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Archive for the ‘Genetic medicine’ Category

Institute of Genetic Medicine | Johns Hopkins Medicine

Tuesday, February 11th, 2020

The McKusick-Nathans Institute of Genetic Medicine (IGM) seeks to further the understanding of human heredity and genetic medicine and use that knowledge to treat and prevent disease.

The IGM is working to consolidate all relevant teaching, patient care and research in human and medical genetics at Johns Hopkins to provide national and international leadership in genetic medicine. The IGM serves as a focal point for interactions between diverse investigators to promote the application of genetic discoveries to human disease and genetics education to the public. It builds upon past strengths and further develops expertise in the areas of genomics, developmental genetics and complex disease genetics. The IGM works to catalyze the spread of human genetic perspectives to other related disciplines by collaboration with other departments within Johns Hopkins.

There are more than 300 dedicated employees in the IGM, fulfilling the Johns Hopkins tripartite mission of research, teaching and patient care. They include 45 full-time faculty, 15 residents, more than 70 graduate students and 200 staff.

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ACSM Tackles Myth on Genetics and Heart Disease as Part of American Heart Month – Newswise

Tuesday, February 11th, 2020

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Newswise (Indianapolis, IN) Nearly half of all U.S. adults have some type of cardiovascular disease. Its a heartbreaking statistic literally and figuratively. People often believe their risk for heart disease cannot be reduced if they have a genetic predisposition. In honor of American Heart Month, the American College of Sports Medicine (ACSM) and ACSM Fellow Beth A. Taylor, Ph.D., have teamed up to shatter this heart myth.

The truth about the heritability (or genetic component) of heart disease is a glass far more full than empty, as long as we look at it accurately, says Dr. Taylor, associate professor of kinesiology at the University of Connecticut and the director of exercise physiology research at Hartford Hospital.

Genetics do play a significant role in increasing heart disease risk. Research shows that individuals at high genetic risk have a 91% higher chance of experiencing a cardiac event, yet that risk can be cut nearly in half by adopting healthy lifestyles.

We may have genes that predispose us to cardiovascular disease, but when, how and to what extent those genes express themselves is highly influenced by lifestyle, says Dr. Taylor. Being more physically active, aiming for a healthy weight, eating a heart healthy diet and avoiding smoking can improve heart health and reduce the risk of coronary events by 46% for high genetic risk individuals.

The outlook looks even better when considering being healthy across the lifespan rather than at a single age. The Framingham Heart Study, a project of Boston University and the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute (NHLBI), has sought to identify common factors contributing to cardiovascular disease (CVD) by following CVD development in three generations of participants.

Dr. Taylor adds, When those three generations of the Framingham Heart Study were reviewed, investigators concluded that the heritability of ideal cardiovascular health was only 13-18%, with health behaviors and lifestyle factors being much more influential.

She says other studies have found that adhering to just four out of five of healthy lifestyle factors (e.g., avoiding smoking and excessive alcohol intake, performing 30 or more minutes a day of moderate-to-vigorous physical activity, eating a heart healthy diet) increased the likelihood of living free of cardiovascular disease, as well as cancer and Type 2 diabetes, by more than 10 years in women and seven years in men.

For Dr. Taylor, the take-home message is simple. You cant completely cure a broken heart; however, you can make it better or worse based on your lifestyle. The choice is yours!

Find more heart health resources from ACSM at https://www.acsm.org/read-research/trending-topics-resource-pages/heart-health-resources.

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About the American College of Sports Medicine

The American College of Sports Medicine is the largest sports medicine and exercise science organization in the world. More than 50,000 international, national and regional members and certified professionals are dedicated to advancing and integrating scientific research to provide educational and practical applications of exercise science and sports medicine. More details at acsm.org.

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Encoded Therapeutics Expands Gene Therapy Leadership with Key Appointment and Promotion – Yahoo Finance

Tuesday, February 11th, 2020

- Salvador Rico, M.D., Ph.D., named Chief Medical Officer

- Martin Moorhead, Ph.D., promoted to Chief Technology Officer

SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO, Calif., Feb. 11, 2020 /PRNewswire/ --Encoded Therapeutics, Inc.(Encoded), a precision gene therapy company,today announced the appointment of Salvador Rico, M.D., Ph.D., as chief medical officer and the promotion of Martin Moorhead, Ph.D., to chief technology officer. Dr. Rico joins Encoded from Audentes Therapeutics, where he led clinical development of the company's pipeline of gene therapies for neuromuscular disorders. In his three years at Encoded, Dr. Moorhead has guided the development of the company's technology platform for creating innovative AAV-based gene therapies. He previously led the development of clonoSEQ, the FDA-approved next-generation sequencing assay for detecting minimal residual disease in lymphoid malignancies, at Adaptive Biotechnologies.

Encoded Therapeutics, Inc. Logo (PRNewsfoto/Encoded Therapeutics, Inc.)

"Sal is an accomplished physician-scientist with deep experience advancing novel therapeutics through clinical development, and Martin is a strong leader who brings a genomics mindset to all aspects of gene therapy development," said Encoded co-founder and chief executive officer Kartik Ramamoorthi, Ph.D."With these appointments, we now have some of the most qualified gene therapy experts in the industry with a proven track record of delivering for patients in need. Their collective experience includes bringing multiple AAV-based gene therapies through clinical development, FDA filings, and approval. I am more confident than ever that our novel gene therapies can make a major impact on patients suffering from debilitating diseases, starting with Dravet Syndrome."

At Encoded, Dr. Rico will lead medical strategy and clinical development of ETX101, which is being developed for patients with SCN1A+ Dravet Syndrome. Dr. Moorhead will lead the technical team that enables Encoded's innovative research platform.

"I am delighted to join an organization that is so committed to transforming patients' lives with the development of next-generation gene therapies," said Dr. Rico. "I look forward to working closely with both the team at Encoded, and with the Dravet Syndrome community, to advance ETX101 through clinical development and ultimately, deliver it to patients in need."

"In building a technology platform that combines the power of genomics and computation with AAV-based gene therapy, Encoded is forging the path for the next generation of precision genetic medicines," said Dr. Moorhead. "I am very proud of what we have accomplished to date and am thrilled at the opportunity to help advance multiple programs for diseases where no treatment options currently exist."

New Leadership Team Appointments

About Encoded

Encoded Therapeutics, Inc., is a biotechnology company developing precision gene therapies for a broad range of severe genetic disorders. Our mission is to realize the potential of genomics-driven precision medicine by overcoming key limitations of viral gene therapy. We focus on delivering life-changing advances that move away from disease management and towards lasting disease modification. We are advancing our lead asset, ETX101, for the treatment of SCN1A-positiveDravet Syndrome. For more information, please visitwww.Encoded.com.

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Lottery like no other offers a cutting-edge medicine with lives on the line – STAT

Tuesday, February 11th, 2020

The lottery that began this week was not about money, or about choosing a school, or about obtaining a visa. It was about a childs life.

In this case, the children selected would receive a drug that otherwise was not available. Jamie Clarkson, an electrician in Queensland, Australia, entered his 18-month-old daughter, Wynter.

We applied for it because we desperately want this drug for our daughter, but youre putting your daughters well-being and longevity in the hands of a lottery, Clarkson said. I guess its the fairest way to decide who gets the drug and who doesnt, but yeah, its not a great feeling.

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The treatment, a gene therapy called Zolgensma, is designed for children like Wynter who have a neuromuscular disease called spinal muscular atrophy, or SMA. Without it or other treatments, those with the most serious type are likely to die as babies. It was first approved by U.S. regulators only last year, and is not yet available in other countries.

The lottery was devised by the drugs manufacturer, Novartis, to give families in those places a chance to get it through a novel form of compassionate use a way to get medications that have not been approved while they wait. Fifty doses are slotted to be given away for free in the first half of the year, with up to 100 total.

The first drawing occurred Monday.

Ethicists and advocates have debated the merits and the design of the unusual arrangement. Parents said that it was uncomfortable to cast their childs fate into what felt like a sweepstakes a kind of bizarre Willy Wonka contest in which, as Maura Blair, a Canadian mother of a child with SMA put it, were talking about lives. But if it was a chance to get the drug, it was worth trying.

Zolgensma costs $2.1 million in the United States the worlds most expensive drug. And even if it is to cost less in other countries, even if it is to be covered by insurance, infants at this point are not eligible for it after turning 2. Some families have even tried to fundraise in hopes of buying the drug themselves and getting it injected by doctors in the United States.

Shes 7 months, Laura Silva, who lives north of Toronto, said about her daughter, Rebecca. Do we rely on their word and wait it out? Or do we take action ourselves? Because the sooner she can get it, the better for her.

Some parents said they had taken issue with news coverage of the lottery, which has framed the eventual recipients of the drugs as lucky winners. If that were the case, what did that say about everyone else?

The kids appeared healthy at birth. But soon, their parents recalled, it became clear that something was wrong. They couldnt raise or control their arms and legs. They would choke on their milk.

Jamie Clarkson, in Australia, said he and his wife, Kellee, had a friend with a daughter around Wynters age. When laid face down (tummy time, in parental parlance), the girl had no problem lifting her head.

The difference was chalk and cheese, he said. Our girl sort of laid there and didnt do anything.

Sometimes the parents were told their kids just needed more time, but eventually, a clinical evaluation and genetic test would confirm the SMA diagnosis. The most serious form, called type 1, is estimated to affect 1 in 15,000 babies.

Children with the disease have a mutation in a gene called SMN1 (or a missing gene) that meant cells dont produce sufficient SMN protein. The dearth of the protein debilitates motor neurons, which are responsible for relaying messages to muscles, and creates a cascade of issues that culminates in muscle weakness.

Without treatment, babies with type 1 SMA might never be able to lift their heads or arms or legs, and struggle to regulate their swallowing and breathing. Most die by 2, typically because of respiratory issues.

Zolgensma works by ferrying a healthy copy of an SMN gene into motor neurons restoring production of the protein and the health of the neurons. It is a one-time treatment with lasting benefits like reigniting a pilot light.

When Zolgensma won approval from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in May, it was hailed a monumental victory for families and an achievement in genetic medicine one of the first gene therapies to make it to the market. But it also created a divide between haves and have-nots American parents, assuming insurance companies would cover the treatment, and parents anywhere else in the world.

It is not uncommon for a drug to be available in the United States before other countries; drug makers routinely apply for and receive regulatory clearance from agencies around the world at different times. But the FDAs approval drove global appeals for a drug that offered babies a chance.

Beyond the issue of regulatory approval, supplies of Zolgensma are tight, Novartis has said. Gene therapies are complex to manufacture, and the company only has one facility producing the drug right now, with plans for two more to come online this year. It also needs to have doses available for U.S. patients and for patients in other countries where the drug could become available in the coming months. (European regulators are expected to decide on Zolgensma this quarter, and Japanese officials before the middle of the year, the company has said. Decisions in Canada and Australia may not come until 2021.)

Novartis saw a lottery as the answer.

Random lotteries are an accepted way to mete out resources when there is a limited amount, some ethicists have argued. They establish an equal playing field and remove the possibility that those with money or connections can maneuver to jump the line.

But experts have also questioned whether Novartis has done enough to try to overcome the scarcity issues. Some have also said that favoring those with the greatest need meaning the sickest children would be a more ethical approach; patients who are healthier could potentially wait until the drug is approved in their home countries or until more supply is available.

If it is really not possible to help all who are in need of help, then a lottery with priority to patients who are worst off is not a bad approach and definitely fairer than other things a company could do, said Holly Fernandez Lynch, a bioethicist at University of Pennsylvanias Perelman School of Medicine. The key is to first do everything possible to minimize the need for a lottery at all and its not obvious to me that Novartis has done that here.

The fact that the lottery created a situation in which there are, for lack of better descriptors, winners and losers also left some people uneasy.

You cant do anything to improve your chances, said Genevieve Kanter, also a bioethicist at Penn. But it does become a zero-sum game, which is what bothers some people about the mechanism, even if at the end of the day, more kids get treated than in the alternate scenario where theres no lottery.

