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New therapy eases lupus side effects

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From Times wire reports

Doctors are reporting the first advance in three decades in treating kidney complications from lupus, a life-threatening disease that primarily affects young women.

A small study showed that an immune-suppression drug worked better than the standard chemotherapy medication, which can cause infertility and other problems.

Nearly a quarter of patients who took the newer drug, CellCept, saw their kidney problems go into complete remission after six months, compared with just 6% of those who received the older treatment, cyclophosphamide. The CellCept patients also had fewer side effects.

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The study was published in the Nov. 24 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine. Partial results were presented in 2003 at a scientific conference in Orlando, Fla.

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