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ARA 290

Cibinetide, PHBSP, PH-BSP, Helix B surface peptide

Quick Stats
Studies 51
Trials 5
Score 1
2016 pubmed 32 citations

Managing fatigue in sarcoidosis - A systematic review of the evidence.

Atkins. Chris C; Wilson. Andrew M AM

Key Findings

  • Fatigue is common in sarcoidosis and often persists even when the disease is inactive.
  • Anti‑TNF drugs (adalimumab, infliximab) and neurostimulants (methylphenidate, armodafinil) showed some benefit, but evidence is limited.
  • ARA‑290 was tested in one of the eight studies, but the trial was small and the overall evidence remains inconclusive.
  • All studies had methodological concerns, making it hard to draw firm conclusions.

Practical Outcomes

  • There isn’t enough reliable data to recommend ARA‑290 for sarcoidosis‑related fatigue. Biohackers should wait for larger, well‑designed trials before considering it, and focus on proven strategies like exercise or approved neurostimulants under medical supervision.

Summary

A review of eight small studies looked at ways to reduce fatigue in people with sarcoidosis, including the peptide ARA‑290. The data are weak – many studies had high bias, few participants, and short follow‑up – so there’s no solid proof that ARA‑290 helps fatigue.

Abstract

Fatigue is a common manifestation of sarcoidosis, often persisting without evidence of disease activity. First-line therapies for sarcoidosis have limited effect on fatigue. This review aimed to assess the treatment options targeting sarcoidosis-associated fatigue. Medline and Web of Science were searched in November 2015; the bibliographies of these papers, and relevant review papers, were also searched. Studies were included if they reported on the efficacy of interventions (both pharmacological and non-pharmacological) on fatigue scores in sarcoidosis patients. Eight studies were identified that fulfilled the inclusion criteria. These studies evaluated six different interventions (infliximab, adalimumab, ARA 290, methylphenidate, armodafinil and exercise programmes). There is evidence to support a treatment effect of anti-tumour necrosis factor (TNF)-αtherapies (adalimumab and infliximab) and neurostimulants (methylphenidate and armodafinil), but within five of the studies, the risk of bias was high within most domains and the remaining three studies included only small numbers of participants and were short in duration. Trial evidence for treating fatigue as a manifestation of sarcoidosis is limited and requires further investigation. Anti-TNF-α therapies may be beneficial in patients with organ-threatening disease. Neurostimulants have some trial evidence supporting improvements in fatigue but further investigation is needed before they can be recommended.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2016

Date

2016-08-09T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1177/1479972316661926

Citations

32

References

42