Its the price we have to pay to have some kids treated.

In an interview with STAT, the president of AveXis, the Novartis unit that developed Zolgensma, said the company considered prioritizing the patients who were sickest or those for whom another SMA treatment did not help. But the company, which is using an outside party to handle the selection and brought in ethicists to consult on the system, did not want to put a finger on the scale in any way, he said. Instead, selections would be random.

Its the only fair way to allocate, the official, Dave Lennon, said, even as he acknowledged, its not an ideal situation.

The alternative is not do anything, which we didnt feel like was a good option, he added.

He said if the supply was sufficient, Novartis hoped to expand the program.

Novartis would not say how many people were being selected each time. Drawings are set to take place every two weeks.

And that means families in desperate need have a chance to obtain the medicine just as often.

For them, they try every possible way to get this Zolgensma, said Csilla Galik, a friend of the family of Noel lys, who has type 1 SMA and whose family lives in Romania near the Hungarian border. They need to try every possibility because this medicines price is incredible.

Beyond Zolgensma, there is another treatment for SMA: Spinraza, manufactured by the drug maker Biogen and more widely available globally. Injected into the spinal fluid every few weeks and then every four months, it promotes the production of the SMN protein by boosting the activity of another gene similar to SMN1.

Many of the children waiting for Zolgensma are already receiving Spinraza, and their parents say it appears to be helping, to an extent.

Wynter Clarksons motor function has improved, though not as much as her parents had hoped it would. She can move her head and raise her arms, and can sit up with a back brace. She can rock from side to side, but not quite roll over. Each treatment requires the family to travel about two and a half hours from their home in Toowoomba to Brisbane.

Spinraza and Zolgensma have not been compared in a head-to-head study, and how long the benefits of Zolgensma last is not yet known. But parents said they see a one-time infusion of Zolgensma which replaces the faulty gene at the root of the disease, instead of just building a workaround as the best option for their children.

Even when children are on Spinraza, their disease can progress, if at a slower rate, parents said.

Blair said her daughter, Lennon, has more control over her head and limbs since starting Spinraza. But after three doses, the girl still needed a feeding tube inserted; she lost her ability to swallow. Thats on top of other care required by Blair and other parents of infants with the disease. Oxygen levels needed to be checked, sleeping sometimes requires a mask and machines to aid breathing, physical therapy exercises are done to try to coax some muscle activity.

You basically repeat that all day, all day until bed time, said Blair, of St. Catharines, Ontario. And everything takes so long.

There is another wrinkle to having a child with the disease: Its inherited, and some parents though not all said they felt responsible for having passed on a mutation that made their child so sick.

To have the disease, a child needs to inherit two mutated copies of the gene, one from each parent who can go through life not knowing they are carrying the mutation until they have a child with the disease.

The parents who have struggled with a sense of guilt know they shouldnt blame themselves, but they still catch themselves wondering if there was something they could have done differently.

Its something we technically gave to her, not even knowing that we could, said Laura Silva, the mother who lives near Toronto. And thats the hardest part.

When it came time for the lottery drawing this week, her daughter Rebeccas name wasnt in the pool she hadnt yet gotten the necessary approval from a Candian health authority to try an experimental drug. Its not clear how many Canadian children found themselves in similar circumstances, or how many were successfully entered by their doctors. Some parents said they were still waiting for that approval.

Noel, the boy in Romania, was entered by his doctor. But his family had not heard anything following the initial drawing. Neither had the Clarksons in Australia:

No word from our neurologist about the free Zolgensma dose, Jamie wrote in an email Tuesday, so Im assuming Wynter wasnt picked this time around, unfortunately.

Winnie Luk-Taylor and Cory Taylor, who live outside Toronto, were once hopeful that Zolgensma could help their daughter, Skye.

She was born in June. Her motor skills werent developing as they should have, and her breath had a rattle to it, as if she were congested. At around 4 months, Skye was diagnosed with SMA and, with a cough, her parents were told to take her to the hospital. She was also started on Spinraza.

She spent a month and a half at the hospital with respiratory infections and complications. She died Dec. 21.

Skye took it all in and smiled at every one and didnt seem to realize she was experiencing some very, I guess, major medical procedures, her mom said. She was a very good-natured girl.

Luk-Taylor said she sometimes wondered what might have happened if Skye had been born one year later June 24, 2020, not 2019. Ontario, the province where they live, started testing for SMA this year as part of its newborn screening, meaning Skye might have been diagnosed earlier in her life and started on Spinraza sooner. Maybe it could have had more of an effect. And maybe Zolgensma would have become available to Canadian babies not long after that.

Instead, at Christmas, Luk-Taylor wrote her daughter a poem.

We will never let you go, it reads in part.

Your spirit will live onIt lives in everything I doI will always fight for youI will always care for youI will always dream of youI got to see who you were to becomeAnd I am blessed and proud of youI am blessed and proud of youI hope you see and hear me nowAnd know that I love you.

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Accelerating Access to Breakthrough Cancer Therapies – TAPinto.net

Tuesday, February 11th, 2020

Atlantic Health System Cancer Care is dedicated to providing patients with access to the most promising and life-saving trials, research, and innovations in the communities where they live and work. Cutting-edge initiatives include the following:

In affiliation with the Translational Genomics Research Institute (TGen) of Phoenix, AZ, Atlantic Health System Cancer Care has created the nations firstBreakthrough Oncology Accelerator, a pioneering research and clinical collaboration that offers multiple early and late-phase clinical trials, right here in New Jersey. The Accelerator is designed to improve patient access to life-saving therapies through more rapid deployment of new research trials and novel payment mechanisms post-approval, saidEric Whitman, MD, medical director of Atlantic Health System Cancer Care.

The Breakthrough Treatment Center is part of the Breakthrough Oncology Accelerator and offers phase 1 clinical trials using the latest immunotherapies, cell-based therapies and genetic medicine options to cancer patients who have not responded to other treatments. The Center typically accommodates eight to 14 patients daily.

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We treat all patients with advanced cancers and use all kinds of treatment, saidDr. Angela Alistar, medical director of the Breakthrough Treatment Center who came to Morristown Medical Center from Wake Forest University a few years ago. She is widely known for her pioneeringresearch on pancreatic cancer, which has doubled the patient survival rate.

As a physician, I always look for early-phase studies because I know what standard of care can do. Unless I have a curative standard of care treatment, Im not interested. I want to do better. I want to find a clinical trial that combines standard of care with something exciting that has promise. Im always looking for, How can we do better? Thats what this Center is about: Not waiting until the last minute, but giving our patients the best options up front.

Atlantic Health System Cancer Care is also the lead affiliate ofAtlantic Health Cancer Consortium (AHCC), the only New Jersey-based Community Oncology Research Program (NCORP) designated by the National Cancer Institute (NCI). Covering 73% of the states population, the AHCC NCORP presents a substantial opportunity to advance scientific understanding of cancer prevention, screening, control, treatment and care delivery research within a large and diverse population, saidMissak Haigentz, MD, medical director of Hematology and Oncology for Atlantic Health System and principal investigator for AHCC NCORP.

To learn more about Atlantic Health System cancer research trials, please go toatlantichealth.org/research

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Myriad Submits sPMA for myChoice CDx with Lynparza in First-Line Maintenance Therapy in Advanced Ovarian Cancer – Yahoo Finance

Tuesday, February 11th, 2020

SALT LAKE CITY, Feb. 11, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Myriad Genetics, Inc. (MYGN), a leader in molecular diagnostics and precision medicine, announced that it has submitted a supplementary premarket approval (sPMA) application to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for its myChoice CDx test to help identify women with advanced ovarian cancer who are potential candidates for maintenance therapy with Lynparza (olaparib) in combination with bevacizumab. Myriads filing is based on the positive results from the Phase 3 PAOLA-1 trial of Lynparza that was published online in the New England Journal of Medicine in December 2019. Lynparza is marketed by AstraZeneca (LSE/STO/NYSE: AZN) and Merck, known as MSD outside of the U.S. and Canada.

This regulatory submission represents another important milestone for the myChoice CDx test, said Nicole Lambert, president, Myriad Oncology and Womens Health. Our goal is to improve patient care through precision medicine and ensure that women with advanced ovarian cancer have access to targeted therapies.

Myriad's myChoice CDx is the most comprehensive homologous recombination deficiency test, enabling physicians to identify patients with tumors that have lost the ability to repair double-stranded DNA breaks, resulting in increased susceptibility to DNA-damaging drugs such as platinum drugs or PARP inhibitors. The myChoice CDx test comprises tumor sequencing of the BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes and a composite of three proprietary technologies (loss of heterozygosity, telomeric allelic imbalance and large-scale state transitions).

About Ovarian CancerOvarian cancer affects approximately 22,000 women per year in the United States according to the American Cancer Society. Typically, ovarian cancer is diagnosed at later stages when it has metastasised to other areas of the body and only 20 percent of patients are diagnosed with early stage disease. Ovarian cancer is one of the deadliest cancers with approximately 14,000 deaths per year attributed to the disease. Patients with certain characteristics such as a family history of the disease, certain genetic mutations such as those in the BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes, obesity and endometriosis face a higher risk from ovarian cancer.

About Myriad GeneticsMyriad Genetics Inc. is a leading precision medicine company dedicated to being a trusted advisor transforming patient lives worldwide with pioneering molecular diagnostics. Myriad discovers and commercializes molecular diagnostic tests that: determine the risk of developing disease, accurately diagnose disease, assess the risk of disease progression, and guide treatment decisions across six major medical specialties where molecular diagnostics can significantly improve patient care and lower healthcare costs. Myriad is focused on five critical success factors: building upon a solid hereditary cancer foundation, growing new product volume, expanding reimbursement coverage for new products, increasing RNA kit revenue internationally and improving profitability with Elevate 2020. For more information on how Myriad is making a difference, please visit the Company's website: http://www.myriad.com.

Myriad, the Myriad logo, BART, BRACAnalysis, Colaris, Colaris AP, myPath, myRisk, Myriad myRisk, myRisk Hereditary Cancer, myChoice, myPlan, BRACAnalysis CDx, Tumor BRACAnalysis CDx, myChoice CDx, EndoPredict, Vectra, GeneSight, riskScore, Prolaris, Foresight and Prequel are trademarks or registered trademarks of Myriad Genetics, Inc. or its wholly owned subsidiaries in the United States and foreign countries. MYGN-F, MYGN-G.

Lynparza is a registered trademark of AstraZeneca.

Safe Harbor StatementThis press release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, including statements relating to ensuring that women with advanced ovarian cancer have access to targeted therapies; and the Company's strategic directives under the caption "About Myriad Genetics." These "forward-looking statements" are based on management's current expectations of future events and are subject to a number of risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially and adversely from those set forth in or implied by forward-looking statements. These risks and uncertainties include, but are not limited to: the risk that sales and profit margins of our molecular diagnostic tests and pharmaceutical and clinical services may decline; risks related to our ability to transition from our existing product portfolio to our new tests, including unexpected costs and delays; risks related to decisions or changes in governmental or private insurers reimbursement levels for our tests or our ability to obtain reimbursement for our new tests at comparable levels to our existing tests; risks related to increased competition and the development of new competing tests and services; the risk that we may be unable to develop or achieve commercial success for additional molecular diagnostic tests and pharmaceutical and clinical services in a timely manner, or at all; the risk that we may not successfully develop new markets for our molecular diagnostic tests and pharmaceutical and clinical services, including our ability to successfully generate revenue outside the United States; the risk that licenses to the technology underlying our molecular diagnostic tests and pharmaceutical and clinical services and any future tests and services are terminated or cannot be maintained on satisfactory terms; risks related to delays or other problems with operating our laboratory testing facilities and our healthcare clinic; risks related to public concern over genetic testing in general or our tests in particular; risks related to regulatory requirements or enforcement in the United States and foreign countries and changes in the structure of the healthcare system or healthcare payment systems; risks related to our ability to obtain new corporate collaborations or licenses and acquire new technologies or businesses on satisfactory terms, if at all; risks related to our ability to successfully integrate and derive benefits from any technologies or businesses that we license or acquire; risks related to our projections about our business, results of operations and financial condition; risks related to the potential market opportunity for our products and services; the risk that we or our licensors may be unable to protect or that third parties will infringe the proprietary technologies underlying our tests; the risk of patent-infringement claims or challenges to the validity of our patents or other intellectual property; risks related to changes in intellectual property laws covering our molecular diagnostic tests and pharmaceutical and clinical services and patents or enforcement in the United States and foreign countries, such as the Supreme Court decision in the lawsuit brought against us by the Association for Molecular Pathology et al; risks of new, changing and competitive technologies and regulations in the United States and internationally; the risk that we may be unable to comply with financial operating covenants under our credit or lending agreements; the risk that we will be unable to pay, when due, amounts due under our credit or lending agreements; and other factors discussed under the heading "Risk Factors" contained in Item 1A of our most recent Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2019, which has been filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission, as well as any updates to those risk factors filed from time to time in our Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q or Current Reports on Form 8-K. All information in this press release is as of the date of the release, and Myriad undertakes no duty to update this information unless required by law.

