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ALS Community Files Citizens' Petition asking FDA to Approve NurOwn Stem Cell Therapy

ALS Community Files Citizens' Petition asking FDA to Approve NurOwn Stem Cell Therapy

Miami Herald5 days ago
New and Unprecedented Survival, Respiratory, and Biomarker Data Prove that NurOwn Helps People with ALS Live Longer and Live Stronger
BREMERTON, WA / ACCESS Newswire / July 7, 2025 / On July 4, 1939, Lou Gehrig delivered his iconic "luckiest man" speech, announcing his retirement from the New York Yankees. On that day, ALS ended his Hall of Fame career. Less than two years later, ALS ended his life at just 37 years old.
In the last 86 years, the lethal outcome has not changed. ALS is a cruel, paralyzing and 100% fatal disease. But today, the ALS community has hope. A coalition of ALS patients and family members has filed a Citizens' Petition with the FDA, requesting the approval of NurOwn, a neurotrophically-enhanced stem cell therapy.
Backed by a decade of real-world data from the NurOwn trials and Expanded Access Program (EAP), the 309-page Citizens' Petition details the unprecedented survival, respiratory, and biomarker data for the FDA's consideration. The new evidence is supported by testimony from top ALS neurologists who were the trial's principal investigators, and the "totality of the evidence" from the Phase 3 trial. And, it aligns with real-world evidence where trial participants (now-unblinded) and their treating neurologists have proclaimed that NurOwn improves how people with ALS "feel, function and survive."
NurOwn: A Revolutionary Approach to ALS Treatment
Developed by BrainStorm Cell Therapeutics, NurOwn combines the restorative potential of autologous mesenchymal stem cells with the regenerative power of neurotrophic factors, which are like "Miracle-Gro" for dying motor neurons. NurOwn uses a patient's own stem cells that work like a FedEx truck, delivering nano-packages of neurotrophic factors and immunomodulatory cytokines directly to damaged motor neurons.
The results are profound. Within days, trial participants reported halting of symptoms like fasciculations, cramping and clonus; and some improvements in function. With additional doses, the EAP data confirm NurOwn's ability to slow lethal ALS progression, improve function, restore breathing, and extend survival - offering a lifeline to those battling this 100% fatal and paralyzing disease.
Unprecedented Survival and Respiratory Data
Survival data have long been the gold standard for FDA approvals; and as Commissioner Makary has emphasized: "gold standard science and common sense" will guide this FDA's decisions. To that end, Petitioners have submitted survival data derived from their own real-world evidence over the past decade. These survival data are unprecedented in ALS clinical trial history.
Five-Year Survival: 100% in NurOwn EAP vs. 20% in ALS natural history. All EAP participants (n=10) achieved five-year survival without tracheostomies.Extended Tracheostomy-Free Survival (TFS): 7-year median tracheostomy-free survival (range from 5 to 8.5 years), far surpassing the 2.5- to 3-year median in ALS natural history data.Progression-Free Survival (PFS): When patients received NurOwn, they experienced PFS ranging from a few months up to 17 months.
(See Petition's Emergent Fact section C at pg 19-33). At the FDA Advisory Committee meeting for NurOwn in 2023, Dr. Anthony Windebank of Mayo presented the clinical trial data and shared his expert opinion about the progression-free survival that he and other experienced trial investigators had witnessed - unprecedented in their prolific 40+ year neurology practices:
"I think this data is compelling & it should be approved…. While not everyone responds to the treatment, there are clearly a significant number who do. I have clearly seen some people stabilize in a way that I have never seen in any other trial. In fact, in the small number of people who participated in EAP and received 6-9 treatments, there were people who stabilized while on NurOwn in the trial. In the interval before they were in the EAP- which was over a year or more in some cases - these participants deteriorated, then again stabilized in the additional [EAP] treatment period. There were some who IMPROVED their score. Other investigators who have been working 'hands on' with the participants in the trial have seen similar responses...."
Dr. Windebank's testimony underscores the unprecedented impact of NurOwn on people with ALS. And the NurOwn survival data is buttressed by other compelling efficacy data also detailed in the Citizen's Petition:
Long-term Preservation of Respiratory Function: A 5- to 8-year delay in the need for non-invasive ventilation (NIV) over a 15-month natural history; and significant stabilization or improvement in Forced Vital Capacity (FVC), both key predictors of ALS survival. (See Emergent Fact section D at pg 34-44).Long-term Slowing of ALS Progression: Up to an 85% slowing in ALS progression rate, from a trial qualification of a minimum loss of 1 point per month to 0.15 points per month after receiving NurOwn. (See Emergent Fact section F at pg 44-46).Biomarker Evidence: 23 CSF biomarkers demonstrate statistically significant changes and NurOwn's target engagement across pathways of neuroprotection, neuroinflammation, and neurodegeneration. (See Fact section M at pgs 156-166).
