From Health Canada:
Biogen Idec Canada Inc., in consultation with Health Canada, would like to inform you about new safety information regarding the risk of liver injury and hypersensitivity in patients receiving TYSABRI (natalizumab).
Tysabri For Health Professionals
For the Public
Showing posts with label Tysabri. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tysabri. Show all posts
Wednesday, June 18, 2008
New Safety Information regarding Liver Injury and Hypersensitivity associated with TYSABRI (natalizumab)
Labels:
Health Canada warning,
natalizumab,
Tysabri
Tuesday, October 30, 2007
Drug body's advice against provinces paying for MS drugs seen as unfair
From the Canadian Press:
An expert panel's advice that provinces and territories not cover the cost of two Multiple Sclerosis drugs creates a system of two-tiered care, MS advocates say.
They view the recommendation as leaving people with the disease, who don't have private drug insurance, unable to afford medication that could slow progression of the condition and ease the pain they suffer.
Late last month, the Common Drug Review advised that governments not put the MS pain medication Sativex on the list of medicines that provincial and territorial drug plans cover for eligible people. That follows a "do not list" recommendation issued in the spring for Tysabri, a drug that slows progression of the disease.
Those decisions put these drugs out of reach for many people with MS, an expert and a spokesperson for the MS Society argue. ...more
An expert panel's advice that provinces and territories not cover the cost of two Multiple Sclerosis drugs creates a system of two-tiered care, MS advocates say.
They view the recommendation as leaving people with the disease, who don't have private drug insurance, unable to afford medication that could slow progression of the condition and ease the pain they suffer.
Late last month, the Common Drug Review advised that governments not put the MS pain medication Sativex on the list of medicines that provincial and territorial drug plans cover for eligible people. That follows a "do not list" recommendation issued in the spring for Tysabri, a drug that slows progression of the disease.
Those decisions put these drugs out of reach for many people with MS, an expert and a spokesperson for the MS Society argue. ...more
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