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High Testosterone in Women Linked to Type 2 Diabetes – Technology Networks

Tuesday, February 11th, 2020

Having genetically higher testosterone levels increases the risk of metabolic diseases such as type 2 diabetes in women, while reducing the risk in men. Higher testosterone levels also increase the risks of breast and endometrial cancers in women, and prostate cancer in men.

The findings come from the largest study to date on the genetic regulation of sex hormone levels, published today inNature Medicineand led by researchers from the Medical Research Council (MRC) Epidemiology Unit at the University of Cambridge and the University of Exeter. Despite finding a strong genetic component to circulating testosterone levels in men and women, the authors found that the genetic factors involved were very different between the sexes.

The team used genome wide association studies (GWAS) in 425,097 UK Biobank participants to identify 2,571 genetic variations associated with differences in the levels of the sex hormone testosterone and its binding protein sex-hormone binding globulin (SHGB).

The researchers verified their genetic analyses in additional studies, including the EPIC-Norfolk study and Twins UK, and found a high level of agreement with their results in UK Biobank.

The team next used an approach called Mendelian randomisation, which uses naturally occurring genetic differences to understand whether known associations between testosterone levels and disease are causal rather than correlative. They found that in women, genetically higher testosterone increases the risks of type 2 diabetes by 37 per cent, and polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) by 51 per cent. However, they also found that having higher testosterone levels reduces T2D risk in men by 14 per cent. Additionally, they found that genetically higher testosterone levels increased the risks of breast and endometrial cancers in women, and prostate cancer in men.

Dr John Perry from the MRC Epidemiology Unit at the University of Cambridge, and joint senior author on the paper, says: "Our findings that genetically higher testosterone levels increase the risk of PCOS in women is important in understanding the role of testosterone in the origin of this common disorder, rather than simply being a consequence of this condition.

"Likewise, in men testosterone-reducing therapies are widely used to treat prostate cancer, but until now it was uncertain whether lower testosterone levels are also protective against developing prostate cancer. Our findings show how genetic techniques such as Mendelian randomisation are useful in understanding of the risks and benefits of hormone therapies."

Dr Katherine Ruth, of the University of Exeter, one of the lead authors of the paper, added: "Our findings provide unique insights into the disease impacts of testosterone. In particular they emphasise the importance ofconsidering men and women separately in studies,as we saw opposite effects for testosterone on diabetes. Caution is needed in using our results to justify use of testosterone supplements, until we can do similar studies of testosterone with other diseases, especially cardiovascular disease."

Reference: Ruth et al. (2020).Using human genetics to understand the disease impacts of testosterone in men and women. Nature Medicine.DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41591-020-0751-5.

This article has been republished from the following materials. Note: material may have been edited for length and content. For further information, please contact the cited source.

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Howard University College of Medicine Receives Grant to Support Youth with Sickle Cell Disease – Howard Newsroom

Tuesday, February 11th, 2020

WASHINGTON The Department of Pediatrics and Child Health in the Howard University College of Medicine has received a $42,000 grant from the Walter Brownley Trust Bank of America, N.A., Trustee to support children with sickle cell disease and their families. There are approximately 1,500 children and youth with sickle cell disease in the Washington, D.C. region.

The project supported by the grant, entitled LIFE (Learning Is Fundamental for Everyone) with Sickle Cell Disease, will focus on increasing educational and other support services for school-age children with sickle cell. Services include education and advocacy training, transportation assistance, special informational workshops for families, and distribution of other needed resources.

Most sickle cell disease patients have low socioeconomic status, lack social support, and face many barriers for achieving optimal medical care and educational achievement, says Dr. Sohail Rana, professor of pediatrics in the College of Medicine and lead administrator of the Life project. The condition can also result in brain complications that place youth at high risk for limited educational achievement. This grant will help us ensure that children and youth with sickle cell disease are fully connected to available resources in the school system and in the larger community.

In the pediatrics department, the LIFE project and will be supported by Patricia Houston, project coordinator, and Cynthia Gipson, a family advocate.

Sickle cell disease is the most common genetic disease in the United States and primarily affects African Americans. It leads to anemia, pain crisis, strokes and other problems. The Howard University College of Medicine, the Howard University Center for Sickle Cell Disease, and Howard University Hospital, have long served as the major center for medical care, research, and other resources to people with sickle cell disease in the Washington region.

For more information about the project, please contact Patricia Houston at phouston@howard.edu or 202-865-4578.

About Howard University

Founded in 1867, Howard University is a private, research university that is comprised of 13 schools and colleges. Students pursue studies in more than 120 areas leading to undergraduate, graduate and professional degrees. The University operates with a commitment to Excellence in Truth and Service and has produced one Schwarzman Scholar, three Marshall Scholars, four Rhodes Scholars, 11 Truman Scholars, 25 Pickering Fellows and more than 70 Fulbright Scholars. Howard also produces more on-campus African-American Ph.D. recipients than any other university in the United States. For more information on Howard University, visit http://www.howard.edu.

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Media Contact: Sholnn Freeman, sholnn.freeman@howard.edu

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Genomenon Commended by Frost & Sullivan for Advancing Clinical Genomics Interpretation and Personalized Medicine with Its Mastermind Platform -…

Tuesday, February 11th, 2020

The company's content-rich genomic database platform and AI-driven processing help mitigate early-stage genomic translational research challenges

SANTA CLARA, Calif. , Feb. 11, 2020 /CNW/ --Based on its recent analysis of the global clinical genomics interpretation market, Frost & Sullivan recognizes Genomenon, Inc. with the 2020 Global Company of the Year Award.Genomenon offers products and services to pharmaceutical companies and clinical diagnostic labs to streamline clinical genomics interpretation and connect scientific evidence to patients' genomic data. Its flagship product, Mastermind, automatically simplifies variant interpretation for faster, more accurate diagnosis and clinical decision-making. In just over two years, Mastermind amassed more than 5,000 users in 1,700 clinical laboratories across 101 countries.

"Powered by its proprietary Genomic Language Processing algorithm and genomic literature database, Mastermind has emerged a leading automated disease-gene-variant association database," said Christi Bird , Principal Consultant at Frost & Sullivan. "Unlike other commercially available tools, the first-in-class genomic database search engine enables full articles and supplemental datasets searches across the genomic literatureallowing geneticists, molecular pathologists, and researchers to identify disease-causing variants from genomic-sequencing datasets quickly and accurately."

Mastermind accelerates tertiary analysis by identifying every research article that includes any given variant in the context of any disease or phenotype and prioritizes the search results by clinical relevance. It leverages artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML) to offer the world's most comprehensive gene and variant landscape, having indexed 100 times more content and identified 20 times more variants than the incumbent database built by manual curation. It also reduces the average 90-minute variant search and curation time using Google or Google Scholar to less than 30 minutes, delivering industry-leading turnaround times and superior diagnostic yields and throughput.

Genomenon is aggressively expanding these compelling value propositions to clinical labs around the world through partnerships. In the past year, it signed agreements with Congenica, Fabric Genomics, GenomOncology, LifeMap Sciences, Diploid, Limbus, Shanghai Shanyi Biological Technology Co., and Google. As next-generation sequencing (NGS) labs use various companies with access to Mastermind for tertiary analysis, partnerships are becoming increasingly important for building stickiness and expanding geographical footprint.

"With three platform choices, Basic, for genomics research; Professional, for clinical decision support; and Enterprise, for advanced implementations, users can select an offering that best fits their current needs, application, sample volume, and price range," noted Bird. "The company recently included phenotypic searches in its engine capability and will be further adding drug and therapeutic searches, strengthening its expansion into the pharmaceuticals industry to advance personalized medicine."

Each year, Frost & Sullivan presents a Company of the Year award to the organization that demonstrates excellence in terms of growth strategy and implementation in its field. The award recognizes a high degree of innovation with products and technologies, and the resulting leadership in terms of customer value and market penetration.

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Frost & Sullivan Best Practices awards recognize companies in a variety of regional and global markets for demonstrating outstanding achievement and superior performance in areas such as leadership, technological innovation, customer service, and strategic product development. Industry analysts compare market participants and measure performance through in-depth interviews, analysis, and extensive secondary research to identify best practices in the industry.

About Frost & Sullivan

For over five decades, Frost & Sullivan has become world-renowned for its role in helping investors, corporate leaders, and governments navigate economic changes and identify disruptive technologies, Mega Trends, new business models, and companies to action, resulting in a continuous flow of growth opportunities to drive future success. Contact us: Start the discussion.

Contact:

Lindsey Whitaker P: +1 (210) 477-8457E: lindsey.whitaker@frost.com

About Genomenon, Inc.

Genomenon connects patient DNA with the billions of dollars spent on research to help doctors diagnose and cure cancer patients and babies with rare diseases.

Their flagship product, the Mastermind Genomic Search Engineis used by hundreds of genetic labs worldwide to accelerate diagnosis, increase diagnostic yield and assure repeatability in reporting genetic testing results.

Genomenon licenses Mastermind Genomic LandscapesTM to pharmaceutical and bio-pharma companies to inform precision medicine development, deliver genomic biomarkers for clinical trial target selection, and support CDx regulatory submissions with empirical evidence.

For more information, visit Genomenon.com

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EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW: The Greek Professor who ‘broke’ the coronavirus DNA sees a vaccine coming soon – Greek City Times

Tuesday, February 11th, 2020

Pagona Lagiou; Professor and Director of Preventive Medicine and Hygienic Epidemiology of Medical School of National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Gigas Magiorkinis; Assistant Professor at National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Dimitrios Paraskevis; Deputy Professor of Preventive Medicine and Hygienic Epidemiology of Medical School of National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Evagelia Georgia Kostaki; PhD

Greek Epidemiology Professor Dr. Dimitrios Paraskevis, the scientist who broke the coronavirus DNA, speaks exclusively to Greek City Times and provides answers on the potential availability of a vaccine against the virus, what we should be mindful of and how the lethal coronavirus started spreading.

By Konstantinos Sarrikostas

What is it actually like running after lethal viruses on a daily basis, 24 hours per day; locating, analyzing and decoding genetic material which leaves a hecatomb of dead people in its wake?

The Father of Medicine Hippocrates became the founder of Orthologic Medicine discouraging his fellow citizens from metaphysical elements, superstitions and even prejudices. Actually, he said that in serious diseases, the most effective method in treatment is absolute accuracy and fastidiousness, which modern doctors, who follow his oath, literally strive for in the healing of their fellow human beings.

Dr. Dimitrios Paraskevis, a modern Hippocrates, is Deputy Professor of Preventive Medicine and Hygienic Epidemiology at the Medical School of the National and Kapodistrian University of Athens. Along with two fellow colleagues, he has managed -in time- to analyse and decode the DNA of the lethal coronavirus which recently broke out in China and has alarmed the international community.

According to Dr. Dimitrios Paraskevis we are in the final stages of discovering a vaccine against the virus, its cause and origin and vital information on how to protect ourselves from it.

