header logo image


Page 627«..1020..626627628629..640650..»

3 Mesothelioma Treatment Options on the Rise – Mesothelioma Guide

March 18th, 2020 11:47 pm

People with mesothelioma dont have many treatment options.

A combination of surgery, chemotherapy and radiation is the standard of care. For years, chemotherapy was the only method with approval from the United States Food and Drug Administration.

In 2019, that changed. Now, in 2020 and looking forward, theres a lot of potential for another unorthodox treatment to emerge.

Last May, the FDA approved using the NovoTTF-100L System on a limited basis for pleural mesothelioma. Patients can use the treatment as a first-line option with chemotherapy and only if they arent candidates for surgery.

The NovoTTF-100L became the first mesothelioma treatment option in 15 years to receive FDA approval. In 2004, pemetrexed was approved for treating this cancer.

Hopefully, we wont have to wait another 15 years for the next approval. Here are three classes of cancer treatment that could break through soon and get approval from the FDA.

If youre interested in accessing any of these cancer treatment techniques, please email our registered nurse, Jenna Campagna. She can help you connect with a mesothelioma specialist and look into experimental treatments. Please email her at jenna@mesotheliomaguide.com.

Immunotherapy is at the forefront of many clinical studies involving mesothelioma. The treatment uses drugs to enhance the bodys immune system. The theory is that the body could better fight mesothelioma with just a little outside help.

There are a few variations of immunotherapy. The one used the most in experiments is checkpoint inhibitors. This type of immunotherapy drug targets the relationship between two proteins: PD-1 and PD-L1.

PD-1 is a protein on T-cells, which are the immune systems fighter cells against diseases like mesothelioma. PD-L1 is a protein in mesothelioma cells.

When the two interact, the T-cells cannot detect mesothelioma cells as dangerous to the body. Basically, the PD-1/PD-L1 connection is a mask for mesothelioma.

Checkpoint inhibitors block this connection, which allows the immune system to detect and attack infected cells. The two most common drugs are nivolumab (brand name Opdivo) and pembrolizumab (brand name Keytruda).

Dr. Patrick Forde and his team are testing immunotherapy with surgery and chemotherapy for pleural mesothelioma. Dr. Forde is a thoracic oncologist at Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center at Johns Hopkins.

The clinical trial involves two stages of two immunotherapy drugs: nivolumab and ipilimumab. Patients receive three doses of nivolumab before surgery and one dose of ipilimumab. Then patients can receive further immunotherapy treatment after surgery.

Immunotherapys versatility is one of the treatments best qualities. It can be used before or after surgery, in conjunction with chemotherapy, and even paired with other emerging therapies.

Dr. Forde, who specializes in treating pleural mesothelioma, said immunotherapy can reduce the size of tumors and how widespread they are in the body. This regression can help surgeons remove the diseased cells during operation.

There are numerous forms of gene therapy. One type involves restructuring the genetic characteristics of infected cells. Another type one called suicide gene therapy uses genes to engage the immune system and attack the tumors.

Gene therapy usually isnt sufficient on its own. Instead, its used in conjunction with other mesothelioma treatment options.

The purpose of gene therapy is to repair or weaken infected cells. Repairing can reduce the number of dangerous mesothelioma cells in the body. Weakening can increase the effectiveness of other treatment methods, such as surgery, chemotherapy or immunotherapy.

A Phase 3 clinical trial involving gene therapy might be the most promising one available to pleural mesothelioma patients. Dr. Daniel Sterman is the director of the Multidisciplinary Pulmonary Oncology Program at New York University Langone Health. He is the lead investigator in the study, which combines gene therapy with chemotherapy.

The trial uses TR002, which is adenovirus-delivered Interferon Alpha-2B. The treatment is a gene therapy transported by a virus into the body. Interferon Alpha-2B is a gene therapy that causes tumors to produce interferon alpha, which is a cancer-fighting protein.

The increased production of this protein alerts the immune system of danger. The T-cells recognize that the cells are producing this protein and begin attacking them.

The Phase 2 results were astonishing in a positive way. The disease control rate meaning the cancer either was stagnant or reduced in size was 87.5% for enrolled patients. Additionally, the survival time for patients who received this gene therapy treatment nearly doubled compared to those who didnt.

Virotherapy involves using programmed viruses to either attack mesothelioma cells or kickstart the immune system. Virotherapy also is used as a vessel to transfer other forms of therapy into the body.

Its another outside-the-box method to help the body stop mesotheliomas progression. There are three types of virotherapy used in experimental mesothelioma treatment:

Oncolytic viruses are modified viruses that focus on cancer cells and ignore healthy ones. This form of virotherapy explicitly targets mesothelioma, and its the most common type of the treatment.

Viral vectors are transports for other forms of treatment. Viral vectors could deliver modified genes or an immune system enhancer.

Viral immunotherapy involves using viruses to activate the immune system. Since the viruses are considered intruders, the immune system senses danger and looks for these viruses. Doctors often program the virotherapy similar to the genetic structure of mesothelioma cells. Doing so allows the immune system to identify harmful cells based on these genetic characteristics.

A new clinical trial involving virotherapy and immunotherapy has potential. The study uses ONCOS-102, which is a modified virus that transports immune system stimulants (cytokines).

ONCOS-102 is a combination of viral immunotherapy and oncolytic viruses. The virus aspect breaks apart the mesothelioma cells, and the cytokines send danger signals to the immune systems T-cells. When the mesothelioma cells break apart, they release antigens that the T-cells recognize as cancerous.

This two-pronged process involving virotherapy and immunotherapy has helped patients. Those receiving ONCOS-102 plus chemotherapy had a progression-free survival of around nine months.

Progression-free survival means the patient didnt die and the disease didnt spread further in the body. By comparison, patients who only received chemotherapy had a progression-free survival of around seven months.

Get in depth knowledge about your diagnosis & the best treatments.

Learn More

Continued here:
3 Mesothelioma Treatment Options on the Rise - Mesothelioma Guide

Read More...

Gene therapy giving Flames executive Snow hope in ALS fight – NHL.com

March 18th, 2020 11:47 pm

He swipes once. Twice. Three times.

The lidocaine goes in, to freeze the skin. Then the needle.

Slowly, precisely, Rasquinha removes spinal fluid through the lumbar puncture, commonly known as a spinal tap. He then gives him the injection that Snow and his wife, Kelsie, believe is saving his life.

They believe because they want to, because they have to, and because -- against every single odd, against every single thing you've ever heard regarding amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, or ALS -- it just might be working.

Snow, a 38-year-old assistant general manager for the Calgary Flames, was diagnosed with ALS on June 17. It was not a surprise. His family has been ravaged by the familial form of the disease, with his father, two uncles and a cousin having died from ALS caused by the SOD1 genetic mutation.

ALS affects motor neurons, the cells that control muscle movement. As ALS progresses, the motor neurons die, the muscles become weaker, and eventually movement slows or becomes impossible.

It's what Snow saw happen in his right hand, how he began to suspect that the disease had come for him too. But almost immediately after his diagnosis, which usually carries a life expectancy of between six and 18 months, Snow enrolled in a phase 3 clinical trial at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre in Toronto for those with the SOD1 mutation, which affects 2 percent of ALS patients.

In this, he was lucky, both that it was available and that he qualified.

He has made the trip to Toronto with Kelsie every four weeks since then, though initially there was a two-in-three chance that every trip brought him an injection of tofersen, a drug that doctors and researchers hoped could slow the progression of the disease.

For the first six months of the trial, two-thirds of the study participants are given the actual drug. One-third are given a placebo.

He does not know for sure whether he was in the group given the medication or the placebo. The Snows believe he was one of the lucky ones, one of those given tofersen. They believe because they, remarkably, have not seen a progression of the disease since he entered the trial. He still does not have use of his right hand. He has use of everything else, all the things they feared might slip away from him in the weeks and months after they confirmed the diagnosis.

The injection takes two minutes, two minutes of silent meditation for Snow. He thinks about his mom, Linda, who committed suicide in 2012. "Because," as he says, "she'd be really happy and really sad if she were here. One of the things I got from her was a real joy for life. She always was happy that I was that way. So, I think about her and how I get to move on because of this." He thinks about his dad, Bob, who died of ALS in 2018, and his uncles and his cousin.

He wishes they had had the opportunity for these two minutes. For that two-in-three chance.

"I move through those thoughts fairly quickly," he says. "I usually say a prayer or two. For them. Probably in part for myself."

****

The Snows have already been at Sunnybrook for hours at this point, Feb. 20 marking their 11th visit to this hospital, his 10th lumbar puncture. At 9:15 a.m., the driver picks them up at their hotel for the 20-minute ride. When they walk in the doors at the hospital, a massive campus that looks like a small airport, Snow is on edge.

They find their way down to Room UG21, where Snow will undergo a battery of tests, all of them designed to determine whether the progress of the disease has slowed, whether it has stopped, whether it has -- God forbid -- picked up again.

They start with a detailed neurological assessment.

"Have you experienced any changes to your health since you were last here?"

"No."

"Have you noticed any difference in your speech?"

"No."

They test knowledge next, the year, the season, the province, the city. A series of words that never changes from visit to visit: apple, penny, table. He counts backward from 100 by seven.

These are the hardest weeks, when the anxiety sweeps up and the visit looms closer and the fear that "no change" might have turned into "some change" pierces the bubble they have formed around themselves.

"My bad hand, I don't have any expectations for it being better," Snow says. "It's more the opposite, that I'm always kind of concerned about and testing the good parts. The other hand, in particular. Living without one hand is not difficult. Living without two hands is difficult.

"It's testing my good hand, and then I overtire it. And then I convince myself something is wrong."

This is when Kelsie can sense his perpetual optimism faltering.

"None of the physical aspects of any of that, the lidocaine, the needle itself, I couldn't care less about those things," Snow says. "It's just the emotional anguish that you can put yourself through, with wondering, am I a little bit different? And if I'm a little bit different, what does that mean?

"Because that's totally unknown. But then you worry, that could be a slippery slope."

He does a breathing test, to determine lung capacity, and one to test muscle strength. That is the one that gives him the most anxiety, because they are testing his hand and his strength, and that is where the disease started to eat at him.

"This is our 10th time doing most of these tests," Snow says.

"And there has not been any changes," research coordinator Jahan Mookshah says.

"Those are our favorite words," Kelsie says.

Kelsie bends down and ties her husband's shoes. The testing is over, for the moment.

****

There is no blood test for ALS. It's only diagnosed by process of elimination, a factor that often can be problematic, as the disease progresses while the patient is still waiting for answers. Snow was told June 10 by an EMG technician in Calgary that it was likely ALS, a diagnosis that was confirmed a week later by Dr. Michael Benatar at the University of Miami.

It was the last answer they wanted in the world. It was a death sentence.

They crumbled, seeing an unknown present, a future robbed.

"I don't know how we did it," Snow said. "We did our days, and then we cried."

Back in Calgary, fellow assistant general manager Craig Conroy got the news on the phone from Snow, while looking at Snow's kids, Cohen and Willa, now 8 and 5, who were staying at his house while their parents were in Miami. As Conroy said, "That just breaks your heart."

But there was some good news.