Real-World Evidence and Patient Experiences
Our Citizens' Petition also leverages real-world evidence (RWE) and real-world data (RWD) from the EAP and Right to Try - consistent with the Congressional intent of the 21st Century Cures Act. Multiple trial participants testified, submitted Public Comments and shared their RWE, which aligns with the type of efficacy evidence specified in the ALS Guidance Document and 21st Century Cures.At the time of the advisory committee meeting in 2023, many trial participants reported tangible improvements in how they felt and functioned, and hence, an improved quality of life. (See sections H & I, pgs. 91-127). Their testimony was supported by video evidence documenting those improvements and by the opinions from multiple treating neurologists outside the clinical trial. For example, neuromuscular specialist Dr. Danielle Geraldi-Samara submitted a Public Comment to the FDA about what she observed in many of her patients participating in the NurOwn Phase 3 trial and EAP:
"The real world evidence could not be more striking. I have known patients nearly immobile who gained some functionality in their gait, patients with severe dysarthria become intelligible, patients who could not manage the fine motor skill needed to button or zipper, finally able to dress independently. I have patients with solid plateaus [in ALSFRS-R scores] over the course of a year."
Her clinical observations of progression-free survival after the NurOwn trial mirror those of Dr. Windebank and the other investigators during the trial and EAP. Now that the Phase 3 trial has been unblinded, multiple trial participants have confirmation that NurOwn halted their lethal progression and helped some people regain function. Our lived patient experiences now have both validation and vindication. When people are becoming paralyzed, it's common sense that we know when a therapy helps us function. Our lived patient experiences aren't anecdotal hyperbole; they are evidence.
And as Commissioner Makary recently said at the Gene and Cell Therapy Forum, there is value in learning from "n of 1" cases. Combined, the EAP "n of 10" and the right to try "n of 1" illustrate compelling and consistent, dose-dependent evidence of efficacy.
Reinforcing the efficacy data, Navy pilot Matt Bellina shared the RWE and RWD contained in his VA medical records in hisblog and onsocial media. Matt too experienced unprecedented clinically meaningful improvements after receiving 7 doses of NurOwn via Right to Try. Although he was a slow progressor, diagnosed in 2011, Matt's ALS had progressed significantly. He was choking on food, using NIV to breathe at night; had little use of his hands; and could not stand without assistance. His data are informative, supporting evidence of efficacy because he is the only person in the US who received 6 consecutive doses; because he was the only "slow progressor" to receive NurOwn; and because his baseline score was 21/48 on the ALS Functional rating scale.
Matt's large magnitude, dose-dependent improvement in function was immediate and obvious. (See section J at pgs 128-133). Matt has video documenting him standing out of a wheelchair unassisted - the first time in two years. He stopped choking on food. He improved his functional score by 6 points. His FVC stabilized and he stopped using NIV to breathe for more than 4 years. NurOwn interrupted Matt's lethal trajectory to death.
Commissioner Makary has repeatedly offered that the FDA, under President Trump, "believes in both the spirit and the letter of right to try." Thus, Petitioners hope that this FDA will consider and believe the RWE from the very veteran for whom President Trump's Right to Try law was named.
Totality of Evidence Methodology for Rare Diseases
To determine if a therapy can meet the approval threshold of "substantial evidence," the FDA asks if a therapy improves how people "feel, function or survive." Regulators look principally at the trial's primary endpoint at one fixed point in time at the end of the trial. But in heterogeneous rare diseases with small populations and short placebo-controlled trials, efficacy signals can be missed. Hence, it's much more likely to result in a Type II statistical error: delaying or denying approval of a drug that does work. In a terminal disease like ALS, Type II errors cause ongoing paralysis and death.
Thus, the Citizens' Petition reasserts the propriety of the FDA's use of the "totality of evidence" statistical methodology to assess NurOwn's efficacy. This approach - widely accepted in oncology for evaluating therapies in heterogeneous, rare populations - strengthens the case for NurOwn's approval by highlighting the consistent benefits in the subgroup of ALS patients earlier in ALS progression (akin to a drug working on stage I and II cancer patients).
