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FDA-approved drug PEG-ADA shows positive results in relieving major complication of priapism

Published on October 31, 2009 at 12:49 AM · No Comments

Thousands of men are afflicted with an embarrassing and painful condition that triggers spontaneous, long-lasting erections. There are limited treatment options, but a solution could be on the way thanks to new research at The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston.

Priapism is a condition of persistent painful penile erection in the absence of sexual desire. It is highly associated with sickle cell disease, leukemia and other blood disorders. It can also result from vasoactive drug abuse. One of the most dangerous complications seen in priapic patients is penile fibrosis, which can lead to erectile dysfunction. Priapism can be an urgent urological condition and causes of the erections lasting at least four hours are unknown.

Biochemists in the laboratory of Yang Xia, M.D., Ph.D., an associate professor at The University of Texas Medical School at Houston, report that an FDA-approved drug called polyethylene glycol-linked adenosine deaminase (PEG-ADA) relieved symptoms and a major complication in a pre-clinical study. Current findings appear online and will be in the March 2010 print issue of The FASEB Journal, the journal of The Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology.

Xia believes priapism is linked to elevated levels of a signaling molecule called adenosine. The link was discovered by Xia and her colleagues when they noticed that genetically-deficient mice with elevated levels of adenosine also had spontaneous erections lasting many hours. Xia's team described their unexpected finding last year in a paper published in The Journal of Clinical Investigation. Subsequent work from this group has appeared in two articles published in The Journal of Sexual Medicine.

"In this latest study, we show in mouse models that we can prevent a major complication of priapism called penile fibrosis, which is scarring of the penis and can lead to erectile dysfunction," Xia said. "We built on our earlier work, which showed that we can prevent and treat priapism in mouse models."

Mice were treated with PEG-ADA, a drug typically prescribed for patients with a deficiency of the adenosine deaminase enzyme, which degrades adenosine to maintain its normal levels. ADA deficient people have a condition called Severe Combined Immunodeficiency Disease (also known as SCID or the "Bubble Boy Disease") and are treated with PEG-ADA, which replaces the missing enzyme.

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