As he points out, in a few months time we will have the vaccine against the coronavirus; but what is absolutely essential is the total implementation of hygiene rules and most importantly behave with great composure.

THE INTERVIEW

Professor, the entire planet is discussing the coronavirus and peoples concern is really great. Could you please tell us in simple terms what the coronavirus is and why it has spread so rapidly?

The coronavirus spreads relatively easy for several reasons, the most significant one being that it can be spread by droplets if someone is exposed to them, for instance through sneezing or coughing. Other reasons include the fact that no preventative measures were taken to contain the virus or at the very least limit its spread, especially when it first infected people at the end of November and the beginning of December 2019 a period of prime importance.

This happened because it is an unknown virus and as such there was no awareness amongst the people in China in order that they initiate the necessary control measures. Therefore, when a great number of people have already been infected, you realise that from that point on, it is more difficult to control the infection. Moreover, owing to the fact that universal transfers are really easy nowadays, a disease can easily be spread globally.

From your studies and genetic analysis as the lead scientist of your research team , have you reached a conclusion about how it started? Was it, after all, spread by bats or could it be a lab product: a discussion which exists globally?

The coronavirus belongs to a team which is characterized as B team and its the same team to which the virus which caused the epidemic SARS in 2003 belongs. The genetic material of the virus which has caused this present epidemic, presents a great proportion with the genetic material of the relevant virus infecting bats.

Talking about proportion we mean that it reaches the level of 96%; that is, the possible source of infection is this particular animal, i.e. bats. Of course, we cannot rule out the fact that the infection can be made by another animal, another carrier, another mammal which has been infected by bats and this, in turn, transferred it to humans. This will be hard to find because we have to find the particular animal and locate the truth, the part of the virus which caused the infection. But, on the other hand, it is not of a particular importance either for epidemiology or for research in the creation of vaccines or antivirus drugs.

As to whether the virus has been created in a lab, that is, if it is a product of human intervention, I would like to assure you that such theories exist almost always in every epidemic with every new virus.

There is no possibility scientifically- that something like this has happened. There is no possibility because it was confirmed that this virus exists in animals, the infections from animals to people are very frequent and also all the people from whom it was isolated and characteristically the virus in China during the period of December, had an identical virus, which means that this was the result of infections among diverse people. Therefore, allow me to repeat that human intervention or the possible origin from a lab, should be indisputably ruled out.

The World Health Organization (WHO) has not used the term pandemic yet. Is it, Professor, a pandemic and when does a pandemic exist?

A pandemic, according to WHO, is defined as such when the epidemic has a great spread in, at least, two areas, in two continents. The areas as they are defined by WHO, are not exactly the geographic continents, but they are slightly different. Not to get into many details, the definition of pandemic refers to the geographic spread and not as much to the number of cases.

In Greece, for the time being, there are no certified cases. Do you believe, too, that it is a matter of time before we will be seeing our first case? How well-prepared is our country with the measures that are increasingly updated.

In Greece, there is no certified case. There may be but it is unlikely that there are any. The authorities have taken the appropriate measures, have announced the protection measures to be undertaken by health professionals, by the population and what people who travel should be mindful of.

We are informed about measures in airports and there has been an attempt for a prompt diagnosis of a possible case which is absolutely important to limit further infections.

Is the diagnosis of the specific virus easy and what are the symptoms?

The symptoms are identical to the ones of the flu and the definition of a potential case is related to whether someone has been exposed to other people from areas in which there are cases. That is, a fellow citizen who has not travelled and has flu symptoms, as you realise, does not have this virus.

So, in the first stages and absence of a case in Greece, if someone has symptoms, these symptoms should be accompanied with an exposure to another possible case, obviously and possibly outside Greece so that there may be a realistic possibility that they have been infected. Therefore, our fellow-citizens are more likely to suffer from the flu or another virus rather than the coronavirus.

The documentation of the infection, is feasible at the Paster Institute as well as in other laboratories which can diagnose if an infection is caused by this specific virus.

As far as travelling is concerned and according to WHO, people should not restrict their travels unless they are in areas in which there is a great number of cases. However, they should follow all the instructions which are recommended in reference to the prevention of infection from these viruses. What are some preventative measures?

People should wash their hands with soap for about 20 seconds and especially when they are in congested places such as airports; they should avoid touching their eyes, nose or mouth with their hands. So, when we find ourselves in public places where there are several fellow- citizens, we should bear in mind that we must take great care of our hands hygiene and that they must not touch our face. Also, if we feel symptoms identical to the ones of the flu, we should stay home, so that we dont expose other people to danger; and if symptoms persist, we should ask for medical advice.

Is the mask just some fashion accessory or does it actually contribute to the restriction of the virus spread?

The mask does not constitute the absolute means of protection and it doesnt mean that anyone who wears it is either totally or to a great extent protected from a possible flu infection or coronavirus. The role of the mask is to protect other people from the sufferer who must wear it. If they sneeze while talking, much fewer droplets are exposed, therefore the mask is a way of protection, especially for the protection of others. So, someone wearing a mask should be aware of the fact that they are not totally protected from these viruses.

Professor, why is this virus so lethal? There have have already been 630 deaths and more than 31.400 cases*?

We should clarify the following: The coronavirus is not so lethal in relation to other viruses. The number of deaths concerns a relatively great number of people about whom the coronavirus infection has been documented. Coronavirus as well as flu virus causes, to a great extent, very mild symptoms.

As a result, the number of people who have been infected is much bigger than the number of people whose infection has been documented. So, the denominator, when we estimate death-rate, is much bigger because the real number of the cases is unknown and a lot bigger related to those who have the infection documented.

Until now, the death-rate was considered to be approximately 3% to 4% but it is possibly much less because as I already earlier the real number of the cases is unknown.

Those who are more susceptible to this infection are older people, vulnerable groups and people who suffer from chronic heart diseases, chronic breathing diseases and immunodeficiency. The above categories constitute the percentage of serious symptoms or death.

How far or how close are we for the coronavirus vaccine creation? Can we be optimistic since a relative treatment for very old viruses and lethal diseases has not been found yet?

There are viruses, as you have correctly mentioned, for which it is not easy to develop vaccines. Hopefully, the coronavirus does not have these characteristics.

We consider that the coronavirus vaccine will be available relatively quickly, possibly even in a few months if we also estimate the time required for clinical tests.

Several Institutes and Centres have actively engaged in the creation of the vaccine. It is believed that in some weeks vaccines will be available for clinical tests. In the meantime, protection measures are vital for the restriction of the virus and for our protection.

I would like to point out once more: there are other viruses and diseases that are really dangerous. I realise how worried people are; the coronavirus is something new. However, Greece and the international community have been confronted with similar threats before, over the last 10 years, a fact that fills us with optimism.

We have the experience and the know-how so that we can face this menace effectively. What is really necessary is composure and optimism about the fact that even this disease will be challenged effectively with minimum human cost.

* Data as of the time of interview

This article was researched and written by a GCT team member.

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Massive Genetic Map of Cancer Mutations Cataloged Available to Doctors and Researchers Worldwide – SciTechDaily

Tuesday, February 11th, 2020

Chromosomes prepared from a malignant glioblastoma visualized by spectral karyotyping (SKY) reveal an enormous degree of chromosomal instability a hallmark of cancer. Credit: NCI Center for Cancer Research (CCR)

Mutations in 38 different types of cancer have been mapped by means of whole genome analysis by an international team of researchers from, amongst others, the University of Copenhagen, Aarhus University, Aarhus University Hospital, and Rigshospitalet. The researchers have compiled a catalog of the cancer mutations that will be available worldwide to doctors and researchers.

Globally, cancer is one of the biggest killers and in 2018, an estimated 9.6 million people died of the disease. In order to provide the best treatment for the disease, it is essential to find out which mutations are driving the cancer.

We have studied and analyzed the whole genome, and our analyses of mutations that are affecting cancer genes have enabled us to genetically explain 95 percent of the cancer occurrences we have studied by means of mutations. Joachim Weischenfeldt

In a major international collaboration called Pan-Cancer Analysis of Whole Genomes (PCAWG), researchers from the University of Copenhagen, Aarhus University, Aarhus University Hospital, and Rigshospitalet have helped to map mutations in 38 different types of cancer.

The mutations have all been combined into a sort of catalog. The catalog, which is already available online, allows doctors and researchers from all over the world to look things up, consult with and find information about the cancer of a given patient.

Most previous major studies have focused on the protein coding two percent of the genome. We have studied and analyzed the whole genome, and our analyses of mutations that are affecting cancer genes have enabled us to genetically explain 95 percent of the cancer occurrences we have studied by means of mutations, says co-author Joachim Weischenfeldt, Associate Professor at the Biotech Research & Innovation Centre, University of Copenhagen, and the Finsen Laboratory, Rigshospitalet.

So, if you know which mutations have caused cancer, the so-called driver mutations, you will be able to better tailor a treatment with the most suitable drugs or design new drugs against the cancer. Precision medicine is completely dependent on the mapping of driver mutations in each cancer, in relation to diagnosis, prognosis and improved treatment, says co-author Jakob Skou Pedersen, professor at Bioinformatics Research Centre and Department of Clinical Medicine, Aarhus University, and Aarhus University Hospital.

The new research results are published in a special edition of the scientific journal Nature with focus on PCAWG. To date, it is the largest whole genome study of primary cancer. This means that the analysis was performed based on material from the tissue in which the tumor originated and before the patient has received any treatment.

The researchers have mainly analyzed and had data on the most common types of cancer such as liver, breast, pancreas and prostate cancer. In total, they have analyzed whole genome-sequenced tumor samples from more than 2,600 patients.

Based on their analyses, they could see that the number of mutations in a cancer type varies a lot. Myeloid dysplasia and cancer in children have very few mutations, while there may be up to 100,000 mutations in lung cancer.

The infographic is an overview of the different cancer types studied in the Pan-Cancer Project. The lower part also lists the six cancer types (for men and women) for which the most samples were available. Credit: Rayne Zaayman-Gallant/EMBL

But even though the number of mutations spans widely, researchers could see that on average there were always 4-5 mutations that were driving the disease, the so-called drivers no matter what type of cancer it was.

It is quite surprising that almost all of them have the same number of driver mutations. However, it is consistent with theories that a cancerous tumor needs to change a certain number of mechanisms in the cell before things start to go wrong, says Jakob Skou Pedersen.

In the catalog, the researchers have divided the mutations into drivers and passengers. Driver mutations provide a growth benefit for the cancer, while passenger mutations cover all the others and are harmless. The vast majority of all mutations are passengers.

To store and process the vast amount of data, the research team has used so-called cloud computing, using 13 data centers spread across three continents. They have had centers in Europe, the US, and Asia.

The large data set has been necessary to establish what was common and unique to the different types of cancer. Today, cancer is divided according to the tissue in which the disease originates, for example breast, brain, and prostate.

The researchers found many things that were completely unique to each type of tissue. Conversely, they also found many common traits across the tissue types. According to Joachim Weischenfeldt, there is thus a need to rethink the way we think about cancer.

Cancer is a genetic disease, and the type of mutations is often more important than where the cancer originates in the body. This means that we need to think of cancer not just as a tissue-specific disease, but rather look at it based on genetics and the mutations it has.

For example, we may have a type of breast cancer and prostate cancer where the driver mutations are similar. This means that the patient with prostate cancer may benefit from the same treatment as the one you would give the breast cancer patient, because the two types share an important driver mutation, says Joachim Weischenfeldt.

Reference: Pan-cancer analysis of whole genomes by The ICGC/TCGA Pan-Cancer Analysis of Whole Genomes Consortium, 5 February 2020, Nature.DOI: 10.1038/s41586-020-1969-6

The International Cancer Genome Research Consortium has been supported by national foundations, including Independent Research Fund Denmark.