Snow had the best-case scenario: a family history and a mutation of the SOD1 gene. He had pressed the issue with doctors, over and over again, after starting to feel the weakness in his right hand while lifting weights during the Stanley Cup Playoffs in April, even as he wanted to believe it was a pinched ulnar nerve, desperate for any answer but this. For Snow, that meant it was only a matter of months between the onset of symptoms and the diagnosis, as opposed to 1 1/2 to 2 years, which is the average.

Which was why when the Snows talked to Benatar on June 17, it was like being flattened and lifted up in the same moment. They confirmed Snow had ALS. They also learned there was a trial, with openings for those with a fast-progressing form of the disease, like him. There was something they could do. There was a place they could go. There was a medicine he could take, produced by Biogen, a company whose corporate headquarters are on Binney Street in Cambridge, Massachusetts, the exact street where Snow lived when he moved there to work at The Boston Globe, another career and another lifetime ago.

There was -- maybe, possibly -- hope. An impossibility in this world.

"It's just like someone believably telling you you're going to die, then telling you you might not die," Kelsie said. "You can't describe that in a more dramatic way than that. You feel like you got your life back. You've got a chance. Just a chance, right?"

Most of the time ALS is sporadic -- that is, not inherited. But in 5 to 10 percent of cases, there is a familial link, an altered gene that has folded. When Kelsie researched trials in the immediate aftermath of the diagnosis, she realized that the studies that were furthest along happened to be for SOD1, Snow's mutation, the second-leading cause of familial ALS.

They would head to Toronto every month, their kids left with a rotating selection of friends, off to get the injection that might -- or might not -- include the liquid hope that his future rested on.

They had six months in which he could have been receiving either the drug or the placebo, until last month, when they were finally assured he would be getting the medication from this point on.

They told their kids that they would have to have a summer to last a lifetime.

"Because we felt like it was maybe going to have to," Kelsie said.

They jammed in everything, all the bike rides and ice cream and pictures, the trip to Merrymeeting Lake in New Hampshire, Snow's family cabin. They jammed happiness in every moment, the tears reserved for private times, for when they couldn't hold it in any longer, wiped away when the kids approached. She wondered if he would make it to February and, if he did, whether he would want to hang around once he got there. She told him to just stay the way he was. They put one foot in front of the other and, still, they don't know exactly how.

By October, they had started to feel differently. Hopeful.

Snow got back on the ice, courtesy of a Flames equipment manager, who sewed his glove into a fist, enabling him to grip a hockey stick. He shot a puck. It rang off the crossbar. Kelsie took a video. It was evident to her that the disease had not progressed, not robbed him of any more strength.

That moment, that month, changed them.

"I felt like that was probably the first moment where I could really breathe," she said.

They went public on Dec. 18, and it ricocheted around the hockey community. Kelsie wrote a letter detailing their diagnosis and their hope, something she has continued to chronicle on her blog, kelsiesnowwrites.com, and recently, in a story that ran in Sports Illustrated.

It has become a piece of her every day, every thought, something that still fells her at a moment's notice. When she is asked if there's been a day that she hasn't thought about ALS since the diagnosis, tears start to flow down her face.

"These three letters are a part of my life forever," Kelsie says. "I sure wish they weren't. But I know that a lot of good things will come to us as a result of this. And I've seen a lot of good in a lot of people because of this.

"There's so much beauty in grief, and there's so much beauty in sadness and tragedy. Because you get to see the best in people. And that's not a small thing. But I wish I didn't have a byline in Sports Illustrated. I don't want a byline in Sports Illustrated. I don't want to be telling this story. But if this is what I'm here for, then I'm OK with that. It's not small. I know that. I know that being there for somebody you love is significant. It's enough for me."

She swipes at the tears, running her fingers underneath her eyes. She sniffles.

"This is because I know you, too," Kelsie says, starting to laugh amidst the tears. "That's the problem."

****

It has been 15 years since I met Kelsie and Chris, back when she was still Kelsie Smith and he was still a baseball writer. The summer of 2005 was one of those summers that's only possible when you are young and there is no responsibility, no ties, no worry. When a White Russian just before the bar closes seems like a good idea, and a shut-off car in a parking lot is the right place to bare a soul, for a friend to reveal she just might be falling in love.

As Kelsie texted me recently, "Honestly, best summer of my life."

They were too young, realistically, for it to work. She was 21. He was 23. They met in a bar, the White Horse Tavern, down the street from the apartment that Snow would buy in Allston, Massachusetts, and that I would later buy from him and live in for the next decade.

He was the Boston Red Sox beat writer at the Globe, she was an intern in the Globe's sports department out of the University of Kansas, and I would be hired into the sports staff that summer as a general assignment reporter.

They got engaged the next summer, and married in December 2007, on a frigid, 9-degree day in St. Paul, Minnesota, where they moved after he was hired as the director of hockey operations for the Minnesota Wild, an unorthodox move that would launch him on a career in hockey and give me a chance to succeed him on the Red Sox beat at the Globe.

She covered the Minnesota Twins for the St. Paul Pioneer Press. We spent spring trainings together in Fort Myers, Florida.

It's hard to think about that day in 2007, so many years ago now, when they promised a lifetime to each other. Because, as Kelsie said, "That I have extra months is not lost on me. I know that I've been already given a gift. It's just that I want what we all thought we were getting when we got married. That we are going to grow old together."

Kelsie has always trusted in Snow, something she has never been shy about expressing. She's always believed he would do what he said, that he would succeed despite all the odds: That he would make the unheard-of jump from baseball reporter to NHL front office member; that he would figure it out after the Wild let him go; that they could find their way on one income (first hers, then his) in a new city, in a new country with a new baby.

And he did. They did.

"It was always like, Chris will figure this out," she said. "And that's probably an unfair amount of pressure that I put on him, but I just believed in him. I've always believed in him that much."

She still does, even in a battle that, up to this point, has been unwinnable.

****

At 1 p.m., after a pizza lunch, it's time to head back to UG21 for the lumbar puncture. Snow laughs about the diet he has been instructed to stick to -- high protein, high fat, high carb -- because losing weight is a marker of the disease. It's one thing he doesn't mind.

This session, too, starts with some tests. Of reflexes. Hands. Ankles. Feet. Jaw.

"This might hurt," Rasquinha says. "Sorry."

Rasquinha flips his hands over, examines them, tells Snow to relax. This is not Snow's forte.

Snow acknowledges yet again that he cannot do anything with his right hand. That went in June, and the atrophy has set in up to his elbow. Kelsie -- or, if he's at work with the Flames, one of his colleagues -- makes sure to cut his food for him, if needed; they tie his skates and his shoes. "Tight, but not too tight," as she puts it.

Testing done, it's time for the lumbar puncture. Snow is now on the open-label extension of the trial. After this visit, he is assured that the fluid sent into his spine will be tofersen. This is a comfort, even as they believe he has been receiving the medication all along.

"All right," Snow says, "let's rock and roll."

The risks are read out, the warnings given, as they always are. The Snows know this nearly by heart. Rasquinha snaps on sterile green gloves and a baby blue face mask. The lidocaine goes in. "Mosquito bite," Rasquinha calls it. "A little burn. Sorry."

Lorne Zinman enters the room. He is part of the reason for their hope, a man who oozes sunshine as he talks, despite having devoted his life to a disease that to this point has claimed every one of its victims.

"This is exciting," says Zinman, the director of the ALS/Neuromuscular Clinic at Sunnybrook and an associate professor of neurology at the University of Toronto. "This is gene therapy for ALS. I've been talking about this for, like, two decades. The fact that it's a reality and we could be helping people like Chris, it's just the happiest thing. I always say -- apology to my children -- the happiest day of my life will be when we finally have something for this disease, because I've seen too many people go through it."

It is easy for Zinman to be joyful these days. He, like all those who work with ALS, has spent years and years in the darkness, and he somehow just might see a little light emerging, a speck that grows bigger with every day that Snow, and potentially others, are stable.

"It's been decades and decades of, really, failure after failure in ALS," Zinman said. "When I give lectures, I put up a slide and I call it the graveyard of failed trials. And it's just failure after failure. The big turning point came when we found the first gene for ALS in the early '90s."

Researchers put the gene into mice, and the mice started to show signs of disease. They thought a cure would come soon after. They were wrong.

Things started to turn when advances in gene therapy led the focus to shift. They knew SOD1 made a protein, and that the protein misfolded, leading to the killing of motor neurons that led to ALS. That became their target.

On Feb. 3, Kelsie posted a video to Twitter showing Snow lifting his right hand at his wrist. It was something he hadn't been able to do since the disease took hold. They don't know what it means, and they try not to read too much into it, but the idea of stability, let alone improvement, sometimes seems like a dream they do not want to end.

And that is what makes Zinman so excited.

"We don't usually see that in ALS trials," he said. "The objective is to slow things down, not to make things improved. It's really exciting when you hear something like that, where I'm actually able to do something that I couldn't do before. You always have to take it with a grain of salt it's just really exciting when you hear something like that."

He envisions a day when a patient like Snow or one of his family members could find out he has the SOD1 mutation, that they could start him on the drugs in the pre-symptomatic phase, as a preventative, similar to the way that doctors have been able to use PrEP to keep HIV from taking hold, or the way that doctors use vaccines to prevent diseases.

"We're diagnosing ALS about five to six times a week, and three to four of our patients die every week," Zinman said. "I've been doing this for 15 years now. I see the faces of these patients, not just them, their family members and what they went through, so to be able to offer someone something like this -- research is hope."

When Zinman and I exited the room, I later learned, Snow grew emotional. He cried. It was joy and relief and release. He had finished another session at Sunnybrook. There had been no change. He soon would be assured of getting more of the medicine that has given him more, where before, he expected there would be less and less.

Because these two minutes, every four weeks, might just be saving him.

"The first few times he was dosed I had full-on panic attacks," Kelsie said. "It was all about the fact that I didn't know what [he was getting]. They'd come in and they'd put this little Ziploc baggie on the desk in there and it had this syringe in it. I remember noticing right away that it was 15 milliliters of this clear fluid. And that was every ounce of hope I had in my life."

****

The appointment over for the month, Snow walks down the corridor, a drab, shabby, beige hallway. It is hardly inspiring, with its fluorescent lights and well-trod flooring. But Snow is nearly bouncing. This is the best he feels all month, his hopes confirmed, the medication, he assumes, flowing through his body.

"Every time I walk this hallway, it's a good feeling," he says. "Because you picture yourself being wheeled."

But he can walk. He can breathe. He can do his job, almost the same way he always has, with a few simple modifications. He wears a suit without a tie these days, because he cannot tie one and, really, who needs it? He has not yet transitioned to slip-on shoes, perhaps out of stubbornness.

Link:
Gene therapy giving Flames executive Snow hope in ALS fight - NHL.com

Read More...

Exploring Avenues in Personalized Medical Care Defines Advances in Red Biotechnology Market: Valuation to Touch Massive US$512 Bn By 2027, Finds…

March 18th, 2020 11:47 pm

Research for novel cancer therapeutics pool in massive investments in red biotechnology market

Player leverage AI to extract potential of red biotechnology in preserving health and controlling diseases

ALBANY, New York, March 18, 2020 /PRNewswire/ -- A wide assortment of applications of genetic engineering technology, vaccine research, and biologics have helped expand the potential of the red biotechnology market, which was worth US$314.2 billion in 2018. Growing application of biotechnology in medicine has unlocked promising prospects particularly in chronic and rare diseases treatment.

