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Category Archives: Molecular Medicine
Older persons with Type 1 diabetes face risk of reduced muscle strength and more cardiovascular issues, researchers find – EurekAlert
Posted: June 13, 2022 at 2:07 am
image:Senior author Thomas Hawke is a professor in the Department of Pathology and Molecular Medicine. view more
Credit: McMaster University
Hamilton, ON (June 10, 2022) Older adults with Type 1 diabetes (T1D) are at significantly higher risk of both muscle weakening and cardiovascular complications, say McMaster University researchers.
Using gripping power as a measure, researchers compared the muscle strength of 63 participants from the Canadian Longitudinal Study on Aging with T1D to a control group of 63 without diabetes, tracking them over a three-year period. The average age of those surveyed was 59 when first assessed.
The research has been published in The Canadian Journal of Diabetes.
The study authors also found that older patients with T1D had abnormally low diastolic blood pressure when the heart muscle is relaxed between beats which might be an indicator of early increased cardiovascular disease risk.
The study follows related research showing that T1D patients over 40 had reduced leg-muscle strength. Taken together, the studies suggest patients should be trying to preserve their strength with resistance-based exercises such as resistance bands and weights.
We now have two pieces of evidence showing that patients with T1D have reduced strength and undertaking resistance-based exercises can compensate for this loss, said senior author Thomas Hawke, a professor in the Department of Pathology and Molecular Medicine.
Hawke explained that some people with T1D avoid exercise, fearing it will lower their blood sugar.
Unlike aerobic exercise, resistance training is not usually associated with lowering blood sugar in T1D. In fact, it can even increase blood sugar levels a little. More and more studies are proving the benefits of resistance exercise. The benefits are multifaceted, he said.
Hawke said the evidence is now overwhelming clear that diminishing muscle strength is strongly associated with higher mortality.
It is also significantly correlated with your frailty and ability to live independently. Can you carry a grocery bag, pick up that laundry basket, or even get up from your toilet unassisted? We need to identify these issues before a person suffers a serious fall and requires hospitalization or institutionalization.
Maureen MacDonald, a professor in the Department of Kinesiology said that the Canadian Longitudinal Study on Aging is providing important data to help identify areas for future research.
We have now received a grant to follow-up this research with an exercise training study to determine if we can lessen some of the negative health impacts of T1D we observed in this study.
Co-author Lauren Turner, who has T1D herself, said the research can guide clinical practice and help patients with diabetes make better decisions about their health.
This study shows the importance of being active and maintaining ones muscle health to ensure longevity, as well as using insulin and monitoring blood sugar levels, said Turner, who completed her undergraduate degree in Kinesiology in Hawkes lab. She is now completing her masters degree at York University.
As someone with diabetes, I enjoy running and being active, and it is all about finding the balance between what is good for you and what you like."
An estimated 300,000 Canadians live with T1D. The disease typically presents in childhood/adolescence and is one of the most common chronic pediatric diseases, resulting in serious complications and reducing life expectancy by as much as 15 years.
The study was funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research.
Canadian Journal of Diabetes
Decreased Diastolic Blood Pressure and Average Grip Strength in Adults with Type 1 Diabetes Compared to Controls: An Analysis of Data from the Canadian Longitudinal Study on Aging (CLSA)
Disclaimer: AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert system.
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Lessons learned from COVID-19 are ‘silver lining’ as we face Monkeypox virus, expert says – CBC.ca
Posted: June 13, 2022 at 2:07 am
There are now 110confirmed cases of monkeypox in Canada, including at least nine in Ontario, according to Health Canada.
As of June 9, at least23 other cases were under investigation in Toronto and Halton Region Public Health confirmed its first case, whilethere have been noconfirmed cases in Hamilton, said Hamilton Public Health Services.
Karen Mossman, a virologist and professor of Pathology and Molecular Medicine at McMaster University, said the silver lining in a potential monkeypox outbreak could be the lessons we learned during the COVID-19 pandemic.
She said COVID-19 has increased awareness on how we should proceed with a potential outbreak.
"Many general practices put in place during COVID will help limit infection with monkeypox," she wrote in an email to CBC Hamilton.
"Hopefully COVID will normalize mask wearing, new working arrangements (and associated technologies), better ventilation systems, etc."
But she also warns that concern around an increase in local cases is warranted.
That concern could be linked to few people having immunity against monkeypox, Dr. Mossman explained.
"While the smallpox vaccine is thought to provide protection, vaccination for smallpox ended circa 1970 when the virus was effectively eradicated, and those vaccinated likely have limited remaining immunity," she said.
Fortunately, she said monkeypox doesn't spread as quickly as SARS-CoV-2, and doesn't mutate as quickly as coronaviruses.
"Monkeypox spreads through bites or scratches from an infected animal, or through direct contact with sores or bodily fluids from infected people (example during sex) or contaminated clothing, bedding etc.," she said.
Mossman says there were also lessons to be learned from COVID-19 about how doctors communicate with the public.
"I think there needs to be a balance between transparency and awareness, with reality based on the best available data and knowledge. The public has a right to be aware of what viruses are circulating, and could potentially form a new outbreak," she said.
"This is where it gets challenging, as we often don't know what we don't know, and as we gather more information, those messages change. We absolutely experienced this during COVID at the beginning there was a lot we did not know, but made assumptions (or best guesses) based on how similar SARS-CoV-2 was to SARS-CoV, and our experience with the pandemic in 2003."
Mossman says the general public needs to have more information in order to assess risk when it comes to outbreaks.
