ALS Reversals: What Are They and How Can We Make Them Happen More Often?

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My name is Rick Bedlack. I am a neurologist at Duke University in Durham North Carolina, and I started the Duke ALS Clinic 16 years ago. I am working to empower people with this disease to live longer and better lives and to have a greater role in research. I currently run the ALSUntangled Program (www.alsuntangled.org) and The Northeast ALS Consortium (NEALS) ALS Clinical Research Learning Institute. This is the story of a new program I recently started called ALS Reversals.

ALS is a degenerative disease of motor neurons, typically characterized by progressive muscle weakness, increasing disability, and shortened survivals. It is widely recognized that ALS progression can be variable. It can be variable between patients, with some folks progressing much more slowly than others. It can also be variable within a given patient, with periods where the disease seems to speed up or slow down for a while. Less appreciated is the fact that ALS progression can stop (plateau) or even reverse with significant recovery of lost motor functions.

I encountered my first ALS reversal in July 2011, more than a decade into my career in ALS, while leading an ALSUntangled review of Dean Kraft, an energy healer. On Kraft’s website was a video about a person named Nelda Buss, who was reported to have been diagnosed with ALS at a top hospital and progressed to where she had lost nearly all movement and was near death. After two years of Kraft’s treatments, she was said to have recovered most or all of her motor function. I was skeptical. Nonetheless, I followed the ALSUntangled standard operating protocol and investigated. Eventually, I found Nelda Buss through social networking. I got her medical records and saw that her ALS diagnosis was sound, and had been confirmed by a trusted colleague at an excellent ALS center. She really did progress to having no strength at all in her arms and legs. Two years later she had recovered to where she was able to walk and use her arms normally. You can read more about this ALSUntangled review here.

Since then, I have found 22 additional “ALS reversals.” Some of these were in old papers, some I found while conducting newer ALSUntangled reviews, one was in a clinical trial and two were my own patients. To me, these cases seemed important enough to focus further research on. I even found a precedent for such work: a study of HIV elite controllers [people who are infected with the HIV virus but never get sick] showed that many of them have the same genetic abnormality, which explains their resistance and helped researchers create a new drug that works for everyone with HIV.

I hypothesized that there were 3 possible explanations for ALS reversals:

  1. They did not have ALS in the first place, but rather an ALS-mimic that was so obscure that it fooled even experts;
  2. A genetic factor that made them “resistant” to the disease (like the HIV elite controllers);
  3. Positive effects from a new treatment these people started or from removing some toxic environmental trigger.

I designed two new programs called Replication of ALS Reversals (ROAR) and Study of ALS Reversals (StAR) to help me work through these hypotheses and was fortunate to receive start-up funding for these from the LVH ALS Foundation.

In my ROAR program, I am testing the exact same treatments that folks with reversals tried in several more patients. In addition to energy healing, some of the other treatments associated with ALS reversals include Lunasin, Protandim, Aimspro, and bone marrow-derived stem cells through Brainstorm Cell, and embryonic stem cells through Neuraltus. There will be several novel patient-centric features of the trials in this ROAR Program, including:

  1. Broad inclusion criteria;
  2. Use of historical controls (no placebos);
  3. Few in-person study visits (most visits done virtually, on home computers);
  4. Results available in real-time.

The first ROAR trial of Lunasin is underway; all 50 available spots have already been promised but we have published the protocol online, so that folks who want to try Lunasin on their own can use the exact same products and dosages as we are, and even follow their outcome measures and post them on PatientsLikeMe.

In my StAR program, I will be looking for obscure ALS mimics in people with reversals, and will be comparing their genes to people whose ALS does not reverse. The first thing this program needed to do was come up with ways to objectively define ALS reversals, and to find more of them. Last year, I worked with colleagues at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) and PatientsLikeMe to look for people with reversals in a large database called PRO-ACT. Our study showed that ALS plateaus and small brief reversals are not uncommon. On the other hand, large reversals lasting a long time are rare; less than 1% of more than 1000 eligible PRO-ACT participants had an ALS Functional Rating Scale-Revised (ALSFRS-R) improvement of at least four points lasting at least a year. This study taught us a lot about the natural history ALS, including what might be meaningfully different and thus worth further investigation.

Unfortunately, all of the participants in PRO-ACT were “de-identified,” so we do not know who they are and thus have no way to contact or further study any of them. I am currently working with a company called Origent Data Sciences, Inc. to define something called “ALS resistance.” This definition would encompass patients who have very long plateaus (like Stephen Hawking), or large, sustained periods of reversal. We think we might have found a way to identify “ALS resistant” patients in real time, which would allow us to find more of them and invite them into the StAR Program. Stay tuned for more on this exciting work later this year.

If you have been diagnosed with ALS, have experienced a marked improvement in motor function, and are willing to participate in our StAR Program, please contact us through our website at www.alsreversals.org.

