- Addi and Cassi’s FDA Cyclodextrin Submission
- Meet Addi and Cassi
- What is Niemann Pick Type C disease?
- Cyclodextrin and Drug Delivery
- Cyclodextrin and Odor Prevention
- Cyclodextrin on Wikipedia
- Cyclodextrin Overview - List of Uses and Drugs
- Cyclodextrin Scientific Papers
- Procter & Gamble Cyclodextrin Overview
- Society Of Cyclodextrins
- Sporanox: Approved Drug Containing Cyclodextrin
- CoQ10 and Cyclodextrin
- Cyclodextrin Releases Trapped Cholesterol
- KTVU Story On The Power of Cyclodextrin
- Take Drug Additive, Not Drug?
- Washington DC HIV/AIDs Epidemic
- Dr. James E. K. Hildreth, HIV/AIDS
- Dr. John Dietschy, Niemann Pick Type C
- Dr. Lajos Szente
- Dr. Len Kritharides, Vascular & Cholesterol Research
- Dr. Steven Walkley, Niemann Pick Type C
The Wall Street Journal Reports On FDA Approval of Addi and Cassi’s Cyclodextrin Treatment
June 5th, 2009
By AMY DOCKSER MARCUS
April 3, 2009
A Mom Brokers Treatment for Her Twins’ Fatal Illness
Bucking Scientific Convention, Ms. Hempel Gets Researchers From Different Fields to Share Data on Potential Therapy
From the moment her twin daughters, Addison and Cassidy, were diagnosed with a fatal genetic disease in October 2007, Chris Hempel has been searching for a drug that might save their lives.

The 5-year-old girls were diagnosed with a devastating cholesterol metabolism disorder known as Niemann-Pick Type C, which is ultimately fatal. Soon after, Ms. Hempel learned that researchers found that a form of a compound called cyclodextrin extended the lives of affected mice.
Ms. Hempel set out to gather as much data as possible. She got a list of all major cyclodextrin distributors and connected with one in Florida, who shared scientific studies and other information with her. She found a short report in the medical literature about a doctor who had treated a child with a different disease using cyclodextrin and tracked him down. She became increasingly hopeful that, although cyclodextrin isn’t approved as a drug in the U.S., she might get the Food and Drug Administration to allow her to give cyclodextrin infusions to her girls as an experimental treatment.
Her search for information also led her to James Hildreth, 52, a pre-eminent AIDS researcher who heads the Center for AIDS Health Disparities Research at Meharry Medical College in Nashville, Tenn. It turned out that he too was seeking FDA approval to run a trial using cyclodextrin, in a vaginal cream to help prevent HIV transmission during heterosexual sex. Ms. Hempel wanted him to combine forces with the NP-C investigators to push forward cyclodextrin research.
That was only the beginning of Ms. Hempel’s long journey through the health-care research community — a distributed and labyrinthine collection of researchers who, for all their expertise, often remain unaware of advances made elsewhere. The problem is even more acute among researchers working on different diseases. But for some serendipity, curiosity — or, in this case, a willful Ms. Hempel — some knowledge in one lab may never make its way to another that could be on the verge of a new therapy.
Drugs approved for one disease often turn out to be effective in others — frequently when someone has a hunch. Thalidomide, originally used for morning sickness but taken off the market because it caused birth defects, is being used in cancer treatment.
Researchers at Pfizer were developing Viagra to treat high blood pressure when they noticed during early tests that it treated impotence. But that happened within the same company. It is even more difficult when researchers are at different labs.
When Ms. Hempel, who lives in Reno, Nev., became passionate about Dr. Hildreth’s work, she was determined to bridge the disparate knowledge. “Right now we have limited data on cyclodextrin. But what if a lot of people started looking at it from different angles and across different diseases?” Ms. Hempel said. “It could lead to something that helps save Addi and Cassi’s lives.”
Ms. Hempel had been researching cyclodextrin for months when she attended the June 2008 meeting in Tucson, Ariz., of the Ara Parseghian Medical Research Foundation, set up by the family of the legendary football coach who lost three grandchildren to NP-C disease. The foundation was providing some funding for cyclodextrin studies in the rare disease, and the latest data were presented there. In an email sent after the meeting, Ms. Hempel wrote to the NP-C researchers that, based on the data she heard, she and her husband, Hugh, planned to seek FDA approval to give the girls cyclodextrin infusions. “I feel very strongly that we must try this to help save Addi and Cassi from this horrible disease,” she wrote.