Transparency Market Research

Future Outlook

Emerging applications of gene therapy, pharmacogenomics, and genetic testing in the preservation of health, notably in oncology, are shaping the future growth trajectories in the red biotechnology market. By 2027-end, the revenues are projected to reach US$512 bn, clocking CAGR of ~6% from 2019 to 2027. In developing countries, many new collaborations are likely to be forged, defining future initiatives on cloud-based technology and AI.

Analysts' Viewpoint

"Staying abreast with standardized regulations and regulatory norms will enable biotechnology and pharmaceutical companies to chart new growth avenues in the red biotechnology market," note the analysts. Marked prevalence of cancer world over expands scope for market stakeholders, they further opine.

Key Takeaways of Red Biotechnology Market Study

Explore 176 pages of top-notch research, incisive insights, and detailed country-level projections. Gain business intelligence on Red Biotechnology Market (Application: Biopharmaceutical Production, Gene Therapy, Pharmacogenomics, and Genetic Testing; End User: Biopharmaceutical Industry, CMOs & CROs, Research Institutes, and Others) - Global Industry Analysis, Size, Share, Growth, Trends, and Forecast, 2019 - 2027 at https://www.transparencymarketresearch.com/report-toc/2063

Red Biotechnology Market: Key Driving Factors and Promising Avenues

A few striking trends in investments in healthcare sector shape the evolution of the red biotechnology market. Growing number of clinical trials in cancer research and incessant efforts of biotechnology players to find therapies for rare diseases are boosting the pace of new drug approvals. A few statistics support research and developments in aforementioned realms.

Download a PDF Brochure of Report - https://www.transparencymarketresearch.com/sample/sample.php?flag=B&rep_id=2063

Red Biotechnology Market: Regional Outlook

Among the various regional markets, North America leads the pack, and is expected to retain its dominance throughout the assessment period. Spate of investments in clinical trials for chronic and rare diseases and massive investments in developing cancer drug pipeline have helped the North America red biotechnology market to reach dominant position. Stakeholders are harnessing artificial intelligence will continue new prospects in the regional market. Prominently, relentless efforts of biopharmaceutical players in the U.S. test new drugs and vaccines form crucial trend in the growth of this regional market.

On the other hand, a growing numbers of players have shifted their attention to Asian economies to tap into the vast latent potential in personalized healthcare. The region will see new strategic collaborations among healthcare companies and biopharmaceutical players.

Story continues

Red Biotechnology Market Competition Landscape

Growing demand for biologics and biosimilars in developing economies has been crucial to the expansion of red biotechnology prospects, globally. Most notably, Asia Pacific has been the key focus for players to gain competitive edge over their peers and rivals.

Biopharmaceutical players have begun inking new partnership deals and distribution agreements in the region, particularly in on oncology therapeutics and development. Focus on novel therapeutics and disease pathways for bettering human health has been one of the key winning imperatives for companies in the red biotechnology market. To consolidate their positions, top players are aiming to expedite product approvals for rare and chronic diseases, and have increased their stakes in advanced stages of clinical trials.

A handful of big pharmaceutical and biotech players, and multinational healthcare companies jointly contribute half of the global revenues. These include Pfizer Inc., Gilead Sciences Inc., Amgen Inc., and F. Hoffmann-La Roche.

Inquire for a Sample Copy of Report - https://www.transparencymarketresearch.com/sample/sample.php?flag=S&rep_id=2063

The red biotechnology market is segmented on the basis of application, end user, and region.

Explore Transparency Market Research's award-winning coverage of the global Healthcare industry:

Bioinformatics Market- The global bioinformatics market is projected to grow at a significant CAGR during the forecast period and is likely to touch a valuation of US$9.1 bn by 2018.

Gene Therapy Market -Expanding at a stellar, double-digits CAGR (Compound Annual Growth Rate) of 40% over the forecast period of 2018 to 2026, the global gene therapy market is a dizzying trajectory, marking out a rosy landscape for players operating in the playfield. As per a Transparency Market Research report, based on extensive primary and secondary research, states that over the period states, the market would accrue a worth of USD 5164.03 million a steep and impressive increase from the USD 17 million worth noted in 2017.

Biosimilars Market- Advancements in oncology settings are improving patient quality of life. Due to effective biosimilars, healthcare providers are able to receive better outcomes in several cancer patients who can opt for convenient treatments such as a painless injections rather than receiving a lengthy chemotherapy session. Patent expiry of biologic drugs for the treatment of cancer are creating a scope for incremental opportunities. As such, oncology indication segment of the biosimilars market is estimated to reach a value of~US$ 21.1 Bnby the end of2027.

Gain access to Market Ngage, an AI-powered, real-time business intelligence that goes beyond the archaic research solutions to solve the complex strategy challenges that organizations face today. With over 15,000+ global and country-wise reports across 50,000+ application areas, Market Ngage is your tool for research on-the-go. From tracking new investment avenues to keeping a track of your competitor's moves, Market Ngage provides you with all the essential information to up your strategic game. Power your business with Market Ngage's actionable insights and remove the guesswork in making colossal decisions.

About Us

Transparency Market Research is a next-generation market intelligence provider, offering fact-based solutions to business leaders, consultants, and strategy professionals.

Our reports are single-point solutions for businesses to grow, evolve, and mature. Our real-time data collection methods along with ability to track more than one million high growth niche products are aligned with your aims. The detailed and proprietary statistical models used by our analysts offer insights for making right decision in the shortest span of time. For organizations that require specific but comprehensive information we offer customized solutions through adhoc reports. These requests are delivered with the perfect combination of right sense of fact-oriented problem solving methodologies and leveraging existing data repositories.

TMR believes that unison of solutions for clients-specific problems with right methodology of research is the key tohelp enterprises reach right decision."

ContactMr. Rohit BhiseyTransparency Market ResearchState Tower,90 State Street,Suite 700,Albany NY - 12207United StatesUSA - Canada Toll Free: 866-552-3453Email: sales@transparencymarketresearch.com

Website: http://www.transparencymarketresearch.com

View original content:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/exploring-avenues-in-personalized-medical-care-defines-advances-in-red-biotechnology-market-valuation-to-touch-massive-us512-bn-by-2027-finds-transparency-market-research-301026016.html

SOURCE Transparency Market Research

Here is the original post:
Exploring Avenues in Personalized Medical Care Defines Advances in Red Biotechnology Market: Valuation to Touch Massive US$512 Bn By 2027, Finds...

Read More...

Engineering specialist selected to deliver expansion of CGT Catapult – EPM Magazine

March 18th, 2020 11:47 pm

Engineering and construction specialists Merit has been chosen to deliver the third phase expansion of the Cell and Gene Therapy Catapult (CGT Catapult) manufacturing centre in Stevenage, further increasing the capacity of the facility.

The company will use its offsite manufacturing technology and expertise in building controlled environments to deliver seven new quality control laboratories.

Merit completed construction of the expansion phase of the manufacturing centre in October last year using its off-site PAM (pre-assembled module) approach.

For these new laboratories, only 10% of the labour content will be carried out on site. The company will engineer pre-assembled analytical QC laboratory space at its offsite manufacturing centre reducing the build time by 33%, aiming to deliver cost savings to the project while also avoiding disruption to research and manufacturing at the Stevenage facility.

Tony Wells, managing director, Merit, said: We are delighted to have the opportunity to continue to work with the team at CGT Catapult and are proud to have an integral role in the development of such a pioneering off-site initiative. Our proprietary Instant Building technology combines advanced offsite manufacturing with the technical expertise to deliver complex solutions in significantly shorter build schedules. We have a detailed knowledge of the project after successfully completing the expansion phase last year and look forward to working closely with CGT Catapult to once again deliver a high-quality facility.

Backed by over 75 million of funding, including investment from the UK Governments Industrial Strategy Challenge Fund; the department of Business Energy and Industrial Strategy, from Innovate UK, the UKs innovation agency, the European Regional Development Fund and from Hertfordshire Local Enterprise Partnership, the centre is providing the infrastructure and expertise to enable companies to develop their manufacturing capabilities and systems for large scale, commercial cell and gene therapy supply. Companies currently collaborating at the centre are Adaptimmune, Autolus, Freeline Therapeutics and TCRTherapeutics.

Keith Thompson, CEO, Cell and Gene Therapy Catapult, said: It is a pleasure to work with Merit again to expand our laboratory space to provide additional analytical capabilities at the Cell and Gene Therapy Catapult manufacturing centre. Merit provided diligent support and ensured minimal disruption during the building of our expansion phase at the centre, and this is crucial to maintaining the facility operational for us and our collaborating companies manufacturing therapies, in an operational GMP compliant state. We look forward to working with Merit again on what is another significant project for CGT Catapult.

See the article here:
Engineering specialist selected to deliver expansion of CGT Catapult - EPM Magazine

Read More...

Correcting Barth Syndrome With Gene Therapy – Gilmore Health News

March 18th, 2020 11:47 pm

Barth syndrome is an X-linked metabolic disorder, affecting only males. It has widespread systemic effects presenting with cardiomyopathy, neutropenia, muscle weakness, stunted growth, exercise intolerance and abnormal skeletal structures. In many cases, it results in stillbirth. It is strongly related to mutations in the tafazzin gene, also known as TAZ. Currently only symptomatic treatment exists, and no definite cure has been developed for Barth syndrome.

Read Also: CRISPR Used for the First Time to Treat a Blind Patient

Researchers at Boston Childrens Hospital have proposed gene therapy as a potential treatment method to inhibit processes that lead to heart failure. The researchers conducted the study on mouse models with Barth syndrome.

A research to better understand Barth syndrome was conducted in 2014 by William Pu, MD and colleagues at Boston Childrens Hospital. Together, they created heart on chip models of Barth syndrome by using cardiac myocytes derived from patients with TAZ mutation. This led the researchers to discover the correlation between Barth syndrome and dysfunction. When the defective mutated TAZ myocytes was replaced by healthy TAZ gene myocytes, the cardiac dysfunction was spontaneously corrected.

Pu and colleagues realized that in order to fully understand the effects of Barth syndrome on the system, an animal body was crucial. Attempts at creating a whole body model had previously been done, but had not been successful.

The Beatson Institute for Cancer Research in the U.K has recently been successful in creating mouse models of Barth syndrome. Two categories of these mouse models were created, in the first category TAZ gene was deleted throughout the whole system whereas in the second category of mouse models ha TAZ gene deleted only from the cardiac myocytes.

The mouse models with whole body TAZ deletion died before birth mostly due to hypotonic weak musculature. However, some of the mice survived and developed cardiomyopathy, similar to the dilated cardiomyopathy in humans. The hearts left ventricle had thinner walls and dilated substantially which decreased the systolic pressure resulting in decreased cardiac output.

In those mice with deleted TAZ in heart muscle cells, all subjects survived but had cardiomyopathy issues and reduced cardiac output. Under electron microscope, the heart muscles were found to have abnormal structures and poor organization.