When including the trial population with the most advanced ALS (akin to stage III/IV cancer), the trial did not meet its endpoints. But when looking at the patients earlier in ALS progression, NurOwn met statistical significance. Using the "totality of the evidence" methodology, renowned biostatistician and Wilkes Award winner, Dr. Lee-Jen Wei of Harvard / Dana Farber analyzed the multiple trial endpoints, across multiple functional scale domains, at multiple time points throughout the 28-week trial. He testified at the Advisory Committee meeting that these p-values were: 0.045, 0.021, 0.007 and 0.005; thus providing more supporting evidence of NurOwn's efficacy.
Meeting FDA Approval Thresholds
The Citizens' Petition asserts that NurOwn achieves the statutory thresholds for multiple FDA approval pathways:
1. Traditional ApprovalNurOwn's survival data, including the five-year survival, TFS, PFS and OS, meet the "substantial evidence" threshold of one well-controlled trial plus supporting evidence. This conclusion aligns with the FDA's recognition that survival data are the gold standard in FDA approvals. Thus the diversity and magnitude of NurOwn's survival outcomes fulfills both the "quality" and "quantity" requirements of "substantial evidence." (See Emergent Fact section C, pgs. 19-33).
2. Accelerated ApprovalNurOwn meets the "reasonable likelihood" threshold for accelerated approval. The survival data from the "n of 10" EAP are "reasonably likely to predict" a favorable impact on irreversible mortality of the 32,000 people with ALS. This survival data far surpasses survival data supporting the accelerated approval of many cancer therapies. (See comparison at Memorandum section I, pgs. 191-209 and Exs. A & B).
NurOwn's respiratory data, including delays in time-to-tracheostomy, time-to-NIV, and improved FVC, are also reasonably likely to predict a favorable impact on mortality. (See Emergent Fact section D, pgs. 34-43 and Memorandum II.C pgs. 219-222).
NurOwn's CSF biomarker data are also reasonably likely to predict a "clinically meaningful" effect. NurOwn caused statistically significant changes in first-in-class CSF biomarkers - regardless of disease severity and only in the NurOwn treatment arm. Of the 45 pre-specified biomarkers tested, 23 had statistically significant changes and 15/23 had p-values ≤0.001. These CSF biomarkers provide objective biological evidence of target engagement across pathways of neuroinflammation, neurodegeneration, and neuroprotection. (See Petition Facts section M, pgs. 156-166 and Memorandum section II.C pgs. 219-222).
Additionally, Brainstorm Cell has shared neurofilament light biomarker data in a poster presentation at the 2024 NEALS conference. As the FDA has acknowledged, as ALS progression advances, harmful NfL increases, reflecting more diseased and dying motor neurons. At the end of the Phase 3 trial, there was a 9.4% delta between the NurOwn and placebo arm (p=.037).
But in those 10 from EAP who were earlier in progression at the start of the Phase 3 trial, the delta between the NurOwn and placebo arms was more apparent. At the end of Phase 3, the 4/10 on placebo had a 37% increase in harmful NfL whereas the 6/10 on NurOwn had a 4% decrease in NfL. With the additional dosing in EAP, the 4/10 in the placebo-crossover group finally experienced a 5% decline in harmful NfL, whereas people on NurOwn maintained a 36% decrease from baseline. Not surprisingly, those who received the most doses of NurOwn and received it earliest in ALS progression had the largest magnitude functional changes and as well as the largest decrease in NfL levels - with two people who received 9 total doses having a decrease of ≥60% in harmful NfL levels. (See table in section II.C.2.a on page 222).
As such, the changes in CSF biomarkers are reasonably likely to predict a clinically meaningful benefit, and thus, the third way that NurOwn can meet the threshold for accelerated approval.
3. Conditional ApprovalNurOwn aligns with Commissioner Makary's proposed "plausible mechanism of action" threshold for conditional approval. Both stem cell technology and neurotrophic factors are plausible mechanisms of action in ALS; and NurOwn's CSF biomarker data confirms biological plausibility. (See Petition Fact section N, pgs. 173-176 and Memorandum section II.G at pgs. 234-241).