She had already put together a three-inch binder of research studies about cyclodextrin. Working with three other families whose children have NP-C disease, they hired a scientist who began writing a request to the FDA for the Hempel children to receive cyclodextrin infusions. But Ms. Hempel knew that she needed more human data if she was going to persuade the FDA that the drug was safe enough to use in her children.
While searching for safety data on cyclodextrin, she spoke with Charles E. Strattan, a cyclodextrin expert and CEO of CTD Holdings Inc., who was helping Ms. Hempel do research. He told her Dr. Hildreth was interested in the same compound for his work in HIV and suggested that the two of them talk.
During a long phone conversation in October 2008, Dr. Hildreth told Ms. Hempel that he believed the protein responsible for NP-C disease also plays an important role in HIV. And in previously published work, he showed that cyclodextrin appeared to inactivate the HIV virus and prevent it from replicating.
The talk galvanized Ms. Hempel. Dr. Hildreth offered to share what he knew about cyclodextrin’s safety with the FDA in support of the Hempels’ request. Ms. Hempel proposed that the two of them go to Johnson & Johnson, which had studied cyclodextrin, to see if the company would be interested in sponsoring a clinical trial. “I knew our stories would be even more powerful if we told them together,” she said.
As is typical in the field, Dr. Hildreth was reluctant to share unpublished data, and he rarely went to scientific meetings that weren’t related to HIV. He was moved by Ms. Hempel’s efforts to help her children, but also surprised by her embrace of his work. “Some of the things we as scientists take for granted about how work will be done and the fact there are silos, with her there is none of that at all,” he said.
When Ms. Hempel called a top National Institutes of Health AIDS researcher to tell him about Dr. Hildreth’s findings and propose joint work in HIV and NP-C disease, Dr. Hildreth told her that a scientist never would have made such a call. In recent months, Ms. Hempel has introduced Dr. Hildreth to NP-C researchers who were also studying cyclodextrin. She also arranged for him to discuss his HIV findings with two Nobel Prize-winning scientists interested in Niemann-Pick proteins. “Our paths would not have crossed otherwise,” he said.
He and Ms. Hempel recently had a conversation with senior officials at Johnson & Johnson. The FDA at first turned down the Hempels’ request to do cyclodextrin infusions in the girls, concerned there wasn’t enough human safety data. But after Ms. Hempel contacted them about her plight, the company wrote a letter to the FDA giving the agency permission to look at all of the safety data it had submitted related to cyclodextrin. The FDA subsequently gave permission for the Hempels to proceed. The girls will start cyclodextrin infusions this month.
That might have been the end of the story except for Ms. Hempel’s insistence that more was at stake, says Steven A. Silber, a vice president at Johnson & Johnson. After listening to Ms. Hempel and Dr. Hildreth’s presentation, Dr. Silber set up a meeting so Dr. Hildreth can present his data to the head of one of its companies that makes anti-viral medications. Dr. Hildreth says that Ms. Hempel’s involvement got his research “the attention of individuals higher up in the organization than I might have been able to get on my own.”
This May, the Parseghian Foundation will host its annual scientific meeting. The group plans to hold a special session dedicated to the work on cyclodextrin. Cindy Parseghian, president of the foundation, says she hopes researchers working with cyclodextrin in other diseases will also attend. “We think there should be more cross-fertilization,” she said. Dr. Hildreth says he plans to share his findings at the meeting.
Dr. Hildreth recognizes that his unusual partnership with Ms. Hempel also has some risks for the HIV trial he is planning. “It is a remote possibility, but is a possibility, that if her beautiful girls are done some harm by the infusions, that would clearly do harm to our efforts,” he said. Still, he adds, “I spent a lot of time thinking about what I would do if I were in her position. My answer is I would do exactly the same thing.”
Late last month, the Hempel girls underwent surgery at a California hospital to get a small medical device implanted under their skin to make it easier to receive regular cyclodextrin infusions. Dr. Hildreth visited them in the hospital.
Filed under News | Comment (0)Cyclodextrins Can Reduce Side Effects of Cancer Drug Treatments
May 11th, 2009
Each day, I learn more about the amazing benefits of cyclodextrins — novel excipients of unexplored potential. Research studies in both humans and animals have shown that cyclodextrins and their derivatives can be used to improve the drug delivery system for almost any type of drug formulation from anti-cancer drugs to anti -viral drugs. In the pharmaceutical industry, cyclodextrins are used as complexing agents to increase the aqueous solubility of poorly soluble drugs and to increase their bioavailability and stability.
When some cancer drugs are combined with cyclodextrins, their bioavailability increases. If a drug’s bioavailability can be controlled in the bloodstream and acceptable drug levels are reached more effectively and precisely, it takes far less of a drug to produce cancer killing effects. Cyclodextrins can help make cancer treatment far less debilitating for a patient undergoing chemotherapy treatment — less of a toxic drug in a person’s system makes for less side effects.