"By using the adage of 'trust me, I'm a doctor,'we aren't doing our job in really educating the public of why and how decisions/recommendations are made, which I think is critically important so that when the next pandemic happens, the public has a general awareness and can better understand what is happening, why, and should they be concerned or not," she said.
At the moment, Niagara Region Public Health is not aware of any local cases, according to an email to CBC Hamilton on Wednesday.
Dr. Azim Kasmani, associate medical officer of health at Niagara Region Public Health, said that it's "unlikely" that a pandemic could arise from the current outbreak.
"From what we know about monkeypox so far, it's unlikely to have the same global impact as COVID-19," he wrote.
"These are different viruses with different spread patterns and different health effects."
For now, Dr. Kasmani suggests steering clear of close and physical contact with others who could be infected with monkeypox, as well as to avoid sharing personal belongings with those individuals.
"As we enter the summer months when large outdoor gatherings and festivals become more common, it is important to think about how much close, skin-to-skin contact you will engage in when attending an event," he added.
Like Dr. Mossman, he agrees that people should be wary of monkeypox but that we could be slightly more prepared for outbreaks this time around.
"COVID-19 was a brand new virus, and humans had no immunity to it when it emerged," he said."Monkeypox, on the other hand, has been known for decades, we have seen it and managed it before."
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Lessons learned from COVID-19 are 'silver lining' as we face Monkeypox virus, expert says - CBC.ca
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Healthcare Is Personal: GE Healthcare’s Total Molecular Imaging Solutions Enable Precision Health & Theranostics for Personalized Prostate Cancer…
Posted: June 13, 2022 at 2:07 am
CHICAGO & VANCOUVER, British Columbia--(BUSINESS WIRE)--GE Healthcare is proud to provide cutting-edge molecular imaging solutions that enable and increase access to precision health and theranostics to help improve patient outcomes across care areas, including prostate cancer the most prevalent cancer in men and the third most prevalent cancer overalli.
Where most medical therapies are designed with the average patient in mind, theranostics brings together diagnoses and treatment in one application, providing a more targeted and personalized therapy than ever before. Clinicians and patients are especially seeing much success with theranostics in prostate cancer a highly manageable disease, but one that is difficult to treat when diagnosed at a late stage claiming more than 1.4 million lives annuallyii.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, clinical adoption of theranostics slowed due to a delay in elective procedures and the increased risk posed to its often-immunocompromised patients. However, a surge in demand for theranostics infrastructureiii is now anticipated following the U.S. Federal Drug Administrations (FDA) approval of several new drugs and therapies. This includes the diagnostic tracer Gallium-68 PSMA-11 and therapy drug Lutetium-177 PSMA-617, which are key to applying theranostics in prostate cancer.
Healthcare is timely and personal and its delivery should be too, explains Jean-Luc Procaccini, President & CEO, Molecular Imaging & Computed Tomography, GE Healthcare. Theranostics has the potential to transform care from a look at the average patient to a precise look at each individual. Already, it is providing hope to late-stage prostate cancer patients by aiding with the diagnosis of the disease, the accurate quantification of its progression, and the delivery of targeted, personalized therapies all in the same session. And soon, we hope to see it adopted earlier in the disease care pathway and across oncology to benefit more patients around the world.
To prepare for the creation of dedicated theranostics centers, SNMMI and related international molecular imaging societies recently published a new guide for healthcare systems globallyiii. Focusing on safety protocols and operational procedures, the guide provides a framework that highlights best practices that can be applied across care areas.
Nuclear medicine is entering a new age of precision theranostics, in which next-generation alpha- and beta-labeled radiotherapeutics are tailored to individual cancer patients using the latest diagnostic PET radiopharmaceuticals, explains Dr. Peter Scott, Associate Professor of Radiology, Division Director of Nuclear Medicine, University of Michigan. With the FDA approval of a new PSMA-agent for treatment of prostate cancer, the future is here. Patients, their families and referring physicians are all demanding access to theranostics, creating an unprecedented demand for higher and higher amounts of radioactive metals. The only way to meet the global need for PET radionuclides like Gallium-68 and Copper-64 is through commercial solid-target solutions suitable for routine use.
As the industry prepares to usher in this new era of precision health and personalized medicine, GE Healthcare is proud to offer innovative molecular imaging solutions to healthcare systems around the world.
Discovery with the Molecule Journey: Enabling Precision Health: The enablement of theranostics in prostate cancer care begins with the production of radioisotopes for use in diagnostic tracers namely Gallium-68 PSMA-11 which is administered to the patient, attaches to specific cancer cells, and releases radioactive emissions to provide detailed molecular information unique to each patient.
However, shortages of the generators that produce Gallium-68 historically have created serious challenges for clinicians and limited patient access. In response, GE Healthcare is proud to introduce a new Solid Target Platform for its PETtrace cyclotron which in combination with its FASTlab 2 New Edition platform can produce 100x the amount of Gallium compared to a generator for increased theranostics capabilities and access in prostate cancer patient careiv.
While solid targets have been around for some time, they have traditionally been viewed as research tools and required complicated infrastructure and highly trained operators. Now, with GE Healthcares TRACERcenter Solutions and new PETtrace Solid Target Platform, healthcare systems can more easily access the equipment, tracers and staff training necessary to deliver a more cost-effective, personalized solution.
Diagnosis: Accurately Staging & Quantifying Disease: To read the emissions released by the Gallium-68 PSMA-11 tracer, the patient must be imaged using a highly sensitive PET/CT scanner. This technology provides the clinician detailed information that is used to better understand the structure and function of each patients tissue and disease state to help form personalized therapy recommendations. The more sensitive the PET/CT, the more accurate the images and quantification.