A Call for De Novo Review and Expedited Action
The Citizens' Petition requests a de novo review by the FDA. The Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research (CBER) has not ever considered the EAP survival, respiratory, or biomarker data, nor has it considered the Right to Try data from Navy pilot Matt Bellina, nor the unblinded and now corroborated RWE/RWD from people who have benefitted from NurOwn since 2011. The Petitioners also request that CBER use the Commissioner's new Priority Voucher to expedite review. The Citizens' Petition also proposes that FDA consider the far-reaching benefits of a Phase 4 post-marketing study, including a biorepository and natural history/exposome database, which aligns with the FDA Priorities outlined by Doctors Makary and Prasad.
A Historic Moment for the ALS Community
At the recent 2025 Gene and Cell Therapy Forum, Secretary Kennedy shared that the FDA will do everything it can to "accelerate approvals for rare diseases." And in their Joint OpEd for JAMA Viewpoints, Commissioner Makary and Director Prasad said the FDA is committed to "rapidly usher to market new products with transformational potential." In furtherance of that commitment, Director Prasad told the rare disease community that the FDA will:
"approve anything that is an incremental advancement"accelerate therapies by "taking action at the first sign of promise for rare diseases" and at the "earliest sign of statistical evidence"monitor people post-market to "ensure people live longer, stronger."
The Citizens' Petition argues that NurOwn has more than transformational potential. Rather, the survival and respiratory data, along with 8 years of RWE, demonstrate its already transformational impact on people living with ALS. Thus, the ALS community calls on the FDA to approve NurOwn, honoring its commitment to marry "gold standard science and common sense."
ALS is stealing decades from our lifespans. Just as the FDA acts with urgency for people with terminal cancer, the Citizens' Petition asks the FDA to act with the same urgency as ALS is killing our motor neurons. Please don't let another generation of people with ALS die waiting when we know a stem cell therapy can help us live.
About ALSALS is a 100% fatal, heterogeneous, rare neurodegenerative disease. As motor neurons die, the brain can no longer communicate with the voluntary muscles, which slowly become paralyzed. For reasons researchers don't fully understand, ALS impacts only the motor neurons, not the sensory neurons. Thus, people with ALS still feel cramping, sensations, fasciculations and pain, but they can't move to respond to them. Ultimately, people lose the ability to walk, talk, move, eat, drink, swallow, and eventually, breathe.
About the Petitioners
The Petitioners are a coalition of people who received NurOwn and others with ALS who could not. We are committed to advancing research, treatment access, and policy changes for ALS.
Petitioners:
Nicholas Warack, Esq.Matt Klingenberg - Phase 3 & EAPEric Stevens - Phase 3 & EAPJoshua Smith - Phase 3 & EAPEstate of Roberto Muggli - Phase 3 & EAPLesley Krummel - Phase 3Estate of Kade Simons - Phase 3Estate of Justin Rogers - Phase 3Terri Pickering Saenz - Phase 2Tara CollazoMayuri SaxenaEstate of Jamie Rose BerryEstate of Patricia ManhardtShahriar Minokadeh, MD
Contact:
Nicholas Warack, Esq.(mail to: Veterans4NurOwn@gmail.com)Mitze Klingenberg(mail to: NurOwnWorks@gmail.com)
SOURCE: NurOwn Citizen's Petition
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KIF18A Targeting Therapies FDA EMA Approval Clinical Trials By Indication Company Country Drug Class Report

Delhi, July 12, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Global KIF18A Targeting Therapies Market Trends, Clinical Trials, Technology Platforms & Future Outlook 2025 Report Highlights & Findings: First KIF18A Targeting Therapy Commercial Availability Expected By 2030 Highest Phase Of Development: Phase-I/II KIF18A Targeting Therapies In Clinical Trials: > 10 Therapies KIF18A Targeting Therapies Clinical Trials Insight By Company, Country, Indication & Phase KIF18A Targeting Therapies Market Development Trends Insight KIF18A Therapies Technology Platforms Insight Download Report: The global KIF18A targeting therapies market is rapidly gathering momentum as KIF18A has emerged as a key vulnerability in cancers characterized by chromosomal instability. As a mitotic kinesin motor protein essential for chromosome alignment during cell division, KIF18A is overexpressed in malignancies such as ovarian and triple-negative breast cancers, making it a promising target for precision oncology with potentially lower toxicity than traditional chemotherapies. Although no KIF18A-targeted therapy is commercially available yet, the field is progressing quickly. Clinical pipelines include more than 10 therapies, with several in early clinical development. Among the frontrunners is ATX‑295 from Accent Therapeutics, an oral, best-in-class small-molecule inhibitor that recently entered a Phase I/II dose-escalation study in patients with advanced solid tumors, including ovarian and triple-negative breast cancer. It's employed with biomarker-enriched