The Scotsman

Drugs to help against four major illnesses get go-ahead in Scotland

- By GARY FLOCKHART

Four new medicines to help severe asthma, migraines, heart failure and bone marrow cancer have been approved for use by NHS Scotland.

The treatments were given the green light by the scottish medical Consortium (SMC), which also gave provisiona­l approval to a medication for a severe kind of muscular dystrophy. they include the drug is a tuximab to treat multiple myeloma, a cancer of the bone marrow.

Clinicians told a panel of experts how patients can suffer debilitati­ng symptoms including recurrent infections, anaemia, fatigue and severe bone pain and fractures.

The drug increases“progressio­nfree survival ”– the amount of time during and after treatmenta patient lives with the disease but it does not get worse.

Another medication authorised is dupilumab, an extra treatment for some people with asthma so severe it can require intensive therapies causing toxic side effects like bone-weakening osteoporos­is and diabetes.

Asthma UK said it was “great news for Scotland” but that it wants “nationwide access to this potentiall­y life-changing drug for the rest of the UK”.

Dapagliflo­zin was approved for treating heart failure in patients who have symptoms of the disease and have less blood leaving the heart than their body needs. This drug “may help reduce breathless­ness and fatigue, improving their quality of life and potentiall­y lowering the risk of early death”, said the SMC.

Migraine sufferers, who have at least four days of attacks per month, can now access galcanezum­ab, which may improve quality of life, it added.

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