To this end, GE Healthcare is now shipping its Discovery MI Gen 2 premium digital PET/CT system, which provides next-level digital detection with an axial field of view (FOV) scalable up to 30 centimeters to achieve a 125 percent increase in sensitivityv. This helps translate to 33 percent improvement in scan times or dose amountsvi.
These capabilities are further supported by Q.Clear, which offers up to 2x improvement in both image quality (SNR) and quantitation accuracy (SUVvii), and MotionFree for up to 67 percent improvement in lesion volume measurements, helping inform clinicians prostate cancer therapy recommendationsviii.
Additionally, this scanner includes a CT that is designed to allow TrueFidelity deep-learning image reconstruction to enable image sharpness and improved noise textureix. Discovery MI Gen 2 proclaims up to a 41 percent increase in small lesion detectabilityx.
Treatment: Delivering & Monitoring Targeted Therapy: With regard to therapy, the FDA recently approved Lutetium-177 PSMA-617 an exceptional therapy for advanced prostate cancer in March 2022. It works by binding to and delivering a small amount of radiation to prostate cancer cells anywhere in the body to help patients with advanced prostate cancer live longer and maintain quality of lifexi.
To help clinicians evaluate the success of these therapies, GE Healthcare developed its breakthrough StarGuide SPECT/CT system with 12 cutting-edge CZT detectors that not only scan patients in 3D to provide more information to clinicians but are also optimized for Theranostics procedures including imaging this latest Lutetium-177-based prostate cancer therapy.
Compared to conventional technologies, StarGuides Digital Focus CZT detectors offer improved volume sensitivity and SPECT resolutionxii, which is especially valuable for imaging both peaks of Lutetium-177 emissions, which in turn helps clinicians pinpoint the size, shape, and position of lesions with exceptional accuracy. Paired with GE Healthcares innovative Q.Clear solution for SPECT reconstruction, the resulting images provide outstanding quantification for the diagnosis and staging of disease and monitoring of treatment.
Increasing Accuracy & Efficiency: Artificial intelligence (AI) also offers new opportunities to streamline workflows, provide accurate data, and help expedite diagnoses across care areas all valuable offerings in todays resource constrained healthcare environment.
Thats why GE Healthcare also offers the Xeleris V image processing solution with a collection of AI-enabled clinical applications to help simplify and enhance workflows. This includes Q.Thera AIxiii, which is designed to leverage Q.Volumetrix MI to help clinicians automatically and accurately segment areas of interest including AI-based kidney segmentation for quantitation and dosimetry calculations, all with the goal to help reduce the time required for the user to process and calculate dose enabling them to spend more time with patients.
The advancement of imaging technologies and continuous evolution and discovery of new tracers and targeted therapies is ushering in a new era in healthcare one in which precision health and theranostics exist at its core. Prostate cancer is only the beginning, with many more applications under development for the future.
GE Healthcare is proud to offer clinicians unique opportunities to make personalized care decisions and treatment response assessments for the benefit of patients around the world. The company is uniquely positioned to advance these efforts as the only partner with solutions spanning from molecular imaging diagnostics, cyclotrons, chemistry synthesis, PET/CT, PET/MR, nuclear medicine, advanced digital solutions, and pharma partnerships to cover the breadth of steps from discovery to diagnosis to treatment.
For more information on GE Healthcares Molecular Imaging portfolio, visit gehealthcare.com or our SNMMI 2022 event overview page.
About GE Healthcare:
GE Healthcare is the $17.7 billion healthcare business of GE (NYSE: GE). As a leading global medical technology, pharmaceutical diagnostics and digital solutions innovator, GE Healthcare enables clinicians to make faster, more informed decisions through intelligent devices, data analytics, applications, and services, supported by its Edison intelligence platform. With over 100 years of healthcare industry experience and around 48,000 employees globally, the company operates at the center of an ecosystem working toward precision health, digitizing healthcare, helping drive productivity and improve outcomes for patients, providers, health systems and researchers around the world.
Follow us on Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter, and Insights for the latest news, or visit our website http://www.gehealthcare.com for more information.