Read Also:UC Berkeley Researchers Restore Vision in Mice Through Gene Insertion

Using gene therapy, the researchers replaced the TAZ gene by administering a gentically engineered virus subcutaneously or intravenously. Whole body TAZ deletion mice survived to an average life span of healthy mice. It successfully prevented cardiac dysfunction in all mice models.

Only when more than 70 percent cardiac myocytes had taken up the modified TAZ gene, significant improvement was seen.

The problem is that neutralizing antibodies to the virus develop after the first dose, said Pu. Getting enough of the muscle cells corrected in humans may be a challenge.

Post introduction of TAZ gene corrected cells, the major problem was seen in sustaining the levels of modified gene cells. In comparison to cardiac myocytes, the number of corrected gene cells in skeletal muscles declined progressively.

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/03/200309165231.htm

Doctors Investigate CRISPR Gene-Editing for Treatment of Sickle Cell Disease

Herpes Could Finally Be Cured With CRISPR According to Study

CRISPR Prevents Liver Disease In Mice Before Birth

Study Shows That CRISPR-Edited T Cells for Cancer Treatment Are Safe and Long-Lasting

See more here:
Correcting Barth Syndrome With Gene Therapy - Gilmore Health News

Read More...

Gene Therapy and Antisense Drugs Market Growth Trends, Key Players, Competitive Strategies and Forecasts to 2025 – 3rd Watch News

March 18th, 2020 11:47 pm

Global Gene Therapy and Antisense Drugs Market: Snapshot

Since an escalating number of patients are being diagnosed with cancer every day, the global demand for gene therapy and antisense drugs is bound to multiply. The growing incidence of health conditions such as Parkinsons disease and high cholesterol is also boosting the demand for gene therapy and antisense drugs. Several new drugs and therapies have been making their debut in the global gene therapy and antisense drugs market of recent.

For instance, in June 2017, it was announced that a group of scientists at the University of Queensland have developed a new technique that is capable of permanently silencing severe allergies triggered by shellfish, peanuts, and venom. The treatment was found to be successful in animal trials. The technique holds considerable potential for treating asthma completely. During the same month, results of another research study for treating multiple myeloma, a type of blood cancer, were announced at a conference held by the American Society of Clinical Oncology. The new CAR-T therapy consists of filtering the blood of the patients in order to eliminate T cells which are then genetically altered and given back to the patients.

Get Sample Copy of the Report @https://www.tmrresearch.com/sample/sample?flag=B&rep_id=500

However, the difficulty pertaining to the delivery of antisense technology to the brain can present key challenges to the expansion of the global market for gene therapy and antisense drugs. Moreover, the unavoidable toxic aftereffects associated with the technology can also inhibit the growth of the gene therapy and antisense drugs market worldwide. However, the present attempts at developing safe and efficient antisense drugs by several market participants including Ionis Pharmaceuticals, which undertook testing of the technology on transgenic mice, can promote the further expansion of the market.

Global Gene Therapy and Antisense Drugs Market: Overview

Antisense gene therapy is emerging as one of the most beneficial therapeutics for various diseases such as tumors, cancer etc. These newer therapies are based on increased knowledge of molecular events that lead to disordered cellular growth. The therapy involves using a gene silencing technique rather than a gene repairing technique for silencing the genes effect.

The research report is a valuable tool for comprehending the progression of the global gene therapy and antisense drugs market between 2017 and 2025.

Global Gene Therapy and Antisense Drugs Market: Treatment Insights

Antisense drugs attach to the mRNA of a target protein, which inhibits the protein production process. Antisense therapeutics can obstruct the expression of oncogenes and other cancer-related genes that express growth factors. Antisense gene therapy involves the utilization of various therapeutic strategies which requires a clear knowledge of the molecular anatomy of cancer related genes. Antisense gene therapy is used to treat various diseases such as hemorrhagic fever, cancer, cystic fibrosis, renal diseases, HIV/AIDS, spinal muscular atrophy, and cardiovascular diseases.

Global Gene Therapy and Antisense Drugs Market: Market Segmentation

On the basis of therapeutic area, the gene therapy and antisense drugs market is segmented into cancer, anemia, rheumatoid arthritis, cardiovascular diseases, HIV/AIDS, cystic fibrosis, diabetes mellitus and obesity, and renal diseases.

By gene transfer method, ex vivo gene transfer and in vivo gene transfer are the segments of the market. The former involves the transfer of cloned genes into cells, i.e., cells are altered outside the body before being implanted into the patient, whereas the latter involves the transfer of cloned genes directly into the patients tissues. The outcome of in vivo gene transfer technology mainly depends on the general efficacy of gene transfer and expression.

Global Gene Therapy and Antisense Drugs Market: Regional Outlook

The global gene therapy and antisense drugs market is segmented into North America, Asia Pacific, Europe, and Rest of the World. Amongst these, North America holds the leading position in the market followed by Europe. The increasing incidence of cancer and other fatal diseases, unhealthy lifestyle practices such as excessive smoking and excessive consumption of high fat content food, and increasing research efforts for treatment against cancer are the major factors driving the gene therapy and antisense drugs market in these regions.

Asia Pacific is expected to emerge as a significant market for gene therapy and antisense drugs. The high population density including a large geriatric population, expeditiously increasing demand for technologically advanced therapeutics, and increasing government support for improved healthcare infrastructure in the region is driving the growth of this regional market. Furthermore, favorable reimbursement policies and tax benefits on newer therapies will further fuel the growth of the Asia Pacific gene therapy and antisense drugs market.

Major Companies Mentioned in Report

Some of the leading companies operating in the global gene therapy and antisense drugs market are GenVec Inc., Avigen Inc., Genome Therapeutics Corp., Tekmira Pharmaceuticals Corporation, Isis Pharmaceuticals, Cell Genesys Inc., and others. These companies are profiled for their key business attributes in the report.

Read Comprehensive Overview of Report @https://www.tmrresearch.com/gene-therapy-antisense-drugs-market

About TMR Research:

TMR Research is a premier provider of customized market research and consulting services to business entities keen on succeeding in todays supercharged economic climate. Armed with an experienced, dedicated, and dynamic team of analysts, we are redefining the way our clients conduct business by providing them with authoritative and trusted research studies in tune with the latest methodologies and market trends.

Contact:

TMR Research,3739 Balboa St # 1097,San Francisco, CA 94121United StatesTel: +1-415-520-1050

More:
Gene Therapy and Antisense Drugs Market Growth Trends, Key Players, Competitive Strategies and Forecasts to 2025 - 3rd Watch News

Read More...

Anchiano Therapeutics Reports Year-End 2019 Financial Results – GlobeNewswire

March 18th, 2020 11:47 pm

CAMBRIDGE, Mass., March 18, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Anchiano Therapeutics Ltd. (Nasdaq: ANCN) (Anchiano), a biopharmaceutical company focused on discovery and development of novel therapies to treat cancer, today reported financial results forthe year ended December 31, 2019.

Key Developments

Year Ended December 31, 2019 Financial Results:

On December 31, 2019, Anchiano had total cash and cash equivalents of approximately $17.6 million. Financial resources are expected to suffice through the end of 2020.

Research and development expenses for the year ended December 31, 2019 were approximately $13.3 million, compared to approximately $7.5 million for the same period in 2018. This increase was mainly due to an increase in clinical trial expenses, manufacturing expenses and manpower expenses, as well as additional startup and initial ongoing expenses in connection with the Collaboration Agreement with ADT.

General and administrative expenses for the year ended December 31, 2019 were approximately $6.2 million, compared to expenses of approximately $5.5 million for the same period in 2018. The increase was mainly due to increases in professional fees, insurance and manpower expenses, offset by a decrease in share-based payment.

Financing expenses, net, in the year ended December 31, 2019 were approximately $4.2 million, compared to approximately $457 thousand for the same period in 2018. This change was mainly due to a revaluation of investor warrants at fair value during a period where these could not be classified within shareholders equity.

Restructuring expenses in the year ended December 31, 2019 were approximately $3.4 million, and were comprised principally of contract termination costs and employee severance and associated termination costs related to the reduction of workforce resulting from Anchianos decision to discontinue its Phase 2 Codex as described above.

Net loss for the year ended December 31, 2019 was approximately $27.1 million compared to approximately $13.8 million for the same period in 2018.

About Anchiano

Anchiano is a biopharmaceutical company dedicated to the discovery, development, and commercialization of novel targeted therapies to treat cancer in areas of significant clinical need, with its headquarters in Cambridge, MA. Anchiano is developing small-molecule pan-RAS inhibitors and inhibitors of PDE10 and the -catenin pathway. For more information on Anchiano, please visit http://www.anchiano.com.

Forward-Looking Statements

This press release contains forward-looking statements that are subject to risks and uncertainties. Words such as believes, intends, expects, projects, anticipates and future or similar expressions are intended to identify forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements are subject to the inherent uncertainties in predicting future results and conditions, many of which are beyond the control of Anchiano, including, without limitation, the risk factors and other matters set forth in its filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including its Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2019. Anchiano undertakes no obligation to publicly update or revise any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise, except as may be required by law.

Company Contact:Frank Haluska, M.D., Ph.D.President and Chief Executive Officerinfo@anchiano.com

Investor Contact:Ashley R. RobinsonManaging DirectorLifeSci Advisors, LLC617-430-7577arr@lifesciadvisors.com

RESULTS OF OPERATIONS (unaudited)

U.S. dollars in thousands

STATEMENTS OF FINANCIAL POSITION (unaudited)

U.S. dollars in thousands

CASH FLOWS (unaudited)

U.S. dollars in thousands

See the rest here:
Anchiano Therapeutics Reports Year-End 2019 Financial Results - GlobeNewswire

Read More...

Gene Therapy Market size Witness Growth Acceleration during 2027 – Packaging News 24

March 18th, 2020 11:47 pm

Report Description

A recent market intelligence report that is published by Data Insights Partner onGene Therapy marketmakes an offering of in-depth analysis of segments and sub-segments in the regional and international Gene Therapy market. The research also emphasizes on the impact of restraints, drivers, and macro indicators on the regional and world Gene Therapy market over the short as well as long period of time. A detailed presentation of forecast, trends, and dollar values of international Gene Therapy market is offered. In accordance with the report, the global Gene Therapy market is projected to expand at a CAGR of 30% over the period of forecast.

Market Insight, Drivers, Restraints& Opportunity of the Market:

Gene therapy is a medical procedure which replaces defective genes or introduces new genes n order to prevent or cure genetic disorders. This procedure has become a bench mark in medical industry as there is no requirement of surgery or drugs or other procedure which has side effects on the individuals. Gene therapy was first commercialized in China in 2004 by China based SiBono Gene Tech (product Gendicine).

The global gene therapy market has been expanding due to the rigorous research conducted in the field of genetics. The rising awareness about the capability of cure of several rare genetic diseases by gene therapy is another important driver which leads the global gene therapy market during the forecast period. Gene therapy has capability cure several life threatening diseases such as cancer, cardiac diseases, AIDS, cystic fibrosis, age-related disorders, sickle cell anemia etc. In March 2019, the director of the National Health Institute (NIH), the U.S. announced that the recent clinical trials on the gene therapy for the treatment of sickle cell anemia showed promising result- therefore, increasing prevalence of aforementioned lie threatening diseases would likely to drive the growth of the global gene therapy market during the forecast period.

