4.093938
AFN 78.583086
ALL 98.028692
AMD 430.600233
ANG 1.994759
AOA 1022.079983
ARS 1273.430123
AUD 1.741515
AWG 2.00905
AZN 1.899229
BAM 1.94552
BBD 2.249414
BDT 135.364744
BGN 1.956714
BHD 0.420123
BIF 3271.32339
BMD 1.114591
BND 1.446656
BOB 7.698323
BRL 6.321517
BSD 1.114113
BTN 95.244734
BWP 15.065396
BYN 3.645935
BYR 21845.97562
BZD 2.237875
CAD 1.559224
CDF 3199.989995
CHF 0.935258
CLF 0.027458
CLP 1053.70095
CNY 8.035645
CNH 8.038634
COP 4662.053802
CRC 564.318188
CUC 1.114591
CUP 29.536651
CVE 110.906104
CZK 24.903343
DJF 198.085479
DKK 7.461114
DOP 65.653715
DZD 148.43807
EGP 55.871534
ERN 16.718859
ETB 147.687571
FJD 2.53497
FKP 0.838643
GBP 0.839916
GEL 3.054414
GGP 0.838643
GHS 13.765629
GIP 0.838643
GMD 80.81211
GNF 9646.781977
GTQ 8.553802
GYD 233.08838
HKD 8.709991
HNL 28.97975
HRK 7.536532
HTG 145.779712
HUF 402.65743
IDR 18381.159303
ILS 3.965402
IMP 0.838643
INR 95.414086
IQD 1460.113677
IRR 46938.200596
ISK 145.92263
JEP 0.838643
JMD 177.601568
JOD 0.790584
JPY 162.626614
KES 144.061263
KGS 97.471376
KHR 4480.654574
KMF 492.095975
KPW 1003.1886
KRW 1560.505279
KWD 0.342741
KYD 0.928494
KZT 568.03853
LAK 24097.449007
LBP 99811.587981
LKR 333.35856
LRD 222.528437
LSL 20.152223
LTL 3.291097
LVL 0.674205
LYD 6.147011
MAD 10.374056
MDL 19.407453
MGA 5055.783316
MKD 61.538345
MMK 2340.055112
MNT 3992.834027
MOP 8.968014
MRU 44.193939
MUR 51.394194
MVR 17.231992
MWK 1933.815063
MXN 21.719028
MYR 4.788324
MZN 71.226495
NAD 20.152218
NGN 1785.931219
NIO 40.961624
NOK 11.595348
NPR 152.391774
NZD 1.896961
OMR 0.429073
PAB 1.114113
PEN 4.107496
PGK 4.533876
PHP 62.209206
PKR 313.72729
PLN 4.265005
PYG 8894.999537
QAR 4.060644
RON 5.107393
RSD 116.613822
RUB 90.282633
RWF 1581.046756
SAR 4.180621
SBD 9.296163
SCR 16.161751
SDG 669.315748
SEK 10.911162
SGD 1.449007
SHP 0.875893
SLE 25.305293
SLL 23372.407676
SOS 636.992606
SRD 40.7734
STD 23069.774923
SVC 9.74849
SYP 14491.834225
SZL 20.15221
THB 37.238883
TJS 11.486208
TMT 3.90664
TND 3.365399
TOP 2.610487
TRY 43.296314
TTD 7.557069
TWD 33.726439
TZS 3006.612171
UAH 46.245634
UGX 4076.460311
USD 1.114591
UYU 46.354857
UZS 14420.01983
VES 105.001372
VND 28891.860053
VUV 133.745898
WST 3.094337
XAF 652.509194
XAG 0.034583
XAU 0.000349
XCD 3.012237
XDR 0.81882
XOF 641.450893
XPF 119.331742
YER 272.075566
ZAR 20.132906
ZMK 10032.656842
ZMW 29.946764
ZWL 358.897716
  • RBGPF