Cyclodextrins were discovered over 100 years ago and the first patent on cyclodextrins and their complexes was registered in 1953. Here is an excellent paper outlining all the benefits of cyclodextrins which I believe has much greater potential than anyone ever imagined: http://www.pharmainfo.net/reviews/cyclodextrins-drug-delivery-systems-update.
Filed under Bioavailability, Cancer Drugs, Cyclodextrin, Cyclodextrin Patents, chemotherapy drugs | Comment (0)Crossing The Blood Brain Barrier - Does Cyclodextrin Make Its Way Into The Brain?
May 2nd, 2009
Dr. David Begley, one of the world’s leading blood brain barrier experts at Kings College London is working on a research project we are currently funding on cyclodextrin and the blood brain barrier.
We want to answer the following question. Does hydroxy propel beta cyclodextrin (HPBCD) cross the blood brain barrier? Since less than 5% of drugs (made up of very small molecules) are able to cross the barrier and cyclodextrin is not considered a small molecule nor a drug, the possibility of cyclodextrin crossing into the brain would be remarkable.
Addi and Cassi, my 5 year old identical twins, who have a cellular cholesterol metabolism disease called Niemann Pick Type C (often referred to as the Childhood Alzheimer’s) and are being treated with infusions of the sugar compound cyclodextrin.
When we started Addi and Cassi’s first few rounds of cyclodextrin infusions three weeks ago, I honestly did not expect to see much of a change because we started with a low dose. I certainly did not think my girls would start saying words again. To put this story in context, prior to starting the cyclodextrin infusions, Addi and Cassi had both lost their ability to talk. Addi was still trying to talk by making grunting sounds and came out with an occasional word here and there and Cassi was virtually mute.
However, since starting the cyclodextrin infusions, Addi has started repeating sentences again. This type of language is called echolalia and it’s something Addi did before she stopped talking. Cassi has become more vocal as well.
In the last 36 hours, Addi has repeated the following: Good morning, That’s great, That feels better, Rosie and Gilbert (characters from a cartoon), Let’s go walking, Let’s do it, Daddy’s here, Alright, Bye Tia (to our nurse), There’s Martha (in reference to our nanny), No, Me, We, More, Where’s Addison, That’s mine, I can do it, Let’s put them in the garbage can, Open, I Love You and Let’s have breakfast. Cassi has only managed a few words over the past few weeks but is making a lot more sounds with different pitches instead of a single low hum. (Note: Cassi has never talked as much as Addi and her speech was lost a few months before Addi’s).
I can’t express in words what it’s like to hear your child talk again. When my husband walked into the hospital room and Addi repeated ‘Daddy’s here” his eyes welled up with tears. Our nanny Martha has been with our girls since birth and it’s been six months since Addi has said her name. Yesterday, Addi clearly said “Martha” twice.
In addition to the spike in speech, the girls also seem happier, appear to have a slight improvement in head control (when rested) and their eye contact appears better. I have noticed a few more “stare off” spells with Addi (possibly absent seizures?) but I am not sure if these have increased or if I am just paying more attention and noticing them more.
The girls have experienced speech improvements previously when starting antibiotics (Amoxicillin and Septra). But the improvements did not last. There seemed to be a honeymoon period after starting the antibiotics and then the improvements stopped after 3-4 weeks. I have never received an answer from a doctor or researcher as to why antibiotics had a short term benefit for my girls, but they did.
To everyone’s delight, Addi and Cassi are experiencing neurological improvements on cyclodextrin. Since they are identical twins and are both improving, this leads me to the conclusion that cyclodextrin (HPBCD) is having some sort of effect on cellular cholesterol accumulation — either it’s crossing the BBB or somehow creating a siphon effect in the body and pulling cholesterol out of the brain? Dr. Begley will need to explain to the research world what cyclodextrin is actually doing and I can’t wait for his research work to finish.
Cyclodextrin is very exciting and promising, not only for Addi and Cassi and other kids impacted with Niemann Pick Type C but for the scientific community in general. I am starting to wonder what cyclodextrin could do for people suffering from atherosclerosis and if it would help eliminate the build up of plaques in the arteries? Also, several lines of evidence have implicated a role for cholesterol in Alzheimer’s disease.
I urge scientists working on diseases involving cholesterol pathways to spin up experiments with cyclodextrin (HPBCD) right away.
Filed under Blood Brain Barrier, Cholesterol, Cyclodextrin, Niemann Pick Type C | Comment (0)