i International Agency for Research on Cancer. Accessed Jun 3, 2022. https://gco.iarc.fr/today/online-analysis-multi-bars?v=2020&mode=cancer&mode_population=countries&population=900&populations=900&key=total&sex=0&cancer=39&type=0&statistic=5&prevalence=0&population_group=0&ages_group%5B%5D=0&ages_group%5B%5D=17&nb_items=10&group_cancer=0&include_nmsc=0&include_nmsc_other=1&type_multiple=%257B%2522inc%2522%253Afalse%252C%2522mort%2522%253Afalse%252C%2522prev%2522%253Atrue%257D&orientation=horizontal&type_sort=0&type_nb_items=%257B%2522top%2522%253Atrue%252C%2522bottom%2522%253Afalse%257D ii Cancer. World Health Organization. Feb 3, 2022. Accessed Jun 1, 2022. https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/cancer iii JNM Publishes Joint Guide for the Establishment of Theranostics Centers. Society of Nuclear Medicine. Apr 29, 2022. https://www.snmmi.org/NewsPublications/NewsDetail.aspx?ItemNumber=40416 iv Svedjehed et al. Demystifying solid targets: Simple and rapid distribution-scale production of [68Ga]GaCl3 and [68Ga]Ga-PSMA-11. Nuclear Medicine and Biology. Volumes 104105, JanuaryFebruary 2022, Pages 1-10. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nucmedbio.2021.10.002 v Sensitivity (cps/kBq) as compared to Discovery MI 20 cm.vi With Discovery MI Gen 2 30 cm configuration compared to 25 cm configuration. 33% reduction in scan time or injected dose, as shown in phantom testing.vii SNR and SUV improvement as compared to OSEMviii Compared to non-processed (STATIC, no motion correction) data. As demonstrated in phantom testing using a typical and fast respiratory model, 18 mm Ge-68 spheres, and OSEM reconstruction.ix As demonstrated in a clinical evaluation consisting of 60 cases and seven physicians, where each case was reconstructed with both DLIR and ASiR-V and evaluated by three of the physicians. In 90 percent of the reads, DLIRs noise texture was rated better than ASiR-Vs. In 99 percent of the reads, DLIRs image sharpness was rated the same as or better than ASiR-Vs.x Discovery MI Gen 2 30 cm compared to Discovery MI 25 cm with matched scan time/injected dose. As demonstrated in phantom testing.xi Breaking News: First-in-Class Radioligand Therapy Approved for Advanced Prostate Cancer, Prostate Cancer Foundation. March 23, 2022. https://www.pcf.org/c/breaking-news-first-in-class-radioligand-therapy-approved-for-advanced-prostate-cancer/#:~:text=Lutetium%2DPSMA%2D617%20(Lu%2DPSMA)%20is%20now,and%20taxane%2Dbased%20chemotherapy xii StarGuide SPECT reconstruction with scatter used the systems factory NEMA NU 1-2018 resolution protocol which uses the same method (BSREM with Clarity 3D) as its clinical bone protocol. NM/CT 870 DR and NM/CT 870 CZT SPECT reconstruction used Evolution for Bone (OSEM). NM/CT 870 DR used LEHR/LEHRS collimators and NM/CT 870 CZT used the WEHR collimator.xiii CE marked. 510k pending with the FDA. Not available for sale in all regions.
Note: Radiopharmaceuticals may not be approved by ministers of health in all regions. Gallium-68 PSMA-11 and Lutetium-177 PSMA-617 are not approved in Canada.
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Yale Scientists Develop Precision Medicine Approach to Metabolic Therapy for Breast Cancer – OncLive
Posted: June 13, 2022 at 2:07 am
Scientists at Yale Cancer Center have found that patients with breast cancer and high levels of insulin in the blood may be responsive to metabolism-targeting treatments, which in turn may improve the effectiveness of subsequent chemotherapy treatments.
Scientists at Yale Cancer Center have found that patients with breast cancer and high levels of insulin in the blood may be responsive to metabolism-targeting treatments, which in turn may improve the effectiveness of subsequent chemotherapy treatments. The findings were published today in Communications Biology.
The incidence of breast cancer is projected to increase more than 50% between 2011 and 2030. This forecast is partially attributable to rising rates of obesity, which accelerate the incidence and progression of breast cancer in postmenopausal women. At the same time, metabolism-targeting therapies such as the diabetes drug metformin have gained increasing popularity in breast cancer treatment, with mixed outcomes in clinical trials.
Using a new class of diabetes drug, SGLT2 inhibitors, Yale researchers studied the SGLT2 inhibitor dapagliflozin as an alternative to metformin. The research was done in animal models to determine the responsiveness to dapagliflozin in addition to chemotherapy in breast tumors. Their findings were mutation-specific. The study revealed that dapagliflozin improves the effectiveness of chemotherapy in slowing breast tumor growth in models with breast cancer driven by mutations upstream of the insulin signaling pathway. Models with breast cancer driven by mutations downstream of the insulin pathway or in pathways with other driver mutations were not improved with the combined therapy.
Our data supports the development of insulin-lowering approaches to breast cancer treatment in hyperinsulinemic patients, said Rachel Perry, PhD, Assistant Professor of Medicine (Endocrinology) and Cellular and Molecular Physiology at Yale Cancer Center and lead author on the paper. The next step will be to move this research into early clinical trials at Smilow Cancer Hospital, which should position SGLT2 inhibitors as an attractive target to fill this niche.
Funding for the study was provided by the Lionheart Foundation.
The following Yale authors contributed to this study: Ngozi D. Akingbesote, Aaron Norman, Wanling Zhu, Alexandra A. Halberstam, Xinyi Zhang, Julia Foldi, and Maryam B. Lustberg.
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Longtime employees honored at in-person ceremony | University Times | University of Pittsburgh – University Times
Posted: June 13, 2022 at 2:07 am
Pitt employees who reached the milestones of 20, 30, 40 and 50 years of service between Jan. 1, 2021 and June 30, 2022, were honored at an in-person ceremony on June 2 at the William Pitt Union.
The longer than normal list reflects a year and a half of work anniversaries. Last June, the ceremony, which is normally held each year, honored those who hit milestones in 2020. That ceremony had been delayed because of the pandemic.
The one person marking 50 years at Pitt Torran King hit that mark last year and then decided to retire after a long career in Facilities Management.
