TIWN

London, June 28 (TIWN) A two-week break from immune-suppressing drugs after a Covid-19 booster vaccination can double antibody response among millions of clinically vulnerable patients, according to a study published in The Lancet Respiratory Medicine.
Methotrexate is the most commonly used immune-suppressing drug used for inflammatory conditions such as rheumatoid arthritis, and skin conditions such as psoriasis. While methotrexate is effective at controlling these conditions and has emerged as first line therapy for many illnesses, it reduces the body’s ability to fight infections and the ability to generate robust response to flu and pneumonia vaccines, including those against Covid-19. Experts at the University of Nottingham working in partnership with several universities and NHS hospitals, recruited 560 patients for a major clinical trial. But it was stopped early because the results were so clear-cut in the first 254 patients. During the trial 127 participants were asked to suspend methotrexate use for two weeks and 127 to continue using it as usual. After 4 weeks and 12 weeks, the spike-antibody level was more than two-fold higher in the group where methotrexate was suspended for two-weeks following vaccination, compared to the group who continued use.
- Prime Minister Modi Offered Prayers at The Cathedral Church of the Redemption on Christmas
- Central Govt Cabinet approves scheme of Conduct of Census of India 2027
- Rahul Gandhi and Amit Shah Engage in Heated Debate Over 'Vote Chori' Allegations
- Good News for India as Microsoft to Invest $17.5 billion for AI Infrastructure and Training
- Minister of Civil Aviation Ordered High-Level Inquiry in Indigo Service Disruption