enrollment based on genomic instability markers like whole-genome doubling, and has received FDA Fast Track status—accelerating its path forward. The clinical landscape includes global contributions from leading biotechs such as Volastra Therapeutics, advancing multiple small-molecule inhibitors including Sovilnesib (AMG‑650) in Phase I for platinum-resistant ovarian cancer, and VLS‑1488 in Phase I/II across chromosomal instability-high tumors. Accent's ATX‑295 stands currently at the most advanced Phase I/II stage, with trials in the US and potentially Asia-Pacific, suggesting geographic development convergence. Technological innovation underpins expansion in this field. Development is dominated by small-molecule inhibitors designed to halt KIF18A's motor activity at kinetochores, causing mitotic catastrophe in cancer cells. Alternative approaches include disrupting upstream regulatory pathways like phosphorylation, and leveraging AI-driven drug discovery platforms. For example, Insilico Medicine's Chemistry42 and PandaOmics platforms generated a macrocyclic KIF18A inhibitor (ISM9682), showcasing the power of AI to enhance specificity and efficiency in drug design. Market trends demonstrate strong growth potential. The first commercial KIF18A-targeting therapy is expected by 2030, propelled by fast track designations and positive preclinical data. The rich pipeline, combined with precision biomarker strategies, supports a robust developmental roadmap, aligning with unmet clinical needs in CIN-high solid tumors and potentially extending to hematologic malignancies where KIF18A overexpression correlates with poor prognosis. Regional development trends show clinical leadership based in the US and Europe, where companies like Accent and Volastra are active, while China and other Asia-Pacific markets are engaging through global trial participation and local biotech collaborations. Multi-region trial footprints and biomarker-defined patient enrollment strategies are shaping global development dynamics. Our Global KIF18A Targeting Therapies Market Report offers detailed insights into this evolving therapeutic area. It profiles more than ten clinical-stage candidates by company, indication, country, and development phase, with a deep focus on ATX‑295 as the leading Phase I/II program. The report evaluates technology platforms, including small-molecule motor inhibitors and AI-enabled discovery, and analyzes biomarker-led patient selection models. Regional development trends and regulatory environments are mapped, and strategic partnerships and investments are examined. For pharmaceutical executives, biotech investors, and drug development leaders, this report provides a strategic foundation. It outlines market drivers, technological innovations, and clinical milestones that are poised to transform KIF18A from a promising target into an approved therapeutic by 2030, potentially offering new treatment options for patients with chromosomally unstable tumors. Disclaimer: The above press release comes to you under an arrangement with GlobeNewswire. Business Upturn takes no editorial responsibility for the same. Ahmedabad Plane Crash

I Was Diagnosed With a UTI, Months Later I Was Planning My Own Funeral
I Was Diagnosed With a UTI, Months Later I Was Planning My Own Funeral

Newsweek

time12 hours ago

  • Newsweek

I Was Diagnosed With a UTI, Months Later I Was Planning My Own Funeral

Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. As the priest read me my last rites at just 41 years old, I was heartbroken and in disbelief. I couldn't believe I was dying. Just months earlier, I had been healthy. I ate well, worked out often, and took care of my husband, a disabled Marine Corps veteran who became paralyzed after an injury in 2011. I was also a stepmother to his two children and had a career in IT for a large healthcare corporation until April 2021. Then, all of a sudden, I couldn't do anything for myself. It started with a urinary tract infection (UTI)—not uncommon for women, affecting 50 to 60 percent of adult women in their lifetime. UTIs are often treated with antibiotics, or sometimes clear up on their own. I regularly worked out and now I am bedridden. I regularly worked out and now I am bedridden. TikTok/@taliasmith2021 I asked my doctor for a urinalysis and culture. The results confirmed a UTI, but with a small bacterial count. Because I was symptomatic, the doctor prescribed Ciprofloxacin—a fluoroquinolone antibiotic that kills the bacteria causing infections. Before starting it, I asked if there was anything I should know, since I rarely took medications. I was told it was "safe and effective" and frequently prescribed for UTIs. I was instructed to take one pill every 12 hours. But after my third dose, I began having severe pain throughout my body, especially in my legs. It felt like the flu—but I wasn't sick. As the day went on, it worsened. I developed tingling and numbness in my extremities, zapping pains in my head and face, like electrical shocks. I skipped my fourth pill that night, convinced my symptoms would vanish after sleep. When I woke up, I couldn't walk. It felt like a bomb had gone off in