Torran A. King, work-in process labor, Facilities Management
Marissa Arlet, Institutional Animal Care & Use Committee, SVC Research
David P. Bolette, Veterinary Services, Division of Laboratory Animal Resources, Health Sciences
Marie Elena Bresz, Office of the Dean, School of Computing and Information
Carl Daugherty, Animal Husbandry, Division of Laboratory Animal Resources, Health Sciences
Robin A. DeAngelo, Radiology, School of Medicine
Judith L. DeNinno, Animal Husbandry, Division of Laboratory Animal Resources, Health Sciences
Trudy Newring Evans, Office of the Dean, School of Computing and Information
Charles Fleishaker, Research Support Services, Dietrich School of Arts and Sciences
Edward Gyurisin, University Center for Teaching and Learning
Susan E. Johnson, fiscal, UPMC Hillman Cancer Institute
Edward F. Kuchar, Medicine, School of Medicine
Leigh Ann Kuchar, Pitt IT Telecom
Lisa Kubick, Office of the Dean, Dietrich School of Arts and Sciences
Sandra G. Latini, Office of Technology Management, SVC Research
Judy Malenka, Infectious Diseases & Microbiology, Graduate School of Public Health
John F. McKnight, Johnstown Physical Plant, maintenance
Mary Murock, Animal Husbandry, Division of Laboratory Animal Resources, Health Sciences
Karen O'Brien, Facilities Management AVC
Dave Rahuba, Moving Services, Business and Auxiliary Services
James J. Roskowski, Prosthodontics, Dental Medicine
Jim Segneff, Information Technology, Swanson School of Engineering
Bruce Steele, Office of University Communications
Joanne Stumme, Student Financial Services, CFOs office
Frederick W. Tylka, Information Technology, Swanson School of Engineering
Karen A. Whitehead, Operations and Quality Administration, SVC Philanthropic and Alumni Engagement
John Ziats, Johnstown Office of Student Life
Douglas Ziegler, University Center for Teaching and Learning
Greg L. Adametz, Pediatrics Research Administration, School of Medicine
Lisa M. Bailey, Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, School of Medicine
Karen Bassett, Office of the Dean, School of Education
Donna L. Baxter, Student Financial Services, CFOs office
Sharon Hixson Bindas, Office of the Dean, School of Computing and Information
Natalie K. Bird, Departmental Libraries, University Library System
David J. Browning, Dental Instruments, School of Dental Medicine
Carmella Campbell, Basic Research Administration, UPMC Hillman Cancer Institute
Katheryn Carr, Office of Sponsored Programs, SVC Research
Lynda M. Connelly, University Center for Social and Urban Research
Roy Cooper Jr., University Store, Business and Auxiliary Services
Robert A. Crawford, Facilities Management Pittsburgh Campus Buildings
Babeth V. Crockett, Public Safety and Emergency Management
Allen A. DiPalma, Office of Trade Compliance, SVC Research
Kelly L. Dornin-Koss, Educational and Compliance Office, SVC Research
Janet Famiglietti, UPCI National Surgical Adjuvant Breast and Bowel Project, UPMC Hillman Cancer Institute
Donald J. Fedor Jr., Facilities Management Pittsburgh Campus Buildings
Timothy Fitzgerald, Pitt IT Enterprise Applications
Amy Flaugh, Epidemiology, Graduate School of Public Health
Michael Gaber, Office of the Dean, School of Medicine
Paul A. Guglielmo, Facilities Management Work-in Process Labor
Nadine M. Hamlett, Clinical Programs, School of Law
Scott David Harley, Scaife Hall Waste Processing
Matthew J. Harr, Johnstown Information Systems
Fang He, Pathology, School of Medicine
Richard H. Henderson, Office of Administration, Health Sciences
Carol M. Herko, Real Estate Administration, Planning, Design and Real Estate
Rich Holmes. Office of University Counsel
Nancy Hood, Psychology, Dietrich School of Arts and Sciences
Roy Humphrey, WPTS Radio/Panther Prints, Student Affairs
Wendy M. Jameson, Pathology, School of Medicine
Anthony Jones, Pitt IT Operations
Diane Kline, program coordinator, Graduate School of Public & International Affairs
Shari D. Kubitz, Learning Research & Development Center
Michele Leahy, Craniofacial Regeneration, School of Dental Medicine
Kimberly A. Livingston, Johnstown Operations-Registrar
David Malicki, Biological Sciences, Dietrich School of Arts and Sciences
Darla J. McGivern, Critical Care Medicine, School of Medicine
Jayne McGoey, Internal Audit , Chancellors office
Elizabeth McNally-Martin, Education Technology and Innovation, School of Nursing
Maureen McNulty, Annual Programs, SVC Philanthropic and Alumni Engagement
Kellie Mitchell, Office of the Dean, Swanson School of Engineering
Jeff Morrison, Office of Administration, Health Sciences
Cara Svitko Nestlerode, Epidemiology, Graduate School of Public Health
Cindy Niznik, Physics & Astronomy, Dietrich School of Arts and Sciences
Jane Ann Ondo, Pitt IT Portfolio and Project Management Office
Marianne Page, Psychology, Dietrich School of Arts and Sciences
Nancy M. Patuc, Pitt IT Financial Systems
Glenn Peterson, Bioengineering, Swanson School of Engineering
Nancy I. Petro, Medicine, School of Medicine
George Petrucci, Housing Administration, Business and Auxiliary Services
Paul A. Poland, Medicine, School of Medicine
David Puccio, University Center for Teaching and Learning
Pamela Rall-Johnston, Scaife Hall Housekeeping
Douglas J. Remmick, Pitt IT Telecom
Susan L. Ronczka, Office of the Controller, CFOs office
Elizabeth A. Rush, UPCI Research Lab-Kirkwood, UPMC Hillman Cancer Institute
Laura Schmid, Office of Human Resources
Laurel Ann Povazan Scholnick, Departmental Libraries, University Library System
Adrian Starke, Chemical/Petroleum Engineering, Swanson School of Engineering
Kevin Starke, Payment Processing & Compliance, CFOs office
Jody Stockdill, Medicine, School of Medicine
Carla D. (Crawford) Takacs, Innovation Institute, SVC Research
Jeffrey A. Toporcer, Pitt IT Software Site License
Carol Kinlough Truschel, Medicine, School of Medicine
Pamela D. Vincent, Pediatrics, School of Medicine
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June: Welsh farms AMR study | News and features – University of Bristol
Posted: June 13, 2022 at 2:07 am
Bacterial sampling is now underway to assess the abundance and types of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) in bacteria on Welsh dairy, beef and sheep farms.