Request for Report Sample:https://datainsightspartner.com/request-for-sample?ref=8

On the other hand, treatment cost and stringent regulatory conditions etc. may hamper the growth of the global gene therapy market in the upcoming future. The results of Gendicine clinical trials were published in 2003 and the medicine got approval by the China State Food and Drug Administration in the same year. Although approved in China, Gendicines use is not very promising outside China. There are several concerns among the researchers about the quality of the clinical trials performed and safety and efficacy of the treatment. However, Gendicines equivalent Advexin (company Introgen Therapueitcs) is still waiting for the FDA approval.

Increasing investment to the gene therapy related research (around 10 Bn was invested in 2015 by private and public organizations), new product developments such as (Zolgensma in 2019), strategic alliance among the key players (such as collaboration between Axovant and Yposkesi) would bring the global gene therapy market an opportunity to propel during the forecast period. In May 2019, Avexis (a Novartis company) has got the FDA approval for Zolgensma for treatment of spinal muscular atrophy for the pediatric patients (less than 2 years of age).

Segment Covered:

This market intelligence report on the global gene therapy market encompasses market segments based on product, application, target user and geography. On the basis of product, the sub-markets is segmented into Yescarta, Kymriah, Strimvelis, Gendicine, Zolgensma and others (Advexin). Based on application, the global gene therapy market has been segregated into large B-Cell lymphoma, Car T Cell therapy, ADA-SCID (adenosine deaminase deficiency), muscular atrophy, head and neck squamus cell carcinoma, others (Crigler-Najjar syndrome). By target user, the global gene therapy market is also classified into adult and pediatric. By Geography, the global gene therapy market has been divided into North America (the U.S., Canada), Latin America (Brazil, Mexico, Argentina and other countries), Europe (Germany, France, the U.K., Spain, Italy, Russia, and other countries), Asia Pacific (India, Japan, China, Australia and New Zealand and other countries), Middle East and Africa (GCC, South Africa, Israel and Other countries).

Profiling of Market Players:

This business intelligence report offers profiling of reputed companies that are operating in the market. Companies such as Novartis, Gilead Sciences, Orchard Therapeutics Ltd, SiBiono GeneTech Co, Introgen Therapeutics and among others have been profiled into detail so as to offer a glimpse of the market leaders. Moreover, parameters such as gene therapy market related investment & spending and developments by major players of the market are tracked in this global report.

Report Highlights:

In-depth analysis of the micro and macro indicators, market trends, and forecasts of demand is offered by this business intelligence report. Furthermore, the report offers a vivid picture of the factors that are steering and restraining the growth of this market across all geographical segments. In addition to that, IGR-Growth Matrix analysis is also provided in the report so as to share insight of the investment areas that new or existing market players can take into consideration. Various analytical tools such as DRO analysis, Porters five forces analysis has been used in this report to present a clear picture of the market. The study focuses on the present market trends and provides market forecast from the year 2017-2027. Emerging trends that would shape the market demand in the years to come have been highlighted in this report. A competitive analysis in each of the geographical segments gives an insight into market share of the global players.

Request for Report Analysis:https://datainsightspartner.com/report/gene-therapy-market/8

Salient Features:

This study offers comprehensive yet detailed analysis of the Gene Therapy market, size of the market (US$ Mn), and Compound Annual Growth Rate (CAGR (%)) for the period of forecast: 2019 2027, taking into account 2017 as the base year

It explains upcoming revenue opportunities across various market segments and attractive matrix of investment proposition for the said market

This market intelligence report also offers pivotal insights about various market opportunities, restraints, drivers, launch of new products, competitive market strategies of leading market players, emerging market trends, and regional outlook

Profiling of key market players in the world Gene Therapy market is done by taking into account various parameters such as company strategies, distribution strategies, product portfolio, financial performance, key developments, geographical presence, and company overview

Leading market players covered this report comprise names such as. Novartis, Gilead Sciences, Orchard Therapeutics Ltd, SiBiono GeneTech Co, Introgen Therapeutics and among others

The data of this report would allow management authorities and marketers of companies alike to take informed decision when it comes to launch of products, government initiatives, marketing tactics and expansion, and technical up gradation

The world market for Gene Therapy market caters to the needs of various stakeholders pertaining to this industry, namely suppliers, manufacturers, investors, and distributors for Gene Therapy market. The research also caters to the rising needs of consulting and research firms, financial analysts, and new market entrants

Research methodologies that have been adopted for the purpose of this study have been clearly elaborated so as to facilitate better understanding of the reports

Reports have been made based on the guidelines as mandated by General Data Protection Regulation

Ample number of examples and case studies have been taken into consideration before coming to a conclusion

Reasons to buy:

vIdentify opportunities and plan strategies by having a strong understanding of the investment opportunities in the Gene Therapy market

vIdentification of key factors driving investment opportunities in the Gene Therapy market

vFacilitate decision-making based on strong historic and forecast data

vPosition yourself to gain the maximum advantage of the industrys growth potential

vDevelop strategies based on the latest regulatory events

vIdentify key partners and business development avenues

vRespond to your competitors business structure, strategy and prospects

See the rest here:
Gene Therapy Market size Witness Growth Acceleration during 2027 - Packaging News 24

Read More...

Global Cancer Gene Therapy Market, Trends, Analysis, Opportunities, Share and Forecast 2018-2025 – Galus Australis

March 18th, 2020 11:47 pm

Global Cancer Gene Therapy Report available at Digits n Markets contains an overview of the Global Cancer Gene Therapy which covers market size, opportunities, trends, growth rate, and competition landscape. The Global Cancer Gene Therapy is segmented Source, Product Type Applications and regions. With forecast to 2027.

Digits n Markets has recently published a comprehensive market research report on the Global Cancer Gene Therapy that includes evaluation of market size and various segments. The competitive environment is analyzed along with study of winning strategies adopted by key players.

The report is a detailed study on the accounting Global Cancer Gene Therapy with details regarding an in-depth evaluation of the industry vertical. The study is performed taking into consideration a twofold aspect of consumption and production. Speaking of the product category, the report provides detailed product remuneration, manufacturing of the product and the gross margins of the firms manufacturing the products. With regards to the consumption, the study reveals the product consumption value and the product consumption volume along with the status of import as well as the export of the products.

The Global Cancer Gene Therapy Market Anticipated to exhibit a CAGR 35.1% during Forecast Period. 2018-2025

Avail a free sample in PDF format along with a quick look at vital report briefs:https://digitsnmarkets.com/sample/6650-global-cancer-gene-therapy-market

Key Questions Answered by the Report:

Numerous micro and macro-economic factors impacting the growth of the market are analyzed and the data is represented in a way to aid the clients to enhance their strategic decision making. Key players operating in the Global Cancer Gene Therapy are:

Table of Content

Chapter 1: IntroductionChapter 2: Executive SummaryChapter 3: Market OverviewChapter 4: Cancer Gene Therapy Market, By TypeChapter 5: Cancer Gene Therapy Market, By ApplicationChapter 6: Cancer Gene Therapy Market, By RegionChapter 7: Competition Landscape

See the original post:
Global Cancer Gene Therapy Market, Trends, Analysis, Opportunities, Share and Forecast 2018-2025 - Galus Australis

Read More...

Health Canada Grants Cannabis Research License to the Joint R&D Project of Tree of Knowledge International Corp (TOKI) and Ryerson University -…

March 18th, 2020 11:46 pm

Toronto, ON, March 18, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- via NEWMEDIAWIRE -- Ryerson researchers have a long history of successful collaborative R&D endeavors with Toronto Poly Clinic Inc. (a subsidiary of Tree of Knowledge International Corp. (TOKI)CSE: TOKI OTC: TOKIF) and more recently with TOKI. The novel nano-technology collaborative research project is investigating new ways of delivering cannabinoid molecules to target regions in the body for cancer therapy and pain management. Ryerson researchers received the Health Canada license under the Cannabis Act and Regulations to start the project on March 6, 2020. TOKI is the sponsor and clinical collaborator for the project.

"This Health Canada approval of a research license opens the way for new investigations on developing nano-medicine and delivery methods with cannabinoids. Targeted treatments are essential for many cancer therapies and pain conditions and our project with Ryerson researchers can now work with medical cannabis for our treatment goals. This has been a great milestone for our research," says Dr. Kevin Rod, the Chief Medical Advisor to TOKI.

The Ryerson research team is extremely pleased with this Health Canada license approval to start working on this novel and exciting collaborative R&D initiative. They anticipate building upon the jointly-developed nano-medicine and ultrasound technology platforms to further advance the novel field of targeted cannabinoid drug delivery for cancer treatment and pain management.

With its head office in Toronto, and operations in North York, Ontario, TOKI currently has three primary business segments: (1) Multidisciplinary specialty pain clinics with a focus on the treatment of chronic pain, (2) Development of formulated products for therapeutic purposes and natural health product alternatives at a GMP manufacturing facilityand (3) Distribution and sale of hemp-based cannabidiol (CBD) products in the United States, Europe, Brazil and Australia. Through its Toronto Poly Clinic, the Company has gleaned extensive expertise from being involved in one of the largest observational studies on medical cannabis and from its ongoing direct patient experience. The Company hasalsodeveloped and implemented MCORP (Medical Cannabis Opioid Reduction Program) with great success. Currently, the Companyis expanding its product line to include Health Canada approved Natural products for support of the immune system and general health and wellness during these challenging times of the Corona virus.

Contact:

Tree of Knowledge International Corp.

Michael Caridi

Chairman/CEO

michael@tokicorp.com

917.295.1374

About Tree of Knowledge

With its head office in Toronto, and operations in North York, Ontario and Spokane, Washington, TOKI currently has three primary business segments: (1) Multidisciplinary specialty pain clinics with a focus on the treatment of chronic pain, including controlled applications of medical cannabis in Canada, (2) Development of formulated products for therapeutic purposes and natural health product alternatives at a GMP manufacturing facilityand (3) Distribution and sale of hemp-based cannabidiol ("CBD") products in the United States, Canada, Europe, Brazil and Australia. Through its Toronto Poly Clinic, the Company has gleaned extensive expertise from being involved in one of the largest observational clinical trials on medical cannabis and from its ongoing direct patient experience. The Company has developed and implemented MCERP (Medical Cannabis Education, Research and Best Practice Platform) and MCORP (Medical Cannabis Opioid Reduction Program) with great success. Currently, the Company has research agreements with multiple universities for medical cannabis research and new medical grade products development. TOKI's CBD product line contains EVR Premium Hemp Oil, which is an organically grown and handled, gluten-free, vegan, non-GMO, synergistic compound that is derived from U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) approved industrial hemp grown in the United States. TOKI currently offers several CBD products, which may be used in connection with the treatment of a number of ailments and for general wellness purposes.

