Yes.
The active ingredient, cysteamine, is in all four of the products that I previously talked about. With cysteamine, the hardest part of almost any treatment, if you ask any patient, is the side effects. The side effects of cysteamine are from all drugs. When they took Cystagon and turned it into Procysbi.... Cystagon has to be given every four hours and Procysbi has to be given every two hours.
I wholeheartedly support this drug being here in Canada and Canadians having access to it. If Olivia were a 26-year-old woman managing a relationship and career, of course I would want her to have a drug that makes compliance easier. The problem is that all of the side effects are still the same: gastro upset, making patients smell, loss of or poor appetite, gas, bloating...just horrendous things that nobody wants to deal with.
The difference between Cystagon and the Procysbi was that they enteric-coated the latter, so it releases differently. Is it worth that? That's not for me to decide, but a drug—an active ingredient—that's been around for decades and was first introduced as a treatment in 1994 for patients...I find it unjustifiable and with the—