In mt practice I have using vitamins and co enzyme Q10 with different ages in LHON , nutritional and toxic neuropathies , over decades I have never met a case with even suspected toxicity or even overdose symptoms , and with variable improvements , without Idebenone , for being not available and too expensive for here, So clinical practice revokes that there is an issue in this area , sometimes I do vitamin be levels and comes over the normal range but no signs of any toxicity , usually I reduce the dose gradually in those case
Original Message:
Sent: 12/4/2025 7:39:00 AM
From: Scott Forman
Subject: RE: Clinical trials for LHON in the US
There are many supplement companies that sell methylcobalamin; while cyanide is in microscopic quantities, why not take cobalamin that's attached to a methyl group, a far more important group necessary for so many important cellular biochemical reactions. It's not more expensive either and wastes less metabolic energy.
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Scott Forman, MD
Senior Fellow North American Neuro-ophthalmology Society
Adult and Pediatric Neuro-ophthalmology
Comprehensive Ophthalmology
Functional Medicine
Original Message:
Sent: 12/2/2025 3:45:00 PM
From: Cinthi Pillai
Subject: RE: Clinical trials for LHON in the US
I emailed UpToDate to update this statement, but I'm not sure if they will if it's on the FDA drug info website. The pharmacist didn't want to give the patient B12 supplements because of this.
Original Message:
Sent: 12/2/2025 2:24:00 PM
From: Neil Miller
Subject: RE: Clinical trials for LHON in the US
Simmons Lessell wrote about this issue years ago. He pointed out what Alfredo said; ie, the dose of cyanide in cyanocobalamin is orders of magnitude too small to cause any damage to the optic nerve.
Original Message:
Sent: 12/2/2025 2:20:00 PM
From: Alfredo Sadun
Subject: RE: Clinical trials for LHON in the US
I have always been fond of the pharmacological adage, "It's not the poison, it's the dose." The amount of cyanide in cyanocobalamin is so little as to be negligible. The cases of LHON that showed optic atrophy after cyanocobalamin would have shown the same without the treatment as well. The subacute stage of LHON shows the greatest amount of RNFL reduction (mostly resolution of swelling as well as optic atrophy) to occur 4-8 months after visual loss. It's the nature of the beast, not the poison effect of cyanide.
Original Message:
Sent: 12/2/2025 2:10:00 PM
From: Cinthi Pillai
Subject: RE: Clinical trials for LHON in the US
Hello Dr. Sadun,
I am currently caring for a patient I suspect has LHON. I briefly discussed vitamin supplements with our hospital pharmacist and she pointed out this statement from UpToDate under Cyanocobalamin (vitamin B12): Drug information.
"Leber disease: Patients with Leber disease who received vitamin B12 treatment have suffered from severe rapid optic atrophy. Use of cyanocobalamin in these patients is not recommended."
I had never heard of this, and could not find references. It also seems to be on product packaging per the FDA website.
https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/drugsatfda_docs/label/2021/080737Orig1s040lbl.pdf
Curious to know your thoughts on this?
Thanks,
Cinthi
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Original Message:
Sent: 09-12-2025 16:23
From: Alfredo Sadun
Subject: Clinical trials for LHON in the US
Yep. No trials at the moment and the trials in the pipeline are being prepared very slowly. Just Google Idebenone and LHON. Most of my patients end up using HBC or Relentless (for the record, they buy it directly; we don't prescribe it).
Alfredo
Original Message:
Sent: 9/11/2025 10:03:00 PM
From: Deborah Friedman
Subject: Clinical trials for LHON in the US
Hi,
This is so unusual – I have seen 3 men in the past week who I think have LHON (and my denominator is small). Genetic testing was ordered on all of them.
I looked on clincaltrials.gov and did not see any trials that are currently recruiting in the U.S.
If you are aware of any clinical trials currently looking for participants, please contact me privately.
Also, if you can recommend a reputable source for idebenone, I would like to pass the information on to my patients.
Thank you!
Deb
DeborahFriedman@tx.rr.com