Notice Regarding Forward Looking Statements

This news release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of the United States Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 and forward-looking information within the meaning of applicable Canadian securities legislation. Often, but not always, forward-looking statements and information can be identified by the use of words such as plans, expects or does not expect, is expected, estimates, intends, anticipates or does not anticipate, or believes, or variations of such words and phrases or state that certain actions, events or results may, could, would, might or will be taken, occur or be achieved. Forward-looking statements or information involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors which may cause the actual results, performance or achievements of Canopy Growth or its subsidiaries to be materially different from any future results, performance or achievements expressed or implied by the forward-looking statements or information contained in this news release. Examples of such statements include statements with respect to future product format offerings. Risks, uncertainties and other factors involved with forward-looking information could cause actual events, results, performance, prospects and opportunities to differ materially from those expressed or implied by such forward-looking information, including the Companys ability to satisfy provincial sales contracts or provinces purchasing all cannabis allocated to them, and such risks contained in the Companys annual information form dated June 25, 2019 and filed with Canadian securities regulators available on the Companys issuer profile on SEDARat http://www.sedar.com.Although the Company believes that the assumptions and factors used in preparing the forward-looking information or forward-looking statements in this news release are reasonable, undue reliance should not be placed on such information and no assurance can be given that such events will occur in the disclosed time frames or at all. The forward-looking information and forward-looking statements included in this news release are made as of the date of this news release and the Company does not undertake an obligation to publicly update such forward-looking information or forward-looking information to reflect new information, subsequent events or otherwise unless required by applicable securities laws.

The rest is here:
Health Canada Grants Cannabis Research License to the Joint R&D Project of Tree of Knowledge International Corp (TOKI) and Ryerson University -...

Read More...

Highly bioactive zeolitic imidazolate framework-8capped nanotherapeutics for efficient reversal of reperfusion-induced injury in ischemic stroke -…

March 18th, 2020 11:46 pm

Rational design of potent antioxidative agent with high biocompatibility is urgently needed to treat ischemic reperfusion-induced ROS-mediated cerebrovascular and neural injury during ischemia strokes. Here, we demonstrate an in situ synthetic strategy of bioactive zeolitic imidazolate framework-8capped ceria nanoparticles (CeO2@ZIF-8 NPs) to achieve enhanced catalytic and antioxidative activities and improved stroke therapeutic efficacy. This nanosystem exhibits prolonged blood circulation time, reduced clearance rate, improved BBB penetration ability, and enhanced brain accumulation, where it effectively inhibits the lipid peroxidation in brain tissues in middle cerebral artery occlusion mice and reduces the oxidative damage and apoptosis of neurons in brain tissue. CeO2@ZIF-8 also suppresses inflammation- and immune responseinduced injury by suppressing the activation of astrocytes and secretion of proinflammatory cytokines, thus achieving satisfactory prevention and treatment in neuroprotective therapy. This study also sheds light on the neuroprotective action mechanisms of ZIF-8capped nanomedicine against reperfusion-induced injury in ischemic stroke.

This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial license, which permits use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, so long as the resultant use is not for commercial advantage and provided the original work is properly cited.

Read more:
Highly bioactive zeolitic imidazolate framework-8capped nanotherapeutics for efficient reversal of reperfusion-induced injury in ischemic stroke -...

Read More...

NANOBIOTIX 2019 Annual Results – Business Wire

March 18th, 2020 11:46 pm

PARIS & CAMBRIDGE, Mass.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Regulatory News:

NANOBIOTIX (Paris:NANO) (Euronext : NANO ISIN: FR0011341205 the Company), a late clinical-stage nanomedicine company pioneering new approaches to the treatment of cancer, today announced its audited consolidated results for the fiscal year ending December 31, 2019:

2019 was a major year for Nanobiotix. We made significant progress in our clinical development plan and are proud to have received our first market approval in Europe for NBTXR3, under the brand name Hensify, in soft tissue sarcoma of the extremity and trunk wall. R&D expenses reflect the strength of our development plan and some key positions have been hired to sustain the activity. In 2020, we are prioritizing the registration pathway for head and neck cancer in the US and Europe, while also continuing our Immuno-Oncology program and evaluating NBTXR3 in other indications with our partners. Philippe Mauberna, Chief Financial Officer of Nanobiotix

The audited consolidated financial statements for the fiscal year ending December 31, 2019 have been approved by the Companys executive board and reviewed by the supervisory board on March 17, 2020.

Consolidated Income Statement: 1

In K

2019

2018

Total revenue and other income

2,541

3,479

Sales

68

116

Service

40

109

Other sales

28

7

Licenses

-

-

Other revenues

2,473

3,363

Research Tax Credit

2,437

3,251

Subsidies

20

90

Other

17

22

Research & Development (R&D) costs

(30,411)

(20,893)

Selling, General and Administrative (SG&A) costs

(18,909)

(12,653)

Operating loss

(46,779)

(30,067)

Financial loss

(4,133)

(277)

Income tax

(3)

-

Net loss for the period

(50,915)

(30,345)

Financial Review

Total Revenue in 2019 amounted to 2.5M vs. 3.5M in 2018, mainly due to:

Total Operating expenses reached 49.3M in 2019 vs. 33.5M in 2018:

Total consolidated headcount reached 110 as of December 31, 2019 vs. 102 as of December 31, 2018, in line with the Companys growth.

Net loss after tax amounted to 50.9M for the year ending December 31, 2019 (vs. 30.3M loss in 2018).

Cash available as of December 31, 2019 amounted to 35.1M (excluding the amount related to the 2018 research tax credit, which was received in February 2020)

Nanobiotix activities and achievements in 2019

Clinical

First ever radioenhancer to receive European market approval

In April 2019, the Company announced that Hensify received European market approval enabling commercialization in 27 European Union countries for the treatment of locally advanced soft tissue sarcoma (STS). Hensify is the brand name for NBTXR3 as approved for the treatment of locally advanced STS.

In July 2019, results from the randomized Phase II/III trial evaluating NBTXR3 in patients with locally advanced STS were published in The Lancet Oncology. The data from the registration study (Act.In.Sarc) demonstrated a significant advantage in both pathological complete response (pCR) and rate of margin-negative resection (R0) for those treated with NBTXR3 activated by radiation therapy (RT) versus RT alone. Data showed that an increase in efficacy was achieved with the addition of NBTXR3, without a significant difference in the safety profile compared to RT alone.

NBTXR3 may present as a valuable option for patients with hepatocellular carcinoma or liver metastasis

During an oral presentation at the ASTRO 2019 annual meeting, Nanobiotix announced phase I results in liver cancer. The study showed promising signs of efficacy for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) patients, as every evaluable patient responded and over half (62.5%) reached complete response. Moreover, given that the safety profile was very good, a 5th dose escalation level has been added to the trial.

Clinical collaboration(s)

MD Anderson

In January 2019, the Company announced a clinical collaboration with MD Anderson. This agreement expanded the clinical development plan for NBTXR3, as the nine MD Anderson-led trials will evaluate the product in new indications and patient populations, and should involve around 340 patients.

Pre-clinical collaboration(s)

MD Anderson and Weill Cornell Medical College

At AACR 2019, Nanobiotix presented pre-clinical data from studies currently being conducted through its collaborations with MD Anderson and the Weill Cornell Medical College, demonstrating the efficacy of treatment combinations including NBTXR3, radiotherapy, and anti-PD-1 immunotherapy in treating resistant pre-clinical in vivo lung cancer models.

In November during SITC 2019, Nanobiotix announced new results from an in vivo pre-clinical study showing the generation of adaptive immune response (turning cold tumors into hot tumors), better local control, increased abscopal effect, and significantly increased survival for NBTXR3 activated by RT and anti-PD-1 in combination versus RT alone in combination with anti-PD-1. Additionally, an in vivo RadScopal model showed superior local control along with significant increases in abscopal effect and survival for treatments combining NBTXR3 activated by RT with anti-PD-1 and anti-CTLA-4 versus all other tested combinations.

Financial Events

Registered public offering in the United States

Nanobiotix announced that it planned to conduct a registered public offering of ordinary shares, including in the form of American Depositary Shares (ADSs) in the United States, and has confidentially submitted a draft registration statement on Form F-1 to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.2

View post:
NANOBIOTIX 2019 Annual Results - Business Wire

Read More...

China reports new progress in drug, therapies against Covid-19 – The Star Online

March 18th, 2020 11:44 pm

BEIJING: China has completed the clinical research of Favipiravir, an antiviral drug that has shown good clinical efficacy against the Covid-19 (coronavirus) outbreak, according to an official on Tuesday (March 17).

Favipiravir, the influenza drug which was approved for clinical use in Japan in 2014, has shown no obvious adverse reactions in the clinical trial, said Zhang Xinmin, director of the China National Center for Biotechnology Development under the Ministry of Science and Technology, at a press conference.

More than 80 patients have participated in the clinical trial in The Third People's Hospital of Shenzhen, south China's Guangdong Province, including 35 patients taking Favipiravir and 45 patients on a control group.

Results showed that patients receiving Favipiravir treatment turned negative for the virus in a shorter time compared with patients in the control group.

A multi-centred randomised clinical study led by the Zhongnan Hospital of Wuhan University also suggested that the therapeutic effect of Favipiravir is much better than that of the control group.

Favipiravir has been recommended to medical treatment teams and should be included in the diagnosis and treatment plan for Covid-19 as soon as possible, Zhang said.

A Chinese pharmaceutical company has been approved by the National Medical Products Administration to mass-produce the drug and ensure stable supply, Zhang added.

China is also pushing forward the utilization of some advanced technologies such as stem cell and artificial liver and blood purification in the treatment of severe cases.

Zhang said stem cell therapy proves effective in reducing severe inflammatory reactions caused by Covid-19, as well as reducing lung injury and pulmonary fibrosis in patients.

China has initiated several clinical research programs on stem cell therapy against Covid-19, including a stem cell drug that has been approved for clinical trial and a mesenchymal stem cell therapy.

Stem cell therapy has been used to treat 64 patients in severe and critical condition. Those patients' breathing difficulties were gradually relieved and they were generally cured in eight to 10 days.

The therapy also showed advantages in preventing pulmonary fibrosis and improving the long-term prognosis for patients.

The Chinese Society for Cell Biology and the Chinese Medical Association have jointly issued a guideline to standardize the clinical research and application of stem cell therapy against Covid-19.

Zhang said China is trying to use artificial liver and blood purification technology to treat critically ill patients. Patients receiving this treatment have seen reduced levels of inflammatory factors and improvement in chest imaging.

Their time on ventilator support has been decreased by an average of 7.7 days and the required ICU monitoring time has been shortened. - Xinhua/Asian News Network

View post:
China reports new progress in drug, therapies against Covid-19 - The Star Online

Read More...

Back to the drawing board for triple-negative breast cancer targets, researchers propose new combo approach – Endpoints News

March 18th, 2020 11:44 pm

The reason why triple-negative breast cancer is such a tough disease to treat is largely given away in its name. Such tumors cant be defined by traditional biomarkers neither estrogen receptors, progesterone receptors, nor excess HER2 protein forcing drug hunters down uncharted new pathways.

Researchers at Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center explored one of them, and turned up with some new suggestions.

In a new paper, the scientists began with the observation that deregulated MYCN a member of the transcription factor family that activates expression of some oncogenes has been implicated in a subset of breast cancers with unfavorable prognostic features and clinical outcomes. They ended by putting forth a new drug regimen that could spark new hope.