    1.5000

    64.5

    +2.33%

  • NGG

    1.2600

    71.29

    +1.77%

  • CMSC

    -0.0500

    22.05

    -0.23%

  • SCS

    0.0000

    10.5

    0%

  • GSK

    0.5241

    37.665

    +1.39%

  • BTI

    1.2650

    42.635

    +2.97%

  • BP

    0.1150

    29.745

    +0.39%

  • BCC

    0.8350

    91.825

    +0.91%

  • AZN

    0.8500

    68.81

    +1.24%

  • RELX

    0.5000

    54.54

    +0.92%

  • RIO

    -0.1000

    62.65

    -0.16%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0900

    10.7

    -0.84%

  • BCE

    -0.0750

    21.555

    -0.35%

  • VOD

    0.1800

    9.45

    +1.9%

  • JRI

    0.1400

    12.88

    +1.09%

  • CMSD

    0.0472

    22.06

    +0.21%

Research on multiple sclerosis wins 'Oscars of science'
Research on multiple sclerosis wins 'Oscars of science' / Photo: Michael Tran - AFP

Research on multiple sclerosis wins 'Oscars of science'

An American neurologist and an Italian epidemiologist whose work revolutionized the treatment of multiple sclerosis on Saturday won a prestigious Breakthrough Prize, the award nicknamed the "Oscars of science."

Text size:

Stephen Hauser and Alberto Ascherio were recognized for their decades researching the debilitating neurodegenerative disease, which affects nearly three million people worldwide and was long considered an impenetrable enigma.

Hauser's work on multiple sclerosis (MS) started more than 45 years ago, when he met a young patient named Andrea, "an extraordinarily talented young woman who was already an attorney" and working at the White House under then-president Jimmy Carter, he told AFP.

"Then MS appeared in an explosive fashion and destroyed her life," he said.

"I remember seeing her, unable to speak, paralyzed on the right side, unable to swallow, and soon, unable to breathe on her own, and I remember thinking that this was the most unfair thing I had ever seen in medicine."

Then 27 years old, he decided to make it his life's work.

- Rough road -

"At the time, we had no treatments for MS. In fact, there was also a pessimism that treatments could ever be developed," said Hauser, now 74 and director of the neuroscience institute at the University of California San Francisco.

Scientists knew the disease, which damages the central nervous system and leads to paralyzing cognitive and motor problems, was caused by the immune system turning on the body.

But they thought the white blood cells known as T cells were the lone culprit.

Hauser questioned that.

Studying the role played in the disease by B cells, another type of white blood cell, he and his colleagues managed to recreate the damage MS causes to the human nervous system in small monkeys known as marmosets.

The US federal body overseeing medical research dismissed the link as "biologically implausible," and turned down their application for funding for a clinical trial.

But Hauser and his team pressed on.

They persuaded pharmaceutical company Genentech to back testing. In 2006, they got resounding results: treatments targeting B cells were associated with "a dramatic, more than 90-percent reduction in brain inflammation," Hauser said.

It was "something of a scope that had never been seen before."

That threw open a door to bring new treatments to market that slow the advance of the disease in many patients.

But it also raised other questions. For example, what would cause our white blood cells to turn against us?

- The virus connection -

That was a question that puzzled Ascherio, today a professor at Harvard.

He decided to investigate why MS mostly affected people in the northern hemisphere.

"The geographical distribution of MS was quite striking," he told AFP.

"MS is very uncommon in tropical countries and near the equator."

That made him wonder whether a virus could be involved.

He and his team carried out a long-term study following millions of young US military recruits.

After nearly 20 years of research, they came up with an answer. In 2022, they confirmed a link between MS and the Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), a common infection responsible for another well-known disease, infectious mononucleosis, or mono.

"Most people infected with EBV will never develop MS," said Ascherio, 72.

But everyone who develops MS has had EBV first.

The discovery still did not explain why MS occurs. But it fuelled hope of finding new treatments and preventive measures for a disease that remains uncurable, and whose current treatments do not work on all patients.

Ascherio's breakthrough could also help treat other conditions.

"We are now trying also to extend our investigation, to investigate the role of viral infection in other neurodegenerative diseases, like Alzheimer's or amyotrophic lateral sclerosis," also known as ALS or Lou Gehrig's disease, he said.

The link remains theoretical for now. But "there is some evidence," he said.

"It's like where we were on MS 20 or 30 years ago."

(U.Gruber--BBZ)