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Genentech Provides Topline Results From Investigator-Led Phase II/III Trial With Gantenerumab in Rare Inherited Form of Alzheimer’s Disease – BioSpace

Tuesday, February 11th, 2020

Feb. 10, 2020 06:00 UTC

SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- Genentech, a member of the Roche Group (SIX: RO, ROG; OTCQX: RHHBY), announced today that the gantenerumab arm of the Phase II/III DIAN-TU-001 study did not meet its primary endpoint in people who have an early-onset, inherited form of Alzheimers disease (AD). This form of AD, known as autosomal dominant AD (ADAD), accounts for less than 1% of all cases of the disease. The study, sponsored by Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, did not show a significant slowing of the rate of cognitive decline in people treated with investigational medicine gantenerumab as measured by the novel DIAN Multivariate Cognitive Endpoint, compared with placebo. Overall, gantenerumab's safety profile in DIAN-TU-001 was consistent with that from other clinical trials of the investigational medicine and no new safety issues were identified.

Genentech and Roche are conducting additional analyses to understand the totality of the gantenerumab data from the study, in collaboration with Washington University School of Medicine. Data will be presented at the AAT-AD/PD Focus meeting in April 2020.

We are very grateful to all those involved in this study and hope the data can further contribute to the science and collective understanding of this complex disease, said Levi Garraway, M.D., Ph.D., chief medical officer and head of Global Product Development. Although DIAN-TU didnt reach its primary endpoint, the trial represents the first of its kind and a bold undertaking by all partners involved. Given its experimental nature, we are unable to draw firm conclusions about the impact of gantenerumab in autosomal dominant Alzheimer's disease. This outcome does not reduce our confidence in the ongoing Phase III GRADUATE clinical program.

Gantenerumab, a late-stage investigational medicine, continues to be studied in two large global Phase III studies (GRADUATE 1 and 2) in the broader population of people with AD that is not directly caused by gene mutations (sporadic AD). Every person with ADAD who received gantenerumab in DIAN-TU-001 started on a lower dose and only started titrating to a fivefold higher target dose approximately halfway through the trial, prompted by learnings from other studies of gantenerumab. The GRADUATE studies have been designed from the outset to maximize exposure to gantenerumab, bringing all patients to target dose with minimal or no dose interruption within the study period.

Genentech and Roches AD pipeline spans investigational medicines for different targets, types and stages of AD. In addition to the gantenerumab program, Genentech and Roche are evaluating semorinemab in Phase II studies in sporadic AD. Crenezumab also continues to be studied in the Alzheimers Prevention Initiative Phase II trial in ADAD.

About the DIAN-TU-001 study

DIAN-TU-001 is a Phase II/III study sponsored by Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, United States. The study tested two investigational therapies compared to placebo (Genentech and Roches gantenerumab and Eli Lilly and Company's solanezumab) to determine if either of these treatments could slow the rate of cognitive decline and improve disease-related biomarkers in people who are known to have a genetic mutation for inherited AD. The primary outcome measure for the study the DIAN Multivariate Cognitive Endpoint is a novel outcome measure designed to assess cognitive performance in people with ADAD.

The study followed 194 participants for up to 7 years; the average was about 5 years. Fifty-two people were randomized to active gantenerumab in the study. All participants came from families that carry a genetic mutation that causes inherited AD. The small study included people who did not yet have symptoms of AD at the time of enrollment as well as people who already had mild symptoms of the disease. There are 24 study centers worldwide for DIAN-TU-001, across the United States, Australia, Canada, France, Spain and the United Kingdom.

In the DIAN-TU-001 study, the most common adverse events reported more frequently with gantenerumab than placebo were injection-site reactions, infection of the nose and throat (nasopharyngitis), and amyloid-related imaging abnormalities (ARIA), manifesting as cerebral edema or microhemorrhages. The majority of ARIA findings were asymptomatic; if symptoms occurred, they were mild in nature and resolved.

About autosomal dominant Alzheimers disease

Autosomal dominant AD (ADAD; also known as familial AD or dominantly-inherited AD [DIAD]) is a rare, inherited form of AD caused by single gene mutations in the APP, PSEN1 or PSEN2 genes. Less than 1% of all AD cases worldwide are thought to be caused by genetic mutations. It usually has a much earlier onset than the more common sporadic AD, with symptoms developing in people in their 30s to 60s. If an individual has one of these mutations, there is a 50% chance they will pass it on to each of their children.

About gantenerumab

Gantenerumab is an investigational medicine designed to bind to aggregated forms of beta-amyloid and remove beta-amyloid plaques, a pathological hallmark of AD thought to lead to brain cell death. Previous clinical studies of gantenerumab showed beta-amyloid plaque lowering in people with the more common form of AD that is not directly caused by gene mutations. The clinical significance of this effect is being investigated in two Phase III studies (GRADUATE 1 and 2), which are assessing the safety and efficacy of gantenerumab for the treatment of people with sporadic AD. The GRADUATE program is currently enrolling more than 2,000 patients in up to 350 study centers in more than 30 countries worldwide.

About Genentech in neuroscience

Neuroscience is a major focus of research and development at Genentech and Roche. The companys goal is to develop treatment options based on the biology of the nervous system to help improve the lives of people with chronic and potentially devastating diseases. Genentech and Roche have more than a dozen investigational medicines in clinical development for diseases that include multiple sclerosis, spinal muscular atrophy, neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder, Alzheimers disease, Huntingtons disease, Parkinsons disease and autism.

About Genentech

Founded more than 40 years ago, Genentech is a leading biotechnology company that discovers, develops, manufactures and commercializes medicines to treat patients with serious and life-threatening medical conditions. The company, a member of the Roche Group, has headquarters in South San Francisco, California. For additional information about the company, please visit http://www.gene.com.

View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20200209005048/en/

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Maybe Memorizing the Krebs Cycle Was Worthwhile After All – Medscape

Friday, February 7th, 2020

Like most medical students, I struggled to memorize the Krebs cycle, the complex energy-producing process that takes place in the body's mitochondria. Rote learning of Sir Hans Krebs' eponymous cascade of reactions persists and has been cited as a waste of time in modern medical education. However, it looks like that specialized knowledge about mitochondrial structure and function may finally come in handy in the clinic.

Advances in genetics have contributed to improved diagnostic accuracy of a diverse spectrum of mitochondrial disorders. Respiratory chain, nuclear gene, and mitochondrial proteome mutations can lead to multisystem or organ-specific dysfunction.

A new potential treatment for mitochondrial disorders, elamipretide, has received orphan drug designation from the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and is in clinical trials sponsored by Stealth Biotherapeutics. [Dr Wilner has consulted for Stealth Biotherapeutics.] Recently I had the opportunity to interview Hilary Vernon, MD, PhD, associate professor of genetic medicine at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland, and an expert on mitochondrial disorders. Dr Vernon discussed her research on elamipretide as a treatment for Barth syndrome, a rare form of mitochondrial disease.

I am the director of the Mitochondrial Medicine Center at Johns Hopkins Hospital. I work with individuals from infancy through adulthood who have mitochondrial conditions. I became interested in this particular area when I was early in my pediatrics/genetics residency at Johns Hopkins and saw the toll that mitochondrial disorders took on patients' lives and the limited effective therapies. At that point, I decided to focus on patient care and research in this area.

Mitochondrial disorders can be difficult to recognize because of their inherent multisystem nature and variable presentations (even between affected members of the same family). However, there are several considerations that should raise a clinician's suspicion for a mitochondrial condition. Ascertaining a family history of disease inheritance through the maternal line can raise the suspicion for a mitochondrial DNA disorder. Identification of a combination of medical issues in different organ systems that are seemingly unrelated in an individual (ie, optic atrophy and muscle weakness or diabetes and hearing loss) can also raise suspicion for a mitochondrial condition.

Due to the nature of mitochondria as the major energy producers of the cells, high-energy-requiring tissues such as the brain and the muscles are often affected. Perhaps the best known mitochondrial diseases to neurologists are MELAS (mitochondrial encephalopathy, lactic acidosis, and stroke) as well as MERFF (myoclonic epilepsy with ragged red fibers). There is a nice body of literature on the effects of arginine and citrulline in modifying stroke-like episodes in MELAS, and this is a therapy that is in current practice.

Mitochondria are complex organelles whose structure and function are encoded in hundreds of genes originating from both the nucleus of the cell and the mitochondria themselves. Mitochondria have many key roles in cellular function, including energy production through the respiratory chain, coordination of apoptosis, nitrogen metabolism, fatty acid oxidation, and much more.

Various cofactors and vitamins can be employed to improve mitochondrial function for different reasons. For example, if a specific enzyme is dysfunctional, supplying the cofactor for that enzyme may improve its function (ie, pyruvate dehydrogenase and thiamine). Antioxidants have also been considered to help reduce the oxidant load that could potentially cause ongoing damage to the mitochondrial membrane resulting from respiratory chain dysfunction (ie, coenzyme Q-10).

It is important to remember that the highest number of individual mitochondrial disorders result from mutations in genes located in the nuclear DNA. For example, the TAZ gene that is abnormal in Barth syndrome is a nuclear gene located on the X chromosome. These genes are amenable to the "regular" approaches to gene therapy.

Targeting mitochondrial DNA for gene therapy requires a different set of approaches because the gene delivery has to overcome the barrier of the mitochondrial membranes. However, research is ongoing to overcome these obstacles.

Barth syndrome is a very rare genetic X-linked disorder that usually only affects males. The genetic defect leads to an abnormal composition of cardiolipin on the inner mitochondrial membrane. Cardiolipin is an important phospholipid involved in many mitochondrial functions, including organization of inner mitochondrial membrane cristae, involvement in apoptosis, and organization of the respiratory chain (which is responsible for producing ATP via the process of oxidative phosphorylation), and many of these functions are abnormal in Barth syndrome. Individuals with Barth syndrome typically have early-onset cardiomyopathy, myopathy, intermittent neutropenia, fatigue, poor early growth, among other health concerns.

Early in my post-residency career, I followed several patients with Barth syndrome and was quickly welcomed into the Barth syndrome community by the families and the Barth Syndrome Foundation. From there, I founded the only interdisciplinary Barth syndrome clinic in the US and began to focus a significant amount of my clinical and laboratory research on this condition.

Most commonly, these individuals come to medical attention because of cardiomyopathy, but a minority of patients do come to attention due to repeated infections and neutropenia. Patients were identified for study participation through the Barth Syndrome Foundation or because they were already patients of my study team.

All participants were known to have Barth syndrome prior to study entry, and all had confirmatory genetic testing showing a pathogenic mutation in the TAZ gene.

By binding to cardiolipin in the inner mitochondrial membrane, elamipretide is believed to stabilize cristae architecture and electron transport chain structure during oxidative stress. I thought it would be great if this could help to stabilize the abnormal cardiolipin components on the inner mitochondrial membrane in Barth syndrome.

We observed improvements in several areas across the study population in the open-label extension part of the study. This includes a significant improvement in exercise performance (as measured by the 6-minute walk test, with an average improvement of 95.9 meters at 36 weeks) and a significant improvement in muscle strength. We also observed a potential improvement in cardiac stroke volume. Most of the adverse events were local injection-site reactions and were mild to moderate in nature.

The TAZPOWER trial has an ongoing open-label extension with the same endpoints as the placebo-controlled portion evaluated on an ongoing basis. In addition, in my laboratory, we are using induced pluripotent stem cells to learn more about how cardiolipin abnormalities affect different cell types in an effort to understand the tissue specificity of disease. This will help us to understand whether different aspects of Barth syndrome would necessitate individual management or clinical monitoring strategies.

Mitochondrial inner membrane dysfunction is increasingly recognized as a major aspect of the pathology of a wide range of mitochondrial conditions. Therefore, based on the role of stabilizing mitochondrial membrane components, elamipretide has a potential role in many disorders of the mitochondria.

Yes, this is what we would call "secondary mitochondrial dysfunction" (meant to differentiate from "primary mitochondrial disease," which is caused by defects in genes that encode for mitochondrial structure and function). Approaches intended to protect the mitochondria from further damage, such as antioxidants or strategies that can bypass the mitochondria for ATP production, could overlap as treatment for primary mitochondrial disease and secondary mitochondrial dysfunction.

This is something that is much discussed as a newer consideration for families who are affected by disorders of the mitochondrial DNA, but not something I have experience with firsthand.