Given that patients with TNBC primarily receive systemic cytotoxic chemotherapies that frequently result in unfavorable outcomes, they wrote in Science Translational Medicine, we propose the clinical development of combination BETi and MEKi for patients with advanced TNBC, with parallel evaluation of MYCN as a potential marker for patient selection.

Johanna Schafer, a graduate student working in Jennifer Pietenpols lab, is the first author, while the professor is the senior author.

The MYCN protein, sometimes dubbed N-Myc, has long been studied as a target in neuronal or neuroendocrine tumors, but its role in breast cancer is less clear. Its distinct from MYC (c-Myc), though the two are believed to affect each other.

Their intricate relationship would prove crucial in therapeutic development. But the first question is just how common they are, and according to the study, the two family members are heterogeneously expressed in separate cell nuclei within a given tumor in at least 40% of TNBC tumors. In fact, the expression of MYCN appeared to increase after neoadjuvant chemotherapy, part of the current standard of care.

The prevalence gave them enough reason to think about how to target it. When the team selected a cell line model, they had another finding that MYCN-expressing cells were essentially more prone to resistance to PI3K inhibitors, which block an alternative pathway for tumor growth.

Because the MYC family lack catalytic domains, the team resorted to epigenetic regulators, screening 158 compounds against the cell lines. BET drugs, which block the bromodomain (BRD)-containing family of transcriptional regulators, emerged as the winner.

It echoes an earlier study, done at Michigan State University, showing that the experimental class of molecules can prevent the growth of breast and lung cancers.

But thats not it and heres where the MEK inhibitors come in.

Most of the MYNC-expressing TNBCs also contain MYC-expressing cells, the researchers noted, which can still drive cancer growth. In fact, single-agent treatment with a BETi seemed to have increased MYC expression. Adding trametinib (Mekinist) to the cells, however, decreased the amount of both proteins. The results were further tested and confirmed in mouse models.

As a next step, our research team is proposing the further development and clinical trials of this combination therapy, Pietenpol, the director of Vanderbilt-Ingram and EVP for research at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, said in a statement.

Incyte, which has a pact in place to fund Vanderbilt research such as this study, has a BET inhibitor in early development.

See the original post:
Back to the drawing board for triple-negative breast cancer targets, researchers propose new combo approach - Endpoints News

Read More...

A Second Person Has Been Cured of HIV – Nerdist

March 18th, 2020 11:44 pm

Although most of the news from the world of health and medicine has been quite bleak lately, there are still major strides being made in the sector in an effort to combat the worst illnesses that plague humankind. One such stride was just announced, and its certainly worth celebrating: A second person has been cured of HIV.

In a study published in the medical journal, The Lancet, which comes via Medical News Daily, researchers in London say theyve been able to cure a patient of HIV; meaning the patient tested negative for HIV for an extended period of time (30 months as of March, 2020) despite the lack of antiretroviral therapy.

The person whos been cured, Adam Castillejo, was formerly known only as the London patient in order to protect his identity. But Castillejo, who lives in London, came forward recently, and said that he aims to be an ambassador of hope.

The first person to be cured of HIV, Timothy Ray Brown, an American known originally as the Berlin patient, revealed his identity in 2010, saying that I wanted to do what I could to make [a cure] possible. My first step was releasing my name and image to the public. Brown lived and was treated in Berlin. Incidentally, he is technically the second Berlin patient because the results from treatment of the first one are debatable.

AIDS Policy Project with Timothy Ray Brown (third from left with sunglasses). Griffin Boyce.

Castillejo, as well as Brown, were cured of HIV not by antiretroviral medications, which are often able to drastically mitigate the effects, and transmission rate of, HIV, but rather by stem cell transplants from donor bone marrow. Both Castillejo and Brown hadand may still have, that is unclearcancer along with HIV, and were treated with the stem cell transplants primarily to tackle the former disease. (It seems in Castillejos case doctors and researchers were hoping to cure both simultaneously.)

Both Brown and Castillejo underwent a procedure known as a Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (or HSCT), which involves injecting bone marrow stem cells from a donor, whos often times a parent or sibling, into the recipients bloodstream. Castillejos HSCT treatment was different from Browns, as well as many others, because it was performed with cells that expressed the CCR5 gene.

A video from the MD Anderson Cancer Center that gives a brief outline of how bone marrow stem cell transplants work.

In Castillejos case, stem cells with genomes that express the CCR5 gene were selected because of the fact that it allows for the production of the CCR5 protein: a protein that makes people far more resistant to HIV-1, which accounts for the vast majority of global HIV infections.

While Castillejo received stem cells that did express the CCR5 gene, Brown did notat least according to the study in The Lancet. In fact, according to a 2017 article in New Scientist (which says that Brown received cells with a mutated CCR5 gene, rather than an unexpressed CCR5 gene), some experts believe the curing of Browns HIV was actually due to a potential side effect of his procedure, known as graft-versus-host disease. According to New Scientist, these experts believe that the donor cells attacked Browns native, HIV-infected immune cells, subsequently killing off the virus.

In Castillejos case, on the other hand, it seems there was no graft-versus-host issue that could account for his diminishment of HIV infection levels beyond whats expected to be detectable. Instead, the authors of the study say that one of the implications here is that the Long-term remission of HIV-1 can be achieved utilizing these kinds of cells. The authors also say this method does not require total body irradiation, which would usually be required in cases like these to weaken a recipients immune system in order to allow them to accept donor cells.

An HIV-infected T cell. NIAID

Unfortunately, it seems the treatment that cured Castillejo of HIV is a nonstarter when it comes to mass deployment. There are fatal side effects associated with HSCT, with host-versus-graft chief among them, and doctors say that it should only be performed when there are no other options left.

Prof. Ravindra Kumar Gupta from the University of Cambridge in the U.K., the lead author of the study, told Medical News Daily that [Its] important to note that this curative treatment is high risk and only used as a last resort for patients with HIV who also have life threatening hematological [blood] malignancies.

But Gupta and the other authors of the study still appear to be optimistic that this stands as a proof-of-concept for the idea of using CCR5 gene editing to cure HIV on a larger scale. They warn in their study, however, that several barriers, including the need for increased gene editing efficiency and a lack of robust safety data, still stand in the way of something that could be used as a scalable strategy for tackling HIV.

What do you think about this method of treating HIV? Do you think gene editing will play a big role in curing HIV, or do you think there are other, more promising treatments worth pursuing instead? Let us know your thoughts in the comments.

Feature image: C. Goldsmith / Eliot Lash

More here:
A Second Person Has Been Cured of HIV - Nerdist

Read More...

Splanchnic Vein Thrombosis at Presentation of Polycythemia Vera or Essential Thrombocythemia Associated With Increased Mortality – Hematology Advisor

March 18th, 2020 11:44 pm

Patients with splanchnic vein thrombosis (SVT) as a presenting condition of polycythemia vera (PV) or essential thrombocythemia (ET) had a higher risk of death compared with those without SVT at the time of PV or ET diagnosis, according to results of a retrospective study published in Annals of Hematology.

The Philadelphia chromosome-negative myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPNs), including PV, ET, and primary myelofibrosis (PMF), are a group of hematopoietic stem cell disorders that result in an overproduction of red blood cells, white cells, and/or platelets. All 3 of these conditions are characterized by an increased risk of thrombosis, a major cause of morbidity in patients with these diseases.

Rarely,patients with MPN present with thrombosis in splanchnic veins, which supplyblood to the gastrointestinal tract, liver, spleen, and pancreas.

Resultsof previous studies have shown that patients with MPN presenting with SVT aremore likely to be younger and to have disease characterized by specificfeatures, such as a slower rate of disease progression. These findings suggest thatPV and ET in patients presenting with SVT may be a biologically distinct entityassociated with a specific natural history.

In this study, 113 patients with SVT at theinitial presentation of PV or ET were identified in 2 Spanish registries thatincluded 1831 and 1304 patients with PV and ET, respectively, as well as aseparate registry of 926 patients with MPN. The remaining patients with PV orET (n=3587), including those patients who developed SVT following diagnosis ofMPN, comprised the control group. The primary study outcome was survival, withsecondary outcomes including thrombosis,bleeding, disease progression, and second cancer.

Genotypinginformation, available for nearly 90% of cases and controls showed that JAK2 and CALR mutations were detectable in 97% and 2% of cases, and 87% and9% of controls, respectively. In addition MPLmutations were detected in 1.5% of controls.

Themedian ages of patients of the cases and controls were 42 years and 65 years,respectively (P =.0001). Thosepresenting with SVT were significantly more likely to be diagnosed with PVcompared with ET or an unclassified MPN (P<.0001), and to have lower hemoglobin levels (P =.0004), and higher leukocyte (P =.0004), and lower platelet counts (P =.0004) at diagnosis.

This article originally appeared on Oncology Nurse Advisor

Read this article:
Splanchnic Vein Thrombosis at Presentation of Polycythemia Vera or Essential Thrombocythemia Associated With Increased Mortality - Hematology Advisor

Read More...

Coronavirus tests stepped up to stop exodus of frontline NHS staff – HeraldScotland

March 18th, 2020 11:44 pm

Testingfor coronavirus will be ramped up amid criticism that NHS staff are being lost from the frontline over potentially harmless coughs, while private clinics report being inundated by people who can afford to pay for swab checks.

The Scottish Government says some Covid-19 testing on healthcare workers has already started at a local level anda national approach is being developed which will scale up these initial efforts.

It comes amid speculation that a new four-hour test could be made available in Britain.

Scotland reported its third coronavirus death on Wednesdayand First Minister Nicola Sturgeon confirmed schools across Scotland would close by the end of this week as a result of new advice from Government scientists.

They will also close in England, Wales and Northern Ireland.

Ms Sturgeon said many schools had reached a point where they have lost too many staff to continue as normal and would not necessarily reopen after Easter, or even before the summer holidays.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson said schools and nurseries across the UK would be expected to accommodate vulnerable children or the children of critical workers, such as NHS staff and police during the closure, with free school meals continuing to be provided to all eligible youngsters.

He added that exams would not go ahead as planned in May or June, but that pupils would get the qualifications they deserve.

Earlier Mr Johnson told the House of Commons the number of tests that can be carried out each day for coronavirus will be increased from 5,000 to 10,000, with a goal to expand it to 25,000 per day in England within four weeks.

North of the Border, there are three NHS laboratories currently processing tests and the Scottish Government is working with a range of partners to increase capacity to exceed 2,000 tests per day in the coming weeks.

A number of options to expand that further, and as quickly as possible, are being explored.

The Prime Minister said: We are prioritising testing of NHS staff for the obvious reason that we want them to be able to look after everybody else with confidence that theyre not transmitting the disease, and this country is actually far ahead of many other comparable countries in testing huge numbers of people.

It comes as a coronavirus test that reveals who has had Covid-19 but not shown symptoms is close to becoming available in a move being hailed as a game-changer.

The Governments chief scientific adviser, Sir Patrick Vallance, said Public Health Englands (PHE) work on the antibody test is progressing very fast, and will provide valuable insight into the pandemic.

Mr Johnson said: The great thing about having a test to see whether youve had it is suddenly a green light goes on above your head and you can go back to work safe and confident in the knowledge that you are most unlikely to get it again.

So for an economic point of view, from a social point of view, it really could be a game-changer.

