Arthritis medication can help keep life-threatening condition at bay, study finds

AN ARTHRITIS pill can help keep type 1 diabetes at bay, a study reveals.

Baricitinib was found to slow down the autoimmune disease’s progression by protecting insulin-making cells.

Arthritis medicine baricitinib was found to slow down the disease’s progression by protecting insulin-making cells

The discovery is being described as a world first which could mean sufferers have to inject themselves with insulin less often.

Rachel Connor, from the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation, said: “This evidence suggests we’re on the threshold of a new frontier in medicine.”

At present, there is no way to slow or stop type 1 diabetes, which affects 400,000 people in the UK.

Baricitinib is used for treating rheumatoid arthritis, eczema and alopecia.

But a trial involving 91 diabetes patients in Australia showed it also stopped the immune system attacking cells which make insulin, the hormone that regulates blood sugar.

After a year, those who took baricitinib produced 50 per cent more insulin than those in a placebo group.

As a result they needed fewer doses of insulin to manage their condition.

Researcher Professor Thomas Kay “We showed baricitinib is safe and effective.”

   

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