How Is LAM Treated?
There is no treatment available yet to slow or stop
the growth of the cell clusters and cysts that are the major feature of
LAM.
Most treatments for LAM are aimed at relieving
symptoms and preventing complications.
Since many women with LAM are now living so much
longer, doctors also focus on treating other health problems that happen with
menopause and aging.
The main treatments for LAM are:
- Medicines
- Oxygen therapy
- Procedures to remove fluid from the chest or
abdominal cavities and prevent it from building up again
- Procedures to remove
angiomyolipomas (AMLs)
- Lung transplantation
Medicines
Some medicines may help open your lungs so that you
can breathe more easily.
- Bronchodilators are drugs that relax the muscles
around the airways. As a result, the airways can open up, making it easier to
breathe. About 1 out of 5 women with LAM improves with the use of
bronchodilators.
- Octreotide and diuretics are sometimes used to
prevent the buildup of fluid in the chest cavity and abdomen. Octreotide may
reduce leakage of lymph into the abdominal or chest cavity.
Women with LAM have a greater chance of developing
osteoporosis (a condition that causes bones to become weak and brittle) than
other women. If you have LAM, your doctor should measure your bone density. If
you have lost bone density, your doctor may prescribe drugs that prevent bone
loss. He or she also may prescribe calcium and vitamin D supplements.
Physicians who think that estrogen may play a role
in the development of LAM usually treat their patients with hormone
therapy.
Oxygen Therapy
If the level of oxygen in your blood is low, you may
need oxygen therapy. Oxygen is usually given through nasal prongs or a mask. At
first, you may need oxygen only while exercising. It also may help to use it
while you are sleeping. Over time, you may need full-time oxygen therapy.
Your doctor may give you a standard
exercise stress test or a 6-minute walk test to find out
whether you need oxygen while exercising. A blood test will show what your
oxygen level is and how much oxygen you need.
Procedures To Remove Air or Fluid From the Chest or
Abdomen
Several procedures help remove air or fluid from
your chest and abdominal cavities and prevent them from building up in your
chest cavity.
- Removing fluid from your chest or abdominal
cavities may help relieve abdominal discomfort and shortness of breath. Your
doctor can usually remove this fluid with a needle and syringe. If large
amounts of fluid build up in your chest cavity, your doctor may have to insert
a tube into your chest to remove it.
- Removing air from your chest cavity may relieve
shortness of breath and chest pain caused by a collapsed lung. Your doctor can
usually remove the air with a tube that is inserted into your chest cavity
between your side ribs. The tube is usually attached to a suction device. If
this procedure doesn't work, or if your lungs collapse frequently, you may need
surgery.
- If lymph and air leak into your chest cavity
often, your doctor may perform a procedure to fuse your lung and chest wall
together and remove space for leakage. This procedure is called pleurodesis
(ploo-ROD-e-sis). It involves injecting a chemical into the place where the
leakage is happening. Your doctor may do it at your bedside, while you are
under local anesthesia. It also can be done in the operating room by
video-assisted thoracoscopy surgery, while you are under general
anesthesia.
Procedures To Remove AMLs
If you have ongoing severe pain or bleeding caused
by AMLs, surgery to remove some of the abdominal growths may be helpful. If the
bleeding is not too severe, an experienced radiologist can often block the
blood vessels feeding the AMLs. This may cause them to shrink.
Lung Transplantation
Surgery to replace one or both of your lungs with
healthy lungs from a human donor may be helpful. Survival after a
lung transplant for LAM is probably better than survival after
a lung transplant for another condition, such as emphysema.
Lung transplantation has a high risk of
complications.
In a few cases, doctors have found LAM cells in the
new transplanted lungs and other parts of the body, but the LAM cells do not
seem to prevent the transplanted lung from working.
Possible New Treatments for LAM
Researchers are now studying several medicines as
possible treatments for LAM, including rapamycin.
Rapamycin (sirolimus) is the first drug to show
promise as a treatment that will slow or stop the development and growth of the
LAM cell clusters. Doctors now use it to prevent the immune system from
rejecting kidney transplants. Researchers are looking into whether this
medicine can reduce the size of kidney AMLs in LAM and
tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC) patients. They also are
planning a larger study of the effects of rapamycin, or another drug like it,
on TSC and LAM patients. This study will test whether the drug can prevent or
reverse the growth of the LAM cell clusters and cysts in other organs and slow
the decline of lung function. |