You can really see the potential of that advance, which, as I say, is coming down the track.

Sir Patrick added: It is a gamechanger. And the reason its a gamechanger is that it allows you to understand the proportion of the asymptomatic population whos had this disease, but hasnt had symptoms.

Going forward its going to be critically important to be able to monitor this disease well because only by being able to monitor it can we start relaxing measuresagain.

The Scottish Government is increasing community surveillance by enabling 200 GP practices, representing a population of 1.2 million, to test patients for the virus.

Health Secretary Jeane Freeman has also promised to roll out testing to frontline NHS staff so that they do not self-isolate unnecessarily.

However, there has been criticism from medics that the process has been too slow and has left key services understaffed at a time when demand is soaring.

Glasgow GP Margaret McCartney tweeted: Our workload has increased 30-40 per cent in last two days.

I know everyone is very busy but a negative test in a symptomatic person would surely allow us to have a hope of functioning?

British Medical Association Scotland chairman Dr Lewis Morrison said: The impact Covid-19 will have on the NHS could be huge. Frontline workers will be working in very different ways and we will need every pair of hands we can possibly get at this time.

That is why it is essential for NHS staff to be tested for the virus if they suspect they have it.

The Scottish Government has assured us this will happen and we now need to see the details of how staff can access testing as soon as possible, to minimise the number of NHS staff who would otherwise be self-isolating.

Professor Michael Griffin, president of the Royal College of Surgeons Edinburgh, said: The recommendation from the UK Government on Monday that pregnant women should self-isolate, as well as a 14-day isolation of those who have been exposed to family members with symptoms, though understandable, has already put a huge pressure on the NHS workforce.

Thats why its absolutely imperative that healthcare workers are tested for Covid-19 to confirm whether they are infected in order to help prevent the unnecessary exclusion of essential NHS staff at the frontline when the epidemic hits its peak.

A test is available for 375 at the Private Harley Street Clinic in London.

Mark Ali, a doctor at the clinic, said it had been inundated with requests for the test, which can be couriered to and from a client for them to take swabs from their own nose and throat.

Mr Ali said: We are testing lords and ladies, knights, and even doctors and dentists who are worried about catching the disease.

As of March 12, the UK had tested just under 30,000 people more than any other European nation except Italy, which had tested 86,000 and Russia which had tested 80,000.

The US had tested fewer than 14,000 in official Centre for Disease Control (CDC) laboratories, compared to 250,000 in South Korea.

Scotland has carried out 6,091 tests to date. US firm ThermoFisher held talks this week with the Prime Minister, HealthSecretary Matt Hancock, Chief Medical Officer Chris Whitty, Chief Scientific Advisor Sir Patrick Vallance and representatives from Boots, Amazon and pharmaceutical giant Roche.

The firm is believed to have been demonstrating its four-hour testing kit which has been approved for use in the US.

The UK death toll from the virus has reached 104 exceeding 100 for the first time and the number of new cases is accelerating, with 676 new cases confirmed yesterday.

Organisers announced that the Glastonbury music festival and Eurovision Song Contest would not go ahead due to the coronavirus outbreak, with filming also suspended temporarily on BBC soaps including Eastenders and Casualty.

It comes as Chinas top coronavirus expert has warned that herd immunity will not contain the global pandemic because the disease is highly infectious and lethal.

Dr Zhong Nanshan, Chinas senior medical adviser, said: We dont yet have the evidence to prove that if you are infected once, you would be immune for life.

Clinical trials for potential vaccines are under way in China and the US, but is not expected to be ready until at least 2021.

Meanwhile, an antiviral drug used in Japan to treat influenza has shown potential to speed recovery from the novel coronavirus that causes Covid-19. The drug, called called Favipiravir or Avigan, was tested on 340 people in China who had been diagnosed with Covid-19.

Half tested negative for the virus within four days of being given the drug compared to 11 days for the patients not on the antiviral.

Lung conditions were also shown in X-rays to have improved in 91 per cent of participants.

There were also claims in China that patients could be cured using stem cell therapy.

Dr Dongcheng Wu, a doctor and stem cell expert based in Wuhan, the epicentre of the outbreak, said he had successfully treated nine patients who were hospitalised with novel coronavirus pneumonia.

All nine reportedly made a full recovery following stem cell transplants and conventional treatment. Dr Wu said: Yes, it is a cure but it is still very early in the process.

It came as Italy recorded 475 coronavirus deaths in a single day the highest 24-hour spike for any country since the infection emerged in China.

Read more here:
Coronavirus tests stepped up to stop exodus of frontline NHS staff - HeraldScotland

Read More...

Heres how 3D printing could help fight this aggressive type of cancer – TechRadar

March 18th, 2020 11:44 pm

A 3D printer has been used to isolate stem cells from one of the most aggressive types of breast cancer, in a bid to develop a drug which can help in the fight against that particular cancer.

This breakthrough comes from a team of researchers at the University of Girona in Spain, who employed the BCN3D Sigma 3D printer in order to make three-dimensional scaffolds which replicate the structures found in human tissues.

The aforementioned triple negative breast cancer which affects young women is highly aggressive and even after treatment using chemotherapy or radiotherapy, tumor cells still remain in the body.

As a result, one of the most dangerous facets of this cancer is its high relapse rate, and the idea is the 3D scaffolds are used to separate the stem cells which are responsible for causing those relapses so that they can be studied in the laboratory.

And the hope is that could lead to the development of a drug which can exclusively attack those cells, without damaging other parts of the body, therefore avoiding the danger of a relapse after treatment.

Dr Teresa Puig, one of the researchers involved in the project, noted that with triple negative breast cancer, relapses happen with 20% to 30% of patients, and they occur within three to four years.

Before the 3D printing technology became involved, the researchers had been producing cell cultures two-dimensionally, but this technique didnt allow the cells to be effectively separated.

Now that isolation can be achieved, close investigation of the stem cells will hopefully find the bio-indicators responsible for the tumors, and a suitable drug along the aforementioned lines can then be developed.

Read more here:
Heres how 3D printing could help fight this aggressive type of cancer - TechRadar

Read More...

For the second time in the world, an HIV patient is cured – Medical Progress – Medical Progress

March 18th, 2020 11:44 pm

An HIV patient recovered with a stem cell transplant. He became the second patient in the world to recover from this disease.

an HIV patient who received a stem cell transplant is now cured. He has become the second patient in the world to recover from the disease, his doctors announced Tuesday, March 10.

Almost ten years after the first confirmed case of an HIV patient who managed to get rid of it, this second case, known as the London patient, has shown no signs of the virus for 30 months, according to the results published in the journal The Lancet HIV.

In March 2019, Professor Ravindra Gupta, of the University of Cambridge, announced that this man diagnosed with HIV in 2003 was in remission, having shown no sign of the virus for 18 months. The doctor had however called for caution, insisting on the term of remission and not healing, asking for more time.

We suggest that our results represent a cure for HIV

A year later, his team took this step. We suggest that our results represent a cure for HIV, they write, after testing samples of blood, tissue, sperm. We tested a fairly considerable number of places where the virus likes to hide and practically everything was negative, apart from a few fossil remains of non-active virus, Pr Gupta told AFP. It is hard to imagine that all traces of a virus that infects billions of cells have been eliminated, he said.

Like the Berlin patient, the American Timothy Ray Brown considered cured in 2011, this London patient underwent a bone marrow transplant to treat blood cancer, and thus received stem cells from donors carrying a rare genetic mutation that prevents HIV from taking hold, CCR5.

Scientists point out that the procedure used for the two recovered patients is very cumbersome and risky, asking ethical questions, as Professor Gupta points out.

Is the London patient really healed? Asked Sharon Lewin of the University of Melbourne. The data () is of course exciting and encouraging, but in the end, only time will tell, she noted, saying it would take more than a handful of HIV-cured patients to assess the likelihood of a late and unexpected resumption of virus replication .

Almost 38 million people are living with HIV worldwide, but only 62% are receiving triple therapy. Nearly 800,000 people died in 2018 from HIV-related conditions. The emergence of drug-resistant forms of HIV is also a growing concern.

Read the rest here:
For the second time in the world, an HIV patient is cured - Medical Progress - Medical Progress

Read More...

Buckley couple thank community for their support as dad-of-two receives life-saving treatment | The Leader – LeaderLive

March 18th, 2020 1:50 am

A BUCKLEY man is one step closer to a clean bill of health after receiving life-saving treatment.

The Leader previously reported that Matt Davies was given 12-months to live without a stem cell transplant, which sparked a massive support network, with thousands signing up to become a donor.

Wife Sarah Davies urged people to sign up to become a donor, which could save the lives of many people and over 7,000 had signed up from her link alone.

Before Christmas, Matt was given the news that there was a match for him and he could start his treatment in January.

She told the Leader: It was a success, at the moment the cells in his body are 99.5 per cent donor and 0.5 per cent his. In time they will be 100 per cent donor so its definitely working which is fantastic.

We are on day 67 and on day 100 we can have a bone marrow scan to find out what stage we are.

GvHD is our biggest worry at the moment. Small amounts after a transplant can be good because it means his body is fighting but in huge amounts it can be damaging. It is starting to affect his gut now.

Because we live in Wales and have done for several years, we couldnt get the funding for the therapy which is what the Christie does, but we are now in the process of getting the drug for him, we are in constant talks so its a frustrating game at the moment.

We need to start this medication to get rid of this GvHD before it becomes chronic, so we are still in the process of getting that drug but hes doing really well.

Graft versus host disease (GvHD) is a condition that might occur after a transplant. In GvHD, the donated bone marrow or peripheral blood stem cells view the recipient's body as foreign, and the donated cells then attack the body.

Matt was diagnosed with cancer last year and beat it, however less than eight months later after having his three-monthly routine bone marrow results he was told the leukaemia was back and his only option was a stem cell transplant.

He has since made significant progress however the pair say they are worried about the latest coronavirus outbreak due to Matt essentially having no immune system.

Sarah said: At the moment with coronavirus its very scary because he has a low immune system, he is basically starting from scratch with his immune system so cant get immunisations until he is one year old. We have decided to take the kids out of school because we dont want him catching anything.

Hes done absolutely fantastic and is now back to eating.

Matt has been really lucky. They are pleased with his progress, but they would like his GvHD levels to be lower.

Although Matt faced no real complications during the treatment however has lost a significant amount of weight.

A JustGiving Page has been set up to raise funds for the Christie in Manchester where Matt has been receiving his treatment.

Sarah added: Even still now I will be walking somewhere and random people who Ive never met before will ask me how he is doing. Its actually been so positive. I dont think people realise how much it has helped, just them asking it has really helped us get through this and knowing that a lot of people are supporting us.

On social media we have spoken to so many people in similar situations as ours, its about helping one another, and we have made friends for life.

Thank you so much for your support, it means a lot to us and its lovely for us to read all the comments, even if we cannot reply to them all.

Matts progress can be found on social media via the Team Davies Facebook and Instagram page.

Read more:
Buckley couple thank community for their support as dad-of-two receives life-saving treatment | The Leader - LeaderLive

Read More...

Page 627«..1020..626627628629..640650..»


2025 © StemCell Therapy is proudly powered by WordPress
Entries (RSS) Comments (RSS) | Violinesth by Patrick