Abstract

Treatment of arthritis is carried out using corticosteroids, methotrexate, sulfasalazine-like agents, and TNF-α-blocking agents such as infliximab and adalimumab. The disadvantages of these agents are high-cost, severe side effects including leucopenia, and in some cases the necessity of administration by injection. Polyvalent immunoglobulin formulations derived from bovine colostrum and marketed as a standardized formulation for oral application, are reported to be efficacious in chronic pain syndromes but are rarely, if ever, used as an alternative medication in such patients. To treat arthritis in a real-world setting using polyvalent immunoglobulins in 2 patients, in one case where no alternative treatment modality was available and in another patient in whom the use of polyvalent immunoglobulins appeared to be a suitable option. Two male subjects aged 46 and 82 years with confirmed diagnosis but not well-controlled arthritis/polyarthritis receiving either high-dose NSAIDS, corticosteroids, methotrexate injections, with previous use of, or recommendations for treatment with monoclonal antibodies (etanercept and adalimumab) were treated with oral polyvalent immunoglobulins (KMP01; dose range 10 - 20 g daily) in real-world settings, in one case during a field excursion in Peru. The treatment produced a rapid alleviation of pain in both patients, in one patient where the symptoms were severe and debilitating. In the second patient methotrexate SC injections could be discontinued, and there was a progressive reversal of leucopenia (leucocyte count 3.9 × 103/µL) over a period of ~ 3 months. Polyvalent immunoglobulins have been shown previously to reduce the expression of interleukin-6 and C-reactive protein in peripheral blood monocytes, events attributed to the neutralization of gut-derived endotoxin ligands lipopolysaccharides (LPS) driving the basal immune response. The mode of action of KMP01 on cytokine expression is therefore similar to the TNF-α-blocking agents etanercept and adalimumab. Findings from two case reports support the rationale for using polyvalent immunoglobulins as an effective and safe alternative in arthritis patients receiving standard treatments, in particular, methotrexate and TNF-α-blocking agents.

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