my body. At the emergency room, I explained that I had lost the ability to walk overnight. The first thing the doctor asked me was whether I had been taking Cipro. I was terrified. I need around the clock care and need to use mobility aids. I need around the clock care and need to use mobility aids. TikTok/@taliasmith2021 He explained that Ciprofloxacin carries one of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA)'s highest safety alerts—a Black Box warning. These warnings highlight major risks for consumers and can be added, updated, or removed over time. More than 400 drugs currently carry them. According to the FDA, potential side effects include: Disabling and potentially irreversible reactions : CIPRO can cause serious, lasting side effects in multiple body systems, even in healthy people. : CIPRO can cause serious, lasting side effects in multiple body systems, even in healthy people. Tendinitis and tendon rupture : It increases the risk of tendon injuries, especially in older adults or those on steroids. : It increases the risk of tendon injuries, especially in older adults or those on steroids. Peripheral neuropathy : It can cause nerve damage with pain, tingling, or weakness that may become permanent. : It can cause nerve damage with pain, tingling, or weakness that may become permanent. Central nervous system effects: It may cause seizures, confusion, hallucinations, or suicidal thoughts. I had read the label before taking the pills, it mentions Stevens–Johnson syndrome - and minor stuff but nothing that was on the FDA website. In my state, there was no mention of a Black Box warning for permanent side effects. I trusted my doctor and the medical system—but that doesn't make it my fault, or anyone else's who has had a similar experience. I was sent home, told to take ibuprofen, and assured I'd be better in a few days. That didn't happen. In fact, I got worse. Unbeknownst to me, I was having an adverse reaction known as fluoroquinolone toxicity—also called "floxing." In 2016, the FDA warned doctors and patients that fluoroquinolones should generally not be used for uncomplicated UTIs if there are other good treatment options available. Newsweek has contacted the FDA for comment. An FDA spokesperson told PEOPLE that "patient safety is paramount at the FDA and we continuously review available sources of data and new information on potential risks of drugs, including fluoroquinolones, and take action as needed to protect the American public." "The agency continues to believe that for some serious bacterial infections, the benefits of systemic fluoroquinolones—including the use of higher doses, when appropriate—outweigh the risks," the spokesperson said. I loved my life when I was working and caring for my husband and his kids. Now, it's all been taken from me—and I'm left feeling utterly lost. I loved my life when I was working and caring for my husband and his kids. Now, it's all been taken from me—and I'm left feeling utterly lost. TikTok/@taliasmith2021 My condition deteriorated rapidly. I experienced constant electrical shocks, the sensation of bugs crawling over my skin, excruciating bone and joint pain, debilitating neuropathy, vision and hearing changes, difficulty swallowing, stomach problems, and severe stiffness that left me unable to bend and sit. My body felt like it was shutting down. About two months later, I developed mast cell activation syndrome (MCAS), a disorder in which the immune system reacts inappropriately to perceived threats. Alongside difficulty swallowing due to the toxicity—and severe reactions to food, supplements, and medications from MCAS—I was unable to maintain my weight. Within five months, I lost over 50 percent of my body weight. By September 2021, I weighed just 60 pounds and was admitted to hospice care. I was sure it was the end for me. I asked my father to choose my burial plot near my grandmother. I picked the dress for my casket and the readings for church. It was terrifying. I hadn't eaten in four weeks, couldn't sit up, and was even struggling to breathe. After starting mast cell stabilizers, I managed to eat a few foods to survive. I transitioned to palliative care in May 2022 and remain on it to this day. I now require 24/7 care. I am bed-bound, leaving home only for doctor's appointments in a wheelchair. I live with constant pain and still have nearly all my symptoms, though some have lessened slightly. After a recent health setback, my father started a GoFundMe to help cover my enormous medical expenses. So far, more than $24,000 has been raised to pay for treatments and to explore alternative options. This has devastated us. What are the odds that first my husband ends up in a wheelchair, and then 10 years later, I do as well—from taking an antibiotic? I lost my career, my independence, and my quality of life. Now, I am using TikTok and Instagram to raise awareness of Fluoroquinolone Toxicity (@taliasmith2021) and started a petition for informed consent for fluoroquinolone antibiotics. I also run a website that has heaps of information on "floxing" and to help others who also have been affected.

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