The study, which researchers at the University of Bristol are coordinating, is part of Arwain DGC a project designed to help combat antimicrobial-resistant bacteria in animals and the environment in Wales.
Launched last year, Arwain DGC aims to reduce the need to use antimicrobials such as antibiotics by improving productivity, animal health and welfare through new and innovative technology and 'good practice'.
Data obtained by analysing environmental faecal samples from a selected group of Welsh farms over 12 months will assist researchers in learning more about what factors are associated with AMR on farms. These data will also help inform the design of a robust AMR surveillance system for Wales in the future.
Participating farms have volunteered to be part of the study and the samples and information from accompanying farmer questionnaires along with data on antimicrobial sales to the farm - are anonymised. A core of 50 farms (20 dairy, ten beef, ten sheep, and ten beef/sheep farms) from across Wales have been recruited.
Environmental faecal samples are taken monthly from various locations on each farm by vets from 14 veterinary practices involved in the study. Samples are taken from areas such as animal housing, collection yards, pens and pasture.
The samples are then cultured to identify the presence of antibiotic-resistant Escherichia coli (E. coli) bacteria, which are used in such studies to give an indication of the level of AMR on each farm.
The study is led by Professors Kristen Reyher and Matthew Avison from the University of Bristol, who lead Bristol AMR.
Matthew Avison, Professor of Molecular Bacteriology in Bristol's School of Cellular and Molecular Medicine, said: "Sample collection started in mid-April, and we are very pleased with how it is going. Farmers have been engaging well with the study, and we are very grateful to them and the vets who have important relationships with the farms and are out collecting the monthly samples.
"Over the next 12 months, we aim to get a cross-section of animal samples young, old, mixed species to give us a real-time picture of what is happening on farms at different points throughout the year.
"From our previous experience sampling dairy farms in the southwest of England, we know that, in February, there is very little AMR on farms, but in September, it is easily detectable. However, we have not sampled beef and sheep farms before, so to start seeing the samples come in is exciting."
He added, We hope this work will be used as evidence to recommend to Welsh Government how best to take samples from farms to look at AMR should they ever want to introduce a surveillance system.
Kristen Reyher, Professor of Veterinary Epidemiology and Population Health at Bristol Veterinary School, added: "Farmers and vets have done so much together in the last few years to ensure they are being good stewards of important medicines like antibiotics. Our work comparing their antibiotic use and other management factors with the AMR we find on farms continues to help us unpick the relationships between what happens on farms and in the environment as well as better understand the selection and transmission of AMR. The Arwain DGC project is a great example of Wales leading the way on providing important information about AMR to the world, and we stand ready to get to work on these data that are now rolling in."
Arwain DGC is closely aligned to the Welsh Governments five-yearAMR in Animals and the Environment Implementation Plan (2019 2024). This project has received funding through the Welsh Government Rural Communities - Rural Development Programme 2014-2020, which is funded by the European Agricultural Fund for Rural Development and the Welsh Government.
About antimicrobial resistanceOver-reliance on antimicrobials has led to some antibiotics losing their efficacy and ability to fight infections.
Globally, in 2019, 1.2 million people are estimated to have died from bacterial infections that did not respond to antibiotics.
AMR is classed as a global 'One Health' challenge and described by The World Health Organization as an issue where "without urgent action, we are heading for a post-antibiotic era, in which common infections and minor injuries can once again kill."
About Arwain DGCArwain DGC (Defnydd Gwrthfaicrobaidd Cyfrifol/Responsible Antimicrobial Use) builds on the pioneering work of an earlier project - Arwain Vet Cymru (AVC) - which focused on improving antibiotic prescribing in cattle and sheep through a Wales-wide network of Veterinary Prescribing Champions. AVCs work has subsequently become the blueprint for similar schemes across the UK and globally.
Arwain DGC comprises a schedule of activities and brings together experienced collaborators to deliver a wide-ranging programme addressing AMR in animals and the environment.
Included are key Welsh agricultural stakeholders (Menter a Busnes, Welsh Lamb and Beef Producers Ltd and Welsh Agricultural Organisation Society), academic institutions (University of Bristol and Aberystwyth University School of Veterinary Science) and veterinary delivery partners (Iechyd Da and Milfeddygon Gogledd Cymru).
The overall Arwain DGC project is led by Menter a Busnes, with each partner responsible for specialist elements of its delivery, including:
About Bristol AMRBristol AMR is a cross-faculty Research Strand funded by the Elizabeth Blackwell Institute for Health Research, through the University's Wellcome Trust Institutional Strategic Support Fund (ISSF). AMR research at the University of Bristol focuses on interdisciplinary approaches to tackling AMR with research conducted across all of our six faculties.
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An Innovative ETF Opportunity That Taps Into Our Increased Understanding of the Human Genome – ETF Trends
Posted: June 13, 2022 at 2:07 am
With a targeted disruptive innovation biotechnology-related exchange traded fund strategy, investors can focus on companies driving change in targeted therapeutics, bioinformatics, CRISPR technology, and more.