Yes. The United Mitochondrial Disease Foundation and the Mitochondrial Medicine Society collaborated to develop the Mito Care Network, with 19 sites identified as Mitochondrial Medicine Centers across the US.

Andrew Wilner is an associate professor of neurology at the University of Tennessee Health Science Center in Memphis, a health journalist, and an avid SCUBA diver. His latest book is The Locum Life: A Physician's Guide to Locum Tenens.

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AI, 5G, and IoT can help deliver the promise of precision medicine – VentureBeat

Friday, February 7th, 2020

This article is part of the Technology Insight series, made possible with funding from Intel.

When my son was a toddler, he went to his pediatrician for a routine CAT scan. Easy stuff. Just a little shot to subdue him for a few minutes. Hed be awake and finished in a jiffy.

Except my son didnt wake up. He lay there on the clinic table, unresponsive, his vitals slowly falling. The clinic had no ability to diagnose his condition. Five minutes later, he was in the back of an ambulance. My wife and I were powerless to do anything but look on, frantic with worry for our boys life.

It turned out that hed had a bad reaction to a common hydrochloride sedative. Once that was figured out, doctors quickly brought him back around, and he was fine.

But what if, through groundbreaking mixtures of compute, database, and AI technologies, a quick round of analyses on his blood and genome could have revealed his potential for such a reaction before it became a critical issue?

What if it were possible to devise a course of treatment specific to him and his bodys unique conditions, rather than accepting a cookie-cutter approach and dealing with the ill effects immediately after?

And what if that could be done with small, even portable medical devices equipped with high-bandwidth connectivity to larger resources?

In short, what if, through the power of superior computing and next-generation wireless connectivity, millions of people like my son could be quickly, accurately treated on-site rather than endure the cost and trauma of legacy medical methods?

These questions I asked about my son are at the heart of todays efforts in precision medicine. Its the practice of crafting treatments tailored to individuals based on their characteristics. Precision medicine spans an increasing number of fields, including oncology, immunology, psychiatry, and respiratory disorders, and its back end is filled with big data analytics.

Key Points:

Pairing drugs to gene characteristics only covers a fraction of the types of data that can be pooled to target specific patient care.

Consider the Montefiore Health System in the Bronx. It has deployed a semantic data lake, an architecture for collecting large, disparate volumes of data and collating them into usable forms with the help of AI. Besides the wide range of data specific to patients collected onsite (including from a host of medical sensors and devices), Montefiore healthcare professionals also collate data from sources as needed, including PharmGKB databank (genetic variations and drug responses), the National Institute of Healths Unified Medical Language System (UMLS), and the Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man (human genomic data).

Long story short, the Intel/Cloudera/Franz-based solution proved able to accurately create risk scores for patients, predict whether they would have a critical respiratory event, and advise doctors on what actions to take.

We are using information for the most critically ill patients in the institution to try and identify those at risk of developing respiratory failure (so) we can change the trajectory, noted Dr. Andrew Racine, Montefiores system SVP and chief medical officer.

Now that institutions like Montefiore can perform AI-driven analytics across many databases, the next step may be to integrate off-site communications via 5G networking. Doing so will enable physicians to contribute data from the field, from emergency sites to routine in-home visits, and receive real-time advice on how to proceed. Not only can this enable healthcare professionals to deliver faster, more accurate diagnoses, it may permit general physicians to offer specialized advice tailored to a specific patients individual needs. Enabling caregivers like this with guidance from afar is critical in a world that, researchers say, faces a shortage 15 million healthcare workers by 2030.

Enabling services like these is not trivial in any way. Consider the millions of people who might need to be genetically sequenced in order to arrive at a broad enough sample population for such diagnostics. Thats only the beginning. Different databases must be combined, often over immense distances via the cloud, without sacrificing patients rights or privacy. Despite the clear need for this, according to the Wall Street Journal, only 4% of U.S. cancer patients in clinical trials have their genomic data made available for research, leaving most treatment outcomes unknown to the research and diagnostic communities. New methods of preserving patient anonymity and data security across systems and databases should go a long way toward remedying this.

One promising example: using the processing efficiencies of Intel Xeon platforms in handling the transparent data encryption (TDE) of Epic EHR patient information with Oracle Database. Advocates say the more encryption and trusted execution technologies, such as SGX, can be integrated from medical edge devices to core data centers, the more the public will learn to allow its data to be collected and used.

Beyond security, precision medicine demands exceptional compute power. Molecular modeling and simulations must be run to assess how a drug interacts with particular patient groups, and then perhaps run again to see how that drug performs the same actions in the presence of other drugs. Such testing is why it can take billions of dollars and over a decade to bring a single drug to market.

Fortunately, many groups are employing new technologies to radically accelerate this process. Artificial intelligence plays a key role in accelerating and improving the repetitive, rote operations involved in many healthcare and life sciences tasks.

Pharmaceuticals titan Novartis, for example, uses deep neural network (DNN) technology to accelerate high-content screening, which is the analysis of cellular-level images to determine how they would react when exposed to varying genetic or chemical interactions. By updating the processing platform to the latest Xeon generation, parallelizing the workload, and using tools like the Intel Data Analytics Acceleration Library (DAAL) and Intel Caffe, Novartis realized nearly a 22x performance improvement compared to the prior configuration. These are the sorts of benefits healthcare organizations can expect from updating legacy processes with platforms optimized for acceleration through AI and high levels of parallelization.

Interestingly, such order-of-magnitude leaps in capability, while essential for taming the torrents of data flowing into medical databases, can also be applied to medical IoT devices. Think about X-ray machines. Theyre basically cameras that require human specialists (radiologists) to review images and look for patterns of health or malady before passing findings to doctors. According to GE Healthcare, hospitals now generate 50 petabytes of data annually. A staggering 90% comes from medical imaging, GE says, with more than 97% unanalyzed or unused. Beyond working to use AI to help reduce the massive volume of reject images, and thus cut reduce on multiple fronts, GE Healthcare teamed with Intel to create an X-ray system able to capture images and detect a collapsed lung (pneumothorax) within seconds.

Simply being able to detect pneumothorax incidents with AI represents a huge leap. However, part of the projects objective was to deliver accurate results more quickly and so help to automate part of the diagnostic workload jamming up so many radiology departments. Intel helped to integrate its OpenVINO toolkit, which enables development of applications that emulate human vision and visual pattern recognition. Those workloads can then be adapted for processing across CPUs, GPU, AI-specific accelerators and other processors.

With the optimization, the GE X-ray system performed inferences (image assessments) 3.3x faster than without. Completion time was less than one second per image dramatically faster than highly trained radiologists. And, as shown in the image above, GEs Optima XR240amx X-ray system is portable. So this IoT device can deliver results from a wide range of places and send results directly to doctors devices in real time over fast connections, such as 5G. A future version could feed analyzed X-rays straight into patient records. There, they become another factor in the multivariate pool that constitutes the patients dataset, which in turn, enables personalized recommendations by doctors.

By now, you see the problem/solution pattern:

The U.S. provides a solid illustration of the impact of population in this progression. According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control (CDC), even though the rate of new cancer incidents has flattened in the last several years, the countrys rising population pushed the number of new cases diagnosed from 1.5 million in 2010 to 1.9 million in 2020, driven in part by rising rates in overweight, obesity, and infections.

The white paper Accelerating Clinical Genomics to Transform Cancer Care (below) paints a stark picture of the durations involved in traditional approaches to handling new cancer cases from initial patient visit to data-driven treatment.

At each step, delays plague the process extending patient anxiety, increasing pain, even leading to unnecessary death.

Intel created an initiative called All in One Day to create a goal for the medical industry: take a patient from initial scan(s) to precision medicine-based actions for remediation in only 24 hours. This includes genetic sequencing, analysis that yields insights into the cellular- and molecular-level pathways involved in the cancer, and identification of gene-targeted drugs able to deliver the safest, most effective remedy possible.

To make All in One Day possible, the industry will require secure, broadly trusted methods for regularly exchanging petabytes of data. (Intel notes that a typical genetic sequence creates roughly 1TB of data. Now, multiply that across the thousands of genome sequences involved in many genomic analysis operations.) The crunching of these giant data sets calls for AI and computational horsepower beyond what todays massively parallel accelerators can do. But the performance is coming.

As doctors will have to service ever-larger patient populations, expect them to need data results and visualizations delivered to wherever they may be, including in forms animated or rendered in virtual reality. This will require 5G-type wireless connectivity to facilitate sufficient data bandwidth to whatever medical IoT devices are being used.

If successful, more people will get more personalized help and relief than ever possible. The medical IoT and 5G dovetail with other trends now reshaping modern medicine and making these visions everyday reality. A 2018 Intel survey showed that 37% of healthcare industry respondents already use AI; the number should rise to 54% by 2023. Promising new products and approaches appear daily. A few recent examples are here, here and here.

As AI adoption continues and pairs with faster hardware, more diverse medical devices, and faster connectivity, perhaps we will soon reach a time when no parent ever has to watch an unresponsive child whisked away by ambulance because of adverse reactions that might have been avoided through precision medicine and next-gen technology.

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Tampa health care expert unveils health care plan using artificial intelligence, genetics, medical case management to save taxpayers $1.4 trillion per…

Friday, February 7th, 2020

A Tampa health care expert goes public with a plan to fix America's broken health care system.

TAMPA, Fla. (PRWEB) February 05, 2020

TAMPA, Fla. Local health care expert and medical case management consultant Paul Roberts has spent two decades working to develop more efficient ways to improve healthcare, and now the 47-year-old is attempting his most ambitious task to reform America's health care system.

"There's no question about it, our healthcare system is broken and that really is something that all Americans can get behind, regardless of their political ideologies," said Roberts. "It affects all of us and we need to address it before costs skyrocket even more."

According to Roberts, his alternative plan will save tax payers an estimated 40 percent over Medicare for All, while enhancing the overall quality of care.

Roberts calls his plan Coordinated Care for All, and while it is modeled somewhat like a single-payer government-managed healthcare system, there would be no mandate to participate. Private sector competition would continue by allowing people to opt out. The plan could also be easily adopted for use in the private sector as well.

Roberts's plan focuses on several key areas including prediction of risk, education, prevention, cost containment, efficiency, and medical case management, combining all of these target areas of focus with a centralized computer system, while utilizing artificial intelligence and voluntary genetic input to predict risk.

Coordinated Care for All would combine technology, artificial intelligence and genetics to identify and target the following:

According to Roberts, while all of this can be applied to a model for a single-payer source (Universal Healthcare), the same ideas can also be also applied to the private sector. Additionally, the allowance of pre-existing conditions and competition within the private healthcare sector are inclusive in the plan.

To promote his plan, Roberts has taken big steps. Originally, he tried working with lawmakers, but when that process resulted in slow results, he decided to invest more than $250,000 into the production of a feature-length documentary film called "Diagnosing Healthcare," which is set to be released this spring.

Since beginning his push, Roberts has been gaining momentum. The Case Management Society of America published an article focusing on his plan in their latest issue of their flagship magazine, CMSA Today. Additionally, Roberts was recently interviewed about Coordinated Care for All on American Medicine Today, and next month Roberts is scheduled to speak at the Synapse Innovation Summit at Amalie Arena in Tampa Feb 11-12.

"I realized that in order to be taken seriously, I needed to take my plan directly to the American public, so that's what I am doing," said Roberts. "At the end of the day, the focus of my plan is on improving cost-effectiveness, while also improving the quality of care delivered."

For more information on Coordinated Care for All, visit http://www.robertsccm.com.

For the original version on PRWeb visit: https://www.prweb.com/releases/tampa_health_care_expert_unveils_health_care_plan_using_artificial_intelligence_genetics_medical_case_management_to_save_taxpayers_1_4_trillion_per_year/prweb16890739.htm

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Nigerias most prominent geneticists and medical research professionals are coming together to promote genomics research and make new drug discoveries…

Friday, February 7th, 2020

54gene has announced the launch of the African Centre for Translational Genomics (ACTG), an initiative established to facilitate translational genomics research by African scientists.

