A monoclonal antibody injection has been approved for type 1 diabetes. It only costs about $200,000 and comes with a risk of serious side effects.
STORY AT-A-GLANCE
- The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved Tzield (teplizumab-mzwv), made by drugmakers Sanofi and Provention Bio, for use in adults and children 8 years and older who have stage 2, type 1 diabetes.
- Tzield is a monoclonal antibody injection that neither treats nor prevents type 1 diabetes.
- The treatment is intended to delay the onset of stage 3, type 1 diabetes by only about 25 months.
- The drug’s wholesale cost is $193,900 for a 14-day supply, and it comes with a risk of unknown side effects.
- Tzield may cause cytokine release syndrome (CRS), an acute systemic inflammatory syndrome that includes fever and multiple organ dysfunction.
- Lymphopenia, a reduced level of white blood cells, occurred in 78 percent of patients treated with Tzield.
What Is Type 1 Diabetes?
Type 1 diabetes affects close to 2 million people in the United States. (4) It’s far less common than type 2 diabetes, and affects only about 5 percent to 10 percent of people with diabetes. (5) It’s believed to be caused by an autoimmune reaction, during which the body mistakenly attacks and destroys cells in the pancreas known as beta cells. Beta cells make insulin, so in type 1 diabetes, your pancreas doesn’t make insulin or doesn’t make enough insulin to keep you healthy.Without insulin, which is necessary for blood sugar to enter cells to be used as energy, blood sugar builds up in the bloodstream, causing damage. (6) While it’s thought that genetics play a role in type 1 diabetes, most people diagnosed do not have a family history of the disease. (7) Further, environmental factors, including viruses, may trigger the condition. It can occur at any age but is most commonly diagnosed in children and young adults. (8)
There are three stages of type 1 diabetes that are formally diagnosed. Stage 1 occurs when at least one diabetes-related autoantibody has been detected via screening tests, even though blood sugar levels are still normal and no symptoms are present. (9)
Stage 2 is diagnosed when two or more diabetes-related autoantibodies are present and blood sugar levels have become abnormal due to loss of beta cells. No symptoms are present during stage 2. In stage 3, clinical diagnosis is typically made. Symptoms are typically present, along with significant loss of beta cells.
- Extreme weakness or fatigue.
- Extreme thirst.
- Increased urination.
- Abdominal pain.
- Nausea and/or vomiting.
- Blurred vision.
- Irritability.
- Quick mood changes.
New Drug to Delay Onset of Type 1 Diabetes
The FDA approved Tzield (teplizumab-mzwv), made by drugmakers Sanofi and Provention Bio, (11) for use in adults and children 8 years and older who have stage 2, type 1 diabetes. Tzield is a monoclonal antibody injection that neither treats nor prevents type 1 diabetes. Instead, it’s intended to delay the onset of stage 3, type 1 diabetes. According to the FDA: (12)“Tzield binds to certain immune system cells and delays progression to stage 3 type 1 diabetes. Tzield may deactivate the immune cells that attack insulin-producing cells while increasing the proportion of cells that help moderate the immune response. Tzield is administered by intravenous infusion once daily for 14 consecutive days.”The drug’s safety and efficacy were evaluated via a trial involving just 76 patients with stage 2, type 1 diabetes. Participants received either Tzield or a placebo once daily via an intravenous infusion for 14 days. After a median follow-up period of 51 months, 45 percent of the 44 patients who received the drug went on to be diagnosed with stage 3, type 1 diabetes, compared to 72 percent of the 32 patients who received a placebo.
Tzield Associated With Serious Side Effects
Serious side effects were reported with Tzield use, however, including decreased levels of white blood cells, along with rash, and headache. Warnings and precautions are warranted with the use of Tzield, according to the FDA, including monitoring for symptoms of the following:- Cytokine release syndrome.
- Risk of serious infections.
- Decreased levels of white blood cells called lymphocytes.
- Risk of hypersensitivity reactions.
If the cytokine release spirals out of control, the resulting “cytokine storm” becomes dangerous and is closely tied to sepsis. (15) According to Provention Bio, “CRS occurred in TZIELD-treated patients during the treatment period and through 28 days after the last drug administration.” (16)
“If severe CRS develops, consider pausing dosing for 1 day to 2 days and administering the remaining doses to complete the full 14-day course on consecutive days; or discontinue treatment. Monitor liver enzymes during treatment. Discontinue TZIELD treatment in patients who develop elevated alanine aminotransferase or aspartate aminotransferase more than 5 times the upper limit of normal (ULN) or bilirubin more than 3 times ULN.”Regarding serious infections, Provention Bio stated that people with active serious or chronic infections should not use Tzield, and those who do should be monitored for signs and symptoms of infection during and after use. Lymphopenia, a reduced level of white blood cells often seen alongside infections like HIV, COVID-19, and tuberculosis, also occurred in 78 percent of patients treated with Tzield. (18)
Fasting May Promote Growth of Pancreatic Beta Cells
Conventional medicine currently falls short in helping those with type 1 diabetes, but Tzield only delays its onset by about two years—at a significant monetary cost and risk of serious side effects. Other options deserve further scrutiny—options that have only positive related effects, such as intermittent fasting or time-restricted eating (TRE).An editorial written in the BMJ (19) by noted research scientist James DiNicolantonio, PharmD., (20) discusses the results of several studies that have found repeated episodes of fasting may induce cell growth of pancreatic beta cells in mouse models. The growth is associated with an increased expression of Ngn3, (21) a protein involved in converting DNA into RNA critical for endocrine cells in the pancreatic islets of Langerhans, the cells responsible for producing insulin.
The increase in islet beta cells induced through intermittent fasting was accompanied by a marked improvement in blood sugar control in the animal studies. These observations were of greatest interest to individuals suffering from type 1 diabetes, as they often experience near-complete inflammatory destruction of the islet beta cells.
Consuming Carbs Last Benefits Type 1 Diabetes
Another option that’s free, safe, and available to everyone is simply changing the order in which you eat certain foods. Among children with type 1 diabetes, consuming carbohydrates at the end of the meal has been found to be beneficial. Twenty patients with type 1 diabetes aged 7 to 17 years were included in a related study. (23) They consumed two meals in random order. For the first meal, the protein and fat components were consumed first, followed 15 minutes later by the carbohydrates.In the other meal, protein, fat, and carbohydrates were consumed together, the way they would be in a typical meal. Mean glucose levels were 1 mmol/L lower when carbs were consumed last compared to the typical meal.
“This might mean a lot of things, including you, need less insulin, which might lead to less weight gain overall because we know that those high glucose levels, those high insulin levels, are going to drive weight gain.
More Research Is Needed for Real Type 1 Diabetes Support
It’s unfortunate that a close-to-$200,000 drug is being heralded as a breakthrough for type 1 diabetes, especially since it only delays its onset and is so risky for overall health. What’s needed to truly help those suffering from this devastating condition is research into safe and effective modalities for prevention and treatment.“We’re working with the Diabetes Research Center to see whether, even after the child is born, as long as they don’t have full-blown type 1 diabetes, what can we do to help stop it? And it turns out that the combination of vitamin D and omega-3 really matters.”Black cumin (nigella sativa) also deserves special mention, as studies have shown it can help prevent both type 1 and type 2 diabetes. (27) Instead of pouring research into toxic drug treatments, studies delving into vitamin D, TRE, and environmental triggers of type 1 diabetes, among other strategies, could offer real hope for those with or at risk of type 1 diabetes.