Saturday, 11 February 2023

Systematic review of CLIPPERS studies


Wind-battered trees on Brean Down

One of the difficulties in studying conditions like CLIPPERS is their rarity meaning that there are comparatively few cases to draw from. CLIPPERS, with it's variability of symptoms and outcomes and difficulties in concrete diagnosis has additional challenges. However, now that there have been over ten years of scientific publications on CLIPPERS there are opportunities to get a better overview by combining together earlier work. Dr Al-Chalabi and colleagues from the University of Toeldo published a paper in 2022  titled "Clinical characteristics, management, and outcomes of CLIPPERS: A comprehensive systematic review of 140 patients from 100 studies" to try and achieve this. A systematic review is where a collection of previous works are combined following a protocol which strives to ensure quality and minimize bias to hopefully come to stronger conclusions than might be possible looking at the individual studies. In the case of this review, the "clinical characteristics, treatment strategies and outcomes" of CLIPPERS were assessed.

My reading of the review is that the authors drew together some common themes from the individual studies but that the amount of variability and uncertainty still hindered their ability to draw firm conclusions, even in over 100 nominal CLIPPERS patients. They found 60% of their cohort were male and the mean age of onset was 46 years (which is very close to the age I first got symptoms). The most common (but not the only) symptoms, in order, were ataxia , diplopia, and dysarthria; my own experience was diplopia first, then quite quickly followed by ataxia, and latterly by some dysarthria just as I began treatment. They also found that around 15% of the patients studies had some form of malignancy which presumably means CLIPPERS wasn't their ultimate diagnosis (but I am not a doctor). In terms of long-term treatment, Azathioprine and Methotrexate, were the most common, but not the only, drugs. 

The authors also report that a shorter time on steroids was associated with an increased risk of CLIPPERS relapse which, to me, is the most interesting of their conclusions, possibly, and very unscientifically and with no evidence, because I have long had a gut feeling that longer steroid tapers might be better. The authors suggest that, going forward, steroid tapers should be very slow, although they don't state what "slow" means - presumably months?

These studies are important and as well as making the most of previous studies can hopefully direct future research.

Read other articles in this series at Living With CLIPPERS.

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Living With CLIPPERS by Bill Crum is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.

Friday, 13 January 2023

A Book on CLIPPERS : The Paperback


The paperback version of the CLIPPERS book is now available* as per the links on the last post and in the A Book on CLIPPERS tab on the main Living With CLIPPERS website.

*for some reason the Amazon India marketplace does not offer printed books via Kindle Direct Publishing

Read other articles in this series at Living With CLIPPERS.

Creative Commons Licence
Living With CLIPPERS by Bill Crum is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.

Friday, 6 January 2023

Living With CLIPPERS : The eBook


Happy New Year!

I thought I'd begin 2023 by fulfilling a minor promise to myself to consolidate the stuff that's been accumulating on this blog over the last decade or so into a more digestible and permanent form.  The resulting ebook "A Book on CLIPPERS" focuses on my experience with CLIPPERS from first symptoms through to diagnosis, treatment and recovery. It also has sections on what is known about CLIPPERS and the key research issues, at least as far as I understand them. The difference between the ebook and the blog is that the ebook is written more as a narrative with events in the order they happened and with less of the "fluff" or more speculative stuff that occasionally cluttered things up on-line. It's even been proof-read!

"A Book on CLIPPERS" is available world-wide via Amazon's Kindle store. Kindle ebooks can be read on a Kindle device, or any computer or phone for which a Kindle app is available (which is most of them). It is free to members of Kindle Unlimited and otherwise almost free (around 1 USD  / 1 GBP / 1 EUR or similar). I am investigating the possibility of a physical paperback edition through the same platform and will update on that in due course. I've included some links to the store-page in different marketplaces at the bottom of this post.

Here's the blurb:

What’s it like being diagnosed with a brain condition so new and rare that even the doctors treating you have never heard of it, much less treated any other cases? CLIPPERS (Chronic Lymphocytic Inflammation with Pontine Perivascular Enhancement Responsive to Steroids) was first identified in 2010 in a handful of patients in the USA and Europe. This book tells my story from the first seemingly innocuous symptoms in 2011, followed by hospitalisation on a neurological ward, and eventually to diagnosis, treatment, and recovery.

In this honest account you'll learn about:
  • how CLIPPERS symptoms can quickly escalate from a minor inconvenience to a major problem
  • how a mystery condition is investigated and diagnosed at a leading UK hospital
  • the most common CLIPPERS symptoms and treatments
  • the challenges of CLIPPERS diagnosis
  • important issues and outstanding questions about CLIPPERS

This book provides a resource about the experience and treatment of CLIPPERS, as well as pointers to the most important research over the last decade. I hope it will inform and inspire both those directly affected by CLIPPERS and anyone else who is interested in rare diseases.

Here are the links to the ebook:
(DE) https://www.amazon.de/dp/B0BRQS83K6
(FR) https://www.amazon.fr/dp/B0BRQS83K6


Read other articles in this series at Living With CLIPPERS.

Creative Commons Licence
Living With CLIPPERS by Bill Crum is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.



Wednesday, 25 May 2022

Has it really been that long?


Dartmoor 2022 Some rare sun.


You know how it is; there's something at the back of your mind that you feel you really should do but you don't quite get round to doing it. And so when I looked back at this blog page it was a bit of a shock that no new posts have appeared for well over a year. (I'm pretty sure I did a bit of tidying up behind the scenes since then, but it's a poor excuse). I don't have an enormous amount to say, which is why there has been such an update drought, but I did manage to miss my own anniversary of a decade since being diagnosed with (probable) CLIPPERS in 2011. I've partly been prompted to write here after a nice email from a fellow CLIPPERS patient who hoped in passing that the blog silence didn't mean anything bad had happened.

Since the last post I've managed not to catch COVID helped by working almost exclusively from home and by taking every vaccine offered. The booster program is a little random here but they seem to be erring on the side of caution as I've had two initial jabs (Astra-Zeneca) and three Pfizer "boosters". I felt pretty mouldy for a day or so after the second Pfizer one but took more care with hydration and ibuprofen after the third which seemed to help. CLIPPERS symptoms have remained absent and I've now been taking Azathioprine for ten years which is not ideal but probably better than the alternative.

I very recently had my annual neurology appointment in London. It was strange travelling in to the centre on the train for only the third or fourth time in the last couple of years when I used to do the journey most weekdays. My status was reviewed by the same neurologist I saw when I was first diagnosed and I was judged to be stable. There's always the question about whether I want to stop the medication and I ask "what are the risks of relapse and what would be the consequences if I came off it" and no-one really knows; so I stay on the medication as it's kept me well so far.  I'll get another MRI in due course to provide an up-to-date reference in case there are any changes further down the line.

Hopefully it won't be so long before the next post. I hope everyone out there is staying as well as possible.

Read other articles in this series at Living With CLIPPERS.

Creative Commons Licence
Living With CLIPPERS by Bill Crum is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.