In the recent webcast, Change the DNA of Your Portfolio: Growth Opportunities Through Genomics, Nicholas Grous, associate portfolio manager at ARK Invest, highlighted five innovation platforms that will experience long-term growth, including artificial intelligence, energy storage, robotics, DNA sequencing, and blockchain technology. These five sub-categories are expected to enjoy long-term growth. For instance, gene sequencing is expected to expand to $3.6 trillion in 2030 from $125 billion in 2020. Overall, ARK Invest projects disruptive innovation technologies could grow to $210 trillion by 2030, compared to $14 trillion in 2020.
The increased adoption of disruptive innovation technologies will not just be a one-off event as these innovative ideas will cover a broad swathe of industries and touch upon many facets of the global economy. For example, Grous believed that the convergence of next-generation DNA sequencing, artificial intelligence, and gene therapies should boost returns on investment significantly, potentially creating a golden age of health care likely to rival that of the 1980s and 1990s.
Simon Barnett, research analyst at ARK Invest, explained that researchers had historically been forced to choose between accuracy with short-read sequencing or comprehensiveness with long-range sequencing to break the genome into smaller segments to analyze with high-resolution optics, which is then reassembled with computer algorithms. According to Wrights Law, for every cumulative doubling in data produced on its reinstalled base, the cost of synthesis-based LRS has declined and will continue to decline by 28%. Looking ahead, ARK projects the cost to sequence a whole human genome with long-read technology will drop to $100-$200 and its accuracy will be superior to SRS across all variant types by the end of 2025.
According to our research, gene editing breakthroughs are creating more effective therapies at a faster rate than historically has been the case, Barnett said.
For example, compared to zinc finger nucleases (ZFNs), which moved from discovery to the first human dose in roughly eight years, the relatively new CRISPR technology took less than half the time, three years, and can address 48% of known diseases, or almost twice ZFNs 28%. Prime and base editing CRISPR derivatives address even more diseases, 79% and 59%, respectively. Consequently, Barnett argued that CRISPR may be seen as a superior gene-editing method going forward, and it already shows as CRISPR has been dominating recent academic research and clinical trials.
Looking ahead, ARK expects gene editing and gene therapy companies to grow to $1.1 trillion in market capitalization by 2026. Given potential cures for diseases, the share of research and development funding for gene therapy innovations should continue to rise. By 2026, the share of total R&D spending devoted to gene editing and therapy companies could grow from 3% to 17%.
Additionally, Barnett noted that routine blood-based, multi-cancer screening combined with improvements in single-cancer screening could prevent 40% of metastatic diagnoses and increase loco-regional diagnoses by 10%. Even without improvements in cancer therapy, ARK estimates that earlier intervention could prevent 66,000 cancer deaths per year in the US alone.
The Central Dogma could help describe how biotechnology moves forward. The Central Dogma states that DNA (the genome) is transcribed into RNA (the transcriptome), which ultimately is translated into protein (the proteome). Proteins carry out virtually all critical-to-life functions but, when altered, can cause disease.
Understanding the interactions between and among the pillars of the Central Dogma, we will improve our ability to make predictions, diagnoses, and leaps of fundamental, biological insight, Barnett said.
We believe the future of molecular biology is based on multi-omics techniques that integrate pillars of the Central Dogma. Based on our research, multi-omics including life science tools, basic and translational research, population health efforts, and molecular diagnostics could impact oncology, organ health, and population health, scaling from $110 billion to roughly $300 billion during the next five years, he added.
As a way to capture this potential growth opportunity, investors can turn to theARK Genomic Revolution Multi-Sector Fund (NYSEArca: ARKG), an actively managed strategy that seeks long-term growth of capital by investing in domestic and foreign equity securities of companies across multiple sectors, including health care, information technology, materials, energy, and consumer discretionary, that are relevant to the funds investment theme of the genomics revolution.
ARKG aims for thematic multi-cap exposure to innovative elements including gene therapy bio-informatics, bio-inspired computing, molecular medicine, and pharmaceutical innovations. The ETF aims to capture long-term growth with a low correlation of relative returns to traditional growth strategies and a negative correlation to value strategies. Additionally, the fund offers a tool for diversification due to little overlap with traditional indices. It can be a complement to traditional value/growth strategies.
Financial advisors who are interested in learning more about growth opportunities in the biotech segment can watch the webcast here on demand.
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State of the art medical center opens in Shreveport – KTALnews.com
Posted: June 13, 2022 at 2:07 am
SHREVEPORT, La. (KTAL/KMSS) Residents in the Shreveport area will now be able to get several high-level lifesaving treatments for some conditions closer to home.
The Center for Molecular Imaging and Therapy is a brand new state-of-the-art imaging center using PET imaging to diagnose and assess diseases such as cancer, dementia, and heart disease sooner. PET imaging can also monitor for the possible recurrence of many cancers.
Targeted radiopharmaceuticals produced by CMIT will help diagnose diseases more precisely and accurately and will help physicians in choosing more effective treatment options and guide better outcomes for patients, said CMIT Executive Director Dr. Pradeep Garg.
Director of Imaging Sciences Stephan Lokitz says the new $20 million facility will set them up for the next phase of medicine.
Officials say the new center will promote economic development and expand the workforce in the area over the next five years.