This initiative is the coming together of leading scientists as a welcome development for leveraging talent from across Nigeria to promote genomics research scholarship.

The establishment will also re-invest in the health ecosystem by empowering the next generation of African genomic scientists through the provision and implementation of grants, fellowships, internships, and training for medical researchers, trainees, and students, the company said in a statement released on Tuesday, February 4th, 2020.

According to a 2018 National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) report, Nigeria has few medical geneticists and genetic counselors in Nigeria with most genetic disorders patients seen by pediatricians.

With this first concerted effort from genetic scientists and researchers, the ACTG will be funding its first study under the Non-Communicable Diseases - Genetic Heritage Study (NCD-GHS) Consortium. The consortium will see over 100,000 Nigerians participate in the eponymous study which will seek to understand the genetic basis of the highly prevalent non-Communicable Diseases (NCDs) in Nigeria such as cancers, diabetes, Alzheimers, chronic kidney, sickle cell disease, among others.

ALSO READ: Business Insider chats with the CEO of 54gene, the company building the world's first pan-African biobank

The consortium will have a steering committee co-led by the Director-General of Nigeria Institute of Medical Research [NIMR], Prof. Babatunde Lawal Salako, the Director of National Biotechnology Development Agencys Centre for Genomics Research and Innovation [NABDA-CGRI], Prof Oyekanmi Nash, the CEO of 54gene, Dr. Abasi Ene-Obong, Dr. Segun Fatumo, Assistant Professor, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine [LSHTM], and Dr. Omolola Salako, Consultant Oncologist, College of Medicine, University of Lagos [CMUL].

Speaking on the consortium launch, Dr. Abasi Ene-Obong, said, In continuation with our belief at 54gene that genetic research in Africa should be ethical and beneficial to the communities we serve, and that African scientists be at the forefront of new drug discoveries that benefit Africans and the world at large; we have set up the ACTG to harness translational genetic research across Africa. The NCD-GHS study is our pilot effort under the ACTG that has the potential to rewrite the playbook of genomics research, where African scientists will be placed at the forefront of new drug discoveries for conditions that affect the health of not only Nigerians but greater Africa and the world.

Our collaboration with scientists at NIMR and NABDA-CGRI, as a consortium, is a highly welcome initiative which we believe will be a rewarding and mutually beneficial experience for all parties. For 54gene specifically, the opportunity for us to contribute to a broader national agenda for genomics research is both inspiring and humbling, and we are committed to ensuring its success.

Joining Dr. Ene-Obong at the launch of the NCD-GHS Consortium included many of Nigerias most prominent geneticists and medical research professionals.

Professor. Babatunde Lawal Salako, Director General of the Nigeria Institute of Medical Research (NIMR), added that the consortium will engage senior scientists that have made their mark in the field of cardiometabolic research in teaching hospitals across the country to ensure representativeness and quality.

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Dyne Therapeutics Expands Leadership Team with Key Hires – Business Wire

Friday, February 7th, 2020

WALTHAM, Mass.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Dyne Therapeutics, a biotechnology company pioneering targeted therapies for patients with serious muscle diseases, today announced the addition of three key members to its leadership team: Oxana Beskrovnaya, Ph.D., senior vice president and head of research; Chris Mix, M.D., senior vice president, clinical development; and John Najim, vice president, chemistry, manufacturing and controls (CMC).

Dyne is establishing a leadership position in muscle disease therapeutics by combining transformative science with an organizational passion for changing the lives of patients, said Joshua Brumm, president and chief executive officer of Dyne. We are thrilled to welcome Oxana, Chris and John to our growing team. Leveraging their collective experience in the discovery and development of novel medicines, we are poised to rapidly advance our programs toward the clinic and are fully focused on execution.

Dr. Beskrovnaya is an accomplished R&D leader with a strong track record of discovering and developing first-in-class therapeutics for rare genetic diseases. Prior to joining Dyne, she served as head of musculoskeletal and renal research in Sanofis rare disease and neurological unit, where she advanced a pipeline of drug candidates using multiple therapeutic modalities, including nucleic acids, proteins and small molecules. Dr. Beskrovnaya is the author of numerous patents, invited reviews, editorials, book chapters and original research articles in major scientific journals. She received her Ph.D. in genetics from Moscow Genetics Institute, followed by postdoctoral fellowship training in neuromuscular diseases at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute at the University of Iowa.

Dr. Mix brings extensive clinical development experience to Dyne, most recently serving as vice president of rare genetic disease clinical development at Agios Pharmaceuticals, where he oversaw development across several hemolytic anemia indications. In his previous role as vice president of clinical development at Sarepta Therapeutics, he focused on advancing candidate therapies for rare neuromuscular disease. Dr. Mix received his B.A. in chemistry from Haverford College and his M.D. from the University of Massachusetts Medical School. He completed his residency in internal medicine at Tufts Medical Center, a fellowship in nephrology at the Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston and an M.S. in clinical care research at the Tufts School of Biomedical Sciences.

Mr. Najim brings a wealth of CMC biopharmaceutical development and cGMP manufacturing experience across multiple biologic expression systems and small molecules. Mr. Najim previously held roles of increasing responsibility at Proteon Therapeutics, including most recently as vice president of manufacturing and process development, and also served as associate director of manufacturing at Dyax Corporation. He received his B.S. in biochemistry from Merrimack College and his MBA from Bentley University.

About Dyne TherapeuticsDyne Therapeutics is pioneering life-transforming therapies for patients with serious muscle diseases. The companys FORCE platform delivers oligonucleotides and other molecules to skeletal, cardiac and smooth muscle with unprecedented precision to restore muscle health. Dyne is advancing treatments for myotonic dystrophy type 1 (DM1), Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) and facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy (FSHD). Dyne was founded by Atlas Venture and is headquartered in Waltham, Mass. For more information, please visit http://www.dyne-tx.com, and follow us on Twitter and LinkedIn.

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Is the medication you’re taking worth its price? – Salon

Sunday, February 2nd, 2020

Austin was three years old and Max was a newborn when their mother, Jenn McNary, learned they had a rare genetic condition called Duchenne muscular dystrophy. The doctor painted a grim picture: Her boys would stop walking by age 12 or 13 and, shortly thereafter, they would require nighttime ventilation. They would each need a tracheotomy, a feeding tube, or both by their late teens. Death would come a few years later.

It hasn't worked out that way, thanks to two new drugs that became available after the boys' 2002 diagnosis. Exondys 51, a medicine that targets their genetic mutation, slows the disease's progression, and Emflaza, a corticosteroid, mitigates some of its symptoms. Thanks to these treatments, Austin now attends college and interns at a biotech company. Max attends his local high school in Newton, Massachusetts. Both are able to get around in wheelchairs, and neither needs ventilation. McNary just rented an apartment for her boys because they can function on their own with the help of an aide.

By all accounts, the drugs have been transformative, McNary said. But, she added, her boys "aren't going to be cured," and extending and improving their life for an unknown period of time comes at a high price. Emflaza came onto the market in 2017 at an annual cost of $65,000. Exondys 51 appeared in 2016 at $748,500. Neither of the drugs will help the young men walk again and, in the eyes of some U.S. health economists, the drugs are not worth the price.

That's why McNary hates the quality-adjusted life year (QALY, pronounced "qua-lee"), an economic calculation that attempts to quantify the value of a medical intervention, based in part on the quality of life it bestows on recipients.

First developed by U.S. economists in the late 1960s and early 1970s, variations of the QALY have been used for years by governments around the world to help determine what treatments citizens can obtain under public health care. In America's free-market health care system, however, QALY calculations have largely been avoided. As McNary and others like her are finding out, that's starting to change.

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As policymakers and insurance companies scramble to get a handle on skyrocketing health care costs, they are promoting the idea of paying for value. In this view, drugs designated as higher-value should be prioritized over lower-value treatments. But this raises a thorny question: Who gets to define "value"? Health economists and insurance companies who seek to use limited health care dollars judiciously? Or patients, parents, and doctors who want to receive the best health care for their situation?

Because the quality-adjusted life year threatens her sons' ability to get the medicine they need, McNary is clear about her answer. "To me, the QALY is a measurement that says that keeping my sons alive by providing incremental benefit but not totally curing them is never going to be valuable," McNary said. "Just mull that around in your head if you are less than perfect, you are worth less money."

* * *

In QALY math, a year of perfect health is equal to 1; death equates to 0. The value of other health states is derived from surveys of patients, caregivers, or the general public. Paralysis might be valued at .35, for example, and mild Alzheimer's disease at .52, depending on the survey. Those numbers can then be plugged into a formula that allows the relative cost-effectiveness of treatments to be compared to identify the best buys.

Economists developed the QALY concept more than 40 years ago to address a fundamental question: "Where should we spend whose money to undertake what programs to save which lives with what probability?' Richard J. Zeckhauser and Donald Shepard asked in a 1976 article describing the basic QALY formula. The next year, as U.S. health care spending topped $120 billion, Harvard health policy professor Milton C. Weinstein and his colleague, cardiologist William B. Stason, sounded an alarm bell. "It is now almost universally believed that the resources available to meet the demands for health care are limited," they wrote in the New England Journal of Medicine. "We, as a nation, will have to think very carefully about how to allocate the resources we are willing to make available for health care."

Their article cited by other authors more than a thousand times in the past four decades pointed out that resources were already being allocated by millions of individual decisions: hospitals rationing beds where they didn't have room for all patients, for example, and insurers agreeing to pay for some tests and treatments but not for others. Such decisions, they argued, were often inconsistent with the "societal objective of deriving the maximum health benefits from the dollars spent," an objective that could be achieved by putting the QALY to work.

In the intervening decades, some countries the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, and Sweden, for example have embraced QALY-based evaluations. In the U.K., cost-effectiveness studies are used, in part, to determine which therapies the National Health Service will provide for residents. The publicly-funded health system does not cover Orkambi, the first cystic fibrosis treatment that targets the cause of the disease, for example, because its cost-per-QALY far exceeds the U.K. cost-effectiveness threshold.

In the United States, however, QALY-based assessments have not gained traction until recently. "Perhaps the general reason is that we as patients and our providers don't want to be limited in the treatment options available," said Louis P. Garrison Jr., an economist in the Pharmaceutical Outcomes Research and Policy Program at the University of Washington.

In fact, QALY-based cost-effectiveness reviews are so controversial that the federal government has repeatedly quashed their use. In 1992, the Department of Health and Human Services rejected Oregon's attempt to use QALY-based cost-effectiveness assessments to determine what services its Medicaid program would cover. In 2010, as part of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, Congress prohibited the use of QALYs by the Medicare program. It also banned the federal Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute from using QALY thresholds in its assessments of comparative treatments.

* * *

A QALY Primer

A QALY reflects quality of life and length of life. A year in "perfect health" is worth 1 QALY, death is worth 0 QALYs, and other health states fall between 0 and 1. The amount that a drug lengthens or improves the quality of life is calculated as "QALYs gained." The cost of getting a certain level of health improvement is the "cost per QALY gained," shown here for several interventions targeting asthma.

But more than half of U.S. residents are covered by private insurance companies, which are not prohibited from using QALY-based assessments to decide which medicines they will cover for their members. Traditionally, however, private insurers have generally not used QALYs explicitly in their decisions about what tests and treatments they will pay for, according to a recent report by the National Council on Disability. Instead, when major U.S. insurers decide to limit access to a given medication, they usually cite insufficient data to justify its use in a given situation.

Indeed, until recently, U.S. insurers did not have a source for QALY-based cost-effectiveness reports. That began to change in 2014, when the Institute for Clinical and Economic Review, a nonprofit research organization based in Boston, turned its attention to high-cost drugs. Founded in 2006 as a research project based at Harvard Medical School, ICER initially issued reports on broad topics such as obesity management and palliative care. But when Sovaldi, a drug for deadly hepatitis C, came on the market at the then-shocking price of $84,000 for a 12-week course of treatment, ICER kicked into action. Despite the high price, its assessment found that Sovaldi is cost-effective for some patients. Insurers took notice.