Comments

Submitted by: Christina H. on Mon, 05/15/2023

My mom was just diagnosed with ALS this past week. I am searching everywhere possible for reversal treatments. Urgently need your help!

Submitted by: Amy L. on Wed, 05/17/2023

I'm so sorry to hear your mom is living with ALS. Unfortunately, there is no known treatment to stop or reverse ALS. There are treatments that can help slow progression. Please reach out to your mom's local ALS Association care team for information, resources and support: als.org/local-team

Submitted by: Carrie K. on Fri, 08/04/2023

I’m sorry I’m super confused the article that I just read above is the opposite of your answer. They talk about 22 reversals but yet you say there is no reverse so I’m confused. It seemed like I had high hopes and then I read your answer to some of these people with ALS And I would be discouraged if I were them after reading the article above giving so much help. I’m sorry

Submitted by: Frank C. on Wed, 06/21/2023

i tried every thing i know one thing that triggered this off was 14 years on a toxic drug called Cymbalta destroys your brain and set this off all because i broke my back got hurt and was put on this the big pharma are the real killers now they put up drugs with names and don't even tell you what there for there monsters

Submitted by: vanya P. on Sat, 06/24/2023

I am a Canadian cancer researcher for more than 30 yrs and being involved in identifying causative genes in colorectal cancer, IBD and Crohn's disease.
I was diagnosed May 2023, first mild symptoms began in 2019. Please contact me if you think I would be a suitable candidate forALS Reversals study. Best regards, Vanya

Submitted by: Marika W. on Mon, 07/10/2023

What we’re your first symptoms of the disease, I have suspicions I may have it due tongue fasciculations and general body weakness and twitching.

Submitted by: Lynne H. on Tue, 08/01/2023

I'm 58 years old, and last summer was diagnosed with GAD-65 positive Stiff Person Syndrome. I've had severe foot drop in my right foot for 4 years. It's just started in my left foot. I'm getting weaker in my arms, and also have constant tongue fasciculations. Now they're questioning my original diagnosis, and are about to test me for ALS. Recently, they realized I have severe damage to my lower lumbar. Side by side, the EMG and MRIs confirm the damage is probably causing my right foot drop. I can still walk with a rollator. I can drive. I can clean house and do most inside chores with time. So, my question is how can they tell the difference between ALS and Stiff Person Syndrome with all these similarities? They refuse to do surgery on my lower spine because they think I could have breathing issues if I have ALS. My sats stay 97-98% consistently. They even mentioned I could have both diseases? Is that even possible, and over a year after my SPS diagnosis, still be functioning this well?

Submitted by: Iram R. on Fri, 08/04/2023

Fui diagnosticado em dez 21, eletroneuromiografia, em Jan 22 uma outra eletroneuromiografia com resultado um pouco diferente onde menciona neuropatia periférica, enfim, gostaria de ver qual possibilidade de seguir esta alternativa.

Submitted by: Márla C. on Sun, 11/19/2023

Hi Dr Rick Bedlack:
Your program it’s real hope
Just got EMG 6 days ago ,
I fell 2 month ago , 3 herniated lumbar discs, and left foot drop
Neurologist refused to focus on such
Rather focus on AlS , I’m desperate
I’m 67 and worked out every day for 30 years, now I lost my muscles and unable to walk , pls help
Márla

Submitted by: Faith M. on Thu, 02/01/2024

Recently an old friend called me and asked me if I would do massage
On a friend of hers who has ALS. She asked me because years
Before I did bodywork on her. She said my style of bodywork/healing
work has always stayed in her mind as amazing and highly effective. I told her I will work with her friend who is 42 years old. She cannot move her body at all. She has a very slight ability to turn her neck but very little. When I am with her she will ask me to reposition her head for her. She can speak but very quietly. She can chew food and swallow but has to be fed.
Bodywork/massage is very helpful for her. It gives her immense relief
and relaxation. I have work with many different conditions. This is the first time with an ALS patient.
I’ve been seeing her about once a week foe almost 3 months. I’ve been
Reading as much as I can about this disease to help me understand how I can best help her. Your article is very interesting and the comments from all of the individuals that have ALS and friends or relatives of them were very moving. I want to give my friend the best care possible. I want to learn as much as I can to help me help her.
Thank you for allowing me to express myself. There are very few people I can talk to that have any understanding or knowledge of ALS.
Again thank you, Faith

Submitted by: Karina I. on Thu, 02/29/2024

Good afternoon, my dad was diagnosed with ALS in August 2023. Symptoms appeared after suffering Covid-19 in 2022, stopped pronouncing the letter R, is now weak, does not speak clearly, breathing is difficult, insomnia. He took rilutek for 6 months, but the disease is progressing. We want to fight, we want to go to Israel for treatment, we really need help!

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