The new Center for Molecular Imaging and Therapy will enhance Louisianas position in the increasingly competitive life sciences sector by attracting contracts from out-of-state entities that drive revenue streams and create high-paying jobs, said Louisiana Economic Development Secretary Don Pierson.
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NIH awards USC more than $16 million for research on vascular dysfunction and Alzheimer’s disease | Keck School of Medicine of USC – University of…
Posted: June 13, 2022 at 2:07 am
Research funded by the grant will capitalize on the development of biomarkers and advanced imaging by scientists at the Keck School of Medicine of USC to launch studies tracking changes in the blood-brain barrier, neurovascular function and cognition.
By Hope Hamashige
Blood vessels in the brain (Credit: Stevens INI)
The National Institute on Aging, a division of the National Institutes of Health, awarded Berislav Zlokovic, MD, PhD, director of the Zilkha Neurogenetic Institute, and Arthur W. Toga, PhD, director of the USC Mark and Mary Stevens Neuroimaging and Informatics Institute (Stevens INI), $16.1 million to continue research on the role that blood vessel dysfunction plays in the development of dementia and Alzheimers disease.
Berislav Zlokovic, MD, PhD, director of the Zilkha Neurogenetic Institute (Photo USC)
There is increasing evidence that neurovasculature has a major role in early cognitive decline, said Zlokovic, chair and professor of physiology and neurosciences at the Keck School of Medicine of USC. This grant allows us to continue important research on how changes in the blood-brain barrier and blood flow interact with amyloid-beta and tau pathology to trigger structural and functional changes in the brain leading to cognitive impairment and early Alzheimers disease.
More than 30 years ago, Zlokovic was among the first to propose that flaws in the blood-brain barrier, which keeps harmful substances in the blood from moving into brain tissue, could be the early, underlying cause of most cognitive disorders, rather than the accumulation of amyloid beta plaque, which had long been the focus of Alzheimers research. With this award, he and his colleagues can further test this so-called neurovascular hypothesis.
This work will build on our earlier work, which has shown that people can progress to mild cognitive impairment, independent of amyloid beta and tau if the blood-brain barrier is damaged, said Zlokovic.
Documenting Alzheimers disease progression
The funding will allow the team of researchers to launch longitudinal studies comparing the progress of more than 400 people who have a genetic variant putting them at high risk for developing Alzheimers disease known as apolipoprotein E4 (APOE4) with more than 450 people with APOE3, a different variant which puts them at lower risk for developing Alzheimers disease.
About 75% of the participants will be cognitively unimpaired at the start of the study and about 25% will have only mild impairment. The researchers will follow them for five years, tracking changes in the blood-brain barrier, blood flow and the brains structure and function while monitoring participants for cognitive impairment, using neuroimaging and molecular biomarkers indicating blood vessel dysfunction, which were developed by Zlokovic, and advanced brain imaging technology developed by Toga.
Perivascular spaces in the brain highlighted using data from the Stevens INIs ultra-high field 7T MRI scanner Credit: Stevens INI
Using our ultra-high field 7T magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scanner has transformed our understanding of how fluid-filled regions in the brain perivascular spaces impact brain health. Here at the Stevens INI, we have successfully used this advanced imaging to facilitate breakthroughs, including the central role that perivascular space plays in brain changes associated with aging, including neurodegenerative disorders, said Toga, Provost Professor of Ophthalmology, Neurology, Psychiatry and the Behavioral Sciences, Radiology and Engineering at the Keck School of Medicine. Our imaging capabilities have allowed us to create a multimodal assessment of the role of neurovasculature in cognitive decline, a comprehensive research program on perivascular spaces, and numerous close-up investigations of how fluids travel through the brain, including via the blood-brain barrier. Im thrilled to have received this funding to continue our work in partnership with Dr. Zlokovic.
Arthur W. Toga, PhD, director, Mark and Mary Stevens Neuroimaging and Informatics Institute Director. (Photo INI)
Researchers hope the work will lead to a better understanding of the onset and progression of Alzheimers disease and the identification of the best interventions for different stages of the disease.
Testing treatments in the lab
Simultaneously, the team will conduct complementary laboratory research using mice that have been genetically altered to carry human APOE gene variants to help document changes in the brain that lead to cognitive decline and to test a potential treatment.
The treatment is an experimental neuroprotective enzyme co-developed by Zlokovics team, in collaboration with John Griffin, PhD, from the Scripps Research Institute, called 3K3A-APC, an engineered form of human activated protein C. Researchers will test it in the altered mice to see if it can protect the integrity of the blood-brain barrier and prevent cognitive decline. In addition they hope to examine whether this type of intervention is effective at the earliest signs of vascular dysfunction or at later stages of disease in mouse models that also have amyloid beta and tau. The National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS) recently awarded funding for a pivotal Phase 3 clinical trial of 3K3A-APC in stroke patients, led by Patrick Lyden, MD, professor of physiology and neuroscience at the Zilkha Neurogenetic Institute.
We hope that the results of this research will eventually lead us to new treatments for people with the APOE4 gene, said Zlokovic.
Turning biomarkers into a blood test for Alzheimers disease
Zlokovic added that they continue to improve on key molecular biomarkers, and he hopes eventually to discover biomarkers detectible in blood, which would make the process of identifying people at risk for Alzheimers disease simpler and more accessible.
We have been pursuing several avenues of research that all complement one another, said Zlokovic. We believe that this research will contribute to important new findings about the pathogenesis of cognitive decline and will also lead to development of important new therapies for cognitive impairment, dementia and Alzheimers disease.
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Enhertu Breast Cancer Drug Results in Unheard-