Since then, the organization has been churning out several drug-assessment reports each year. Each report includes its opinion of how much the drug is worth; drugs priced higher than that are deemed not cost-effective. ICER has no authority over anyone, but its reports have become popular reading for U.S. insurers. "If there is a drug of note being approved by the FDA, there's also likely going to be an ICER assessment of that drug that can factor into their decision-making," said David Whitrap, the research organization's vice president of communications and outreach.

* * *

U.S. health care spending has risen dramatically since Weinstein and Stason expressed concern in the mid-1970s. In 2016, the U.S. spent nearly 18 percent of its gross domestic product on health care, far outstripping the average of 11 percent for 10 other high-income nations. High prices for prescription drugs is one reason. "We're seeing price tags now of $1 million, $2 million," said Seema Verma, administrator for the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, at a conference recently. "That's completely unsustainable for the system."

That's why Peter Neumann, director of the Center for the Evaluation of Value and Risk in Health at Tufts Medical Center, said cost-effectiveness analyses are needed more than ever. But there are many reasons for the resistance, Neumann and his co-authors wrote in the Journal of the American Medical Association, including "an inclination on the part of many individuals in the United States to minimize the underlying problem of resource scarcity and the consequent need to explicitly ration care."

Further, Ari Ne'eman, a disability rights activist and consultant to Partnership to Improve Patient Care, a coalition of advocacy groups, said the idea that two health conditions can be numerically compared to one another is simply wrong. "Proponents of the QALY will say it is this mathematically perfect measure that gives us a superpower ability to compare depression drugs to cystic fibrosis drugs to cancer drugs even though all of those drugs do different things because it lets you translate them back to this common measure," he said. "Our concern is that when you engage in that process of translation, you lose some significant nuance in terms of the amount of benefit that's being delivered."

The Partnership argues the QALY calculation is flawed because it assumes quality of life can be captured by a certain number, despite the fact that different surveys arrive at different numbers. For example, a 2006 quality-of-life survey in the U.S. assigns blindness/low vision as .69 on the 0-to-1 scale, while a 2011 survey in the U.K. gives blindness/low vision a score of .78.

Beyond the methodological issues, Ne'eman said, "there are all kinds of ethical problems with it." People with disabilities and chronic medical conditions may value a treatment that offers an incremental improvement in the quality or length of their lives, even though the "QALYs gained" are less than those for a treatment that prevents the loss of perfect health.

Former U.S. Representative Tony Coelho, a Democrat from California and a primary author of the Americans with Disabilities Act, is the Partnership's chairman. "I worry that more focus is being given to what is most cost-effective for the 'average patient' than creating a system that works for each individual patient," he wrote in 2018. "The medication I take for epilepsy isn't 'high value' for every patient. But it's the only one that works for me."

That's why, Ne'eman said, cost-effectiveness analyses must consider the fact that not all patients respond the same way to a drug. Some patients need drugs that aren't deemed cost-effective for the general population. It's important to account for that, he said. "Otherwise we're giving insurers a tool to deny care to people who need it."

When an insurer decides to cover a specific drug, that decision affects everybody who pays into the insurance pool. Michael Sherman, chief medical officer for the insurer Harvard Pilgrim Health Care, uses the example of a gene therapy that costs $1 million to treat a child who will die without it. Under the ACA, families will hit their out-of-pocket maximum at about $16,000, and many health plans have out-of-pocket maximums far below that. "The rest of that million dollars is going to be paid by everyone else that's the way it works in insurance," he said. When insurers see that kind of unanticipated budget impact, they raise premiums or out-of-pocket cost-sharing for everyone.

Like other proponents of the QALY, Neumann sees it as an imperfect but useful tool. "Any single number is never going to capture everything," he said.

"The problem is, if you're not going to use QALYs, what are you going to use?"

* * *

That's an urgent question, particularly now when there is a huge pipeline for rare-disease therapies, often called orphan drugs. By 2024, orphan drug sales are expected to reach $242 billion.

In the U.S., a rare disease is defined as one that affects fewer than 200,000 people. While these conditions are individually rare, in the aggregate, an estimated 25 to 30 million Americans that's about one in 10 live with a rare disease. Most rare diseases affect children, and many are fatal or disabling.

Historically, drugmakers spent little effort developing treatments for rare diseases, but that changed with the passage of the Orphan Drug Act of 1983, which provides tax credits and a seven-year marketing exclusivity to companies that develop rare-disease treatments. Hundreds of such treatments have won FDA approval in recent years, with more than 560 medicines in the works.

Those treatments are generally expensive. On average, the per-patient cost for orphan drugs in the U.S. is almost 4.5 times more than for non-orphan drugs.

In the two decades ending in 2017, the average annual cost for orphan drugs was $123,543, based on the price at the time the drug launched, compared to $4,961 for traditional drugs. For Duchenne alone, more than 30 orphan therapies are in development. None of them are going to cure patients, McNary said. But she hopes new treatments, generally used in combination, will help her sons live longer, healthier lives and completely change the disease trajectory for younger patients whose disease has not yet progressed as far.

The barrier she worries about is cost-effectiveness analysis. In August, the Institute for Clinical and Economic Review published its assessment of treatments for Duchenne, which affects about 400 to 600 boys born in the U.S. each year. Emflaza, the corticosteroid, appears to be as good as or better than prednisone, another corticosteroid approved to treat the disease, but it would need a price cut of at least 73 percent to be considered cost-effective.

Exondys 51 approved by the FDA for about 13 percent of the Duchenne population got a worse review. In the clinical trials used to seek FDA approval, no clinical benefit, including motor function improvement, was demonstrated. (The FDA approved the drug because some of the patients treated with Exondys 51 had a slight increase in dystrophin levels in skeletal muscle.) In light of that, Exondys 51 was not deemed cost-effective at any price.

But Jenn McNary said the drug works for her sons. Austin, who was not eligible for the Exondys 51 clinical trial, stopped walking at age 10. Max got in the trial and started taking the drug at age 9."They have the same mutation, they have been raised by the same mother, so one would expect they would progress similarly," she said. "But Max walked until he was 17."

Austin was already in a wheelchair when, at age 15, he started taking Exondys 51. He regained some upper-body strength that changed his life, according to his mother. "He's able to use a urinal on his own, which makes is possible for him to have a job and to go to college without an aide," she said.

The Medicaid program in Massachusetts, where the McNarys live, won't pay for Max's Duchenne therapies. For the time-being, the drugmakers are giving him the drugs free through a patient-assistance program. Austin, because he's enrolled in college, is eligible for student coverage through Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts. The insurer, by policy, does not cover Exondys 51 for patients who can no longer walk. His mother appeals the insurance denial. Every six months, she sends a video of Austin in action, along with a letter from his doctor and so far, his medicines have been covered.

The payers made their coverage policies before the quality-adjusted life year analysis was published. Now, insurers who have been covering the Duchenne treatments have an independent analysis with which to rethink that decision.

For now, there is one thing that QALY supporters and critics agree on. "Very promising drugs are coming, and they're going to be very expensive," said Neumann, the health economist at Tufts. Increasingly, the QALY appears poised to influence how American health care money is spent.

* * *

Lola Butcher is a health care business and policy writer based in Missouri.

This article was originally published on Undark. Read the original article.

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Here are some tips, treatment options for acne – The Reporter

Sunday, February 2nd, 2020

According to the American Academy of Dermatology, acne affects up to a staggering 50 million Americans annually.

To make matters worse, blackheads, whiteheads, pimples, cysts and other acne-related blemishes seem to occur at the most inconvenient times: before a date, a meeting, class photos, you name it. Although acne is not a serious health threat, severe acne can lead to disfiguring and permanent scarring.

Why do I have acne? Acne is most commonly linked to the changes in hormone levels during puberty, but can start at any age. Certain hormones cause the grease-producing glands next to hair follicles in the skin to produce larger amounts of oil, or abnormal sebum. This abnormal oil changes the activity of harmless skin bacterium called P. acnes, or propionibacterium acnes, which becomes more aggressive and causes inflammation and pus. Certain medications, stress and a poor diet can also contribute to acne. There is also evidence of a genetic component to acne as well.

Types of treatments: Because acne is caused by a myriad of factors, treating it with one product or medicine usually is not enough. You may need to attack it from many angles with different types of treatments that all work differently.

While a pimple will eventually go away, if you have numerous outbreaks, you could end up with scars. This is when it is time to visit a dermatologist, who may suggest a cream, lotion, gel or some that contains ingredients that can help. Many can be bought without a prescription:

Benzoyl peroxide kills bacteria and removes extra oil.

Salicylic acid keeps pores from getting clogged.

Sulfur removes dead skin cells.

Stronger treatments: If some of these over-the-counter remedies do not get your acne under control, your doctor may prescribe a retinoid to be used on the skin. This comes in a cream or gel and helps unplug oil ducts. Antibiotics in cream, lotion, solution or gel form may be used for inflammatory acne.

Isotretinoin is a medicine used to treat severe acne. It is usually used for cystic acne that does not improve after treatment with other medicines. Brand names include Accutane, Amnesteem, Sotret and Claravis. Isotretinoin is the most effective long-term medication for acne but is associated with some risks that dermatologists are familiar with. Spironolactone blocks excess hormones.

When to seek medical help: Even mild cases of acne can cause distress and, in some cases, depression. If your acne is making you feel unhappy or you are having a hard time controlling your blemishes with over-the-counter medication, see your doctor. Try to resist the temptation to pick or squeeze the spots, because this can lead to scarring.

Treatments can take a few months to work, so do not expect immediate results. Once they do start to work, the results are usually good.

Dr. Daniel Shurman of Pennsylvania Dermatology Partners in Amity Township completed his dermatology training at Thomas Jefferson University. He is fellowship-trained in both Mohs micrographic surgery and procedural dermatology, and his research interests include medical genetics, antibiotics in dermatologic surgery and wound healing.

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The first case of coronavirus being spread by a person with no symptoms has been found – Science News

Sunday, February 2nd, 2020

As the 2019 novel coronavirus outbreak continues to spreadin China, researchers have found that people carrying the virus but not showingsymptoms may be able to infect others.

If infected people can spread 2019-nCoV while asymptomatic,it could be harder to trace contacts and contain the epidemic, which is alreadya globalhealth emergency (SN: 1/30/20).

An unnamed Shanghai woman passed the virus to businesscolleagues in Germanybefore she showed signs of the illness, doctors report January 30 in the New England Journal of Medicine. Thewoman had attended a business meeting at the headquarters of the auto supplierWebasto in Stockdorf on January 20 and flew back to China on January 22. Shebecame ill with mild symptoms on the flight back to China and tested positivefor the virus.

Meanwhile, one of her German colleagues fell ill on January24 with a fever, sore throat, chills and muscle aches. His illness was brief,and he returned to work on January 27, the same day that the woman informed thecompany she carried the virus. Nasal swabs and sputum, or phlegm, samples fromthe man contained high levels of the novel coronavirus even though his symptomshad passed.

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Three other employees of the company also tested positivefor the virus. Tracing their contacts, doctors conclude that the first man andanother person caught the virus from their Chinese colleague.

Whats also concerning is that the first man apparently passedthe virus to the other two coworkers, who both had contact with him before hedeveloped symptoms. All cases of the illness have been mild.

These cases suggest that people shed the virus before theyshow symptoms and after recovery from the illness, say Camilla Rothe, atropical medicine and infectious disease specialist at the University Hospital ofLudwig-Maximilians-Universitt in Munich, and her colleagues.

Asymptomatic spread, though common for influenza viruses forexample, would be a new trick for coronaviruses. The coronaviruses that causesevere acute respiratory syndrome, or SARS, and Middle East respiratorysyndrome, or MERS, are notcontagious before people show symptoms (SN:1/28/20).

Another coworker of the firm was confirmed to have the viruson January 30, and a child of one of the infected workers has also contractedthe virus, bringing the case count to six, health officials in the German stateof Bavaria said January 31. The company has closed its headquarters near Munichuntil February 2 and began testing contacts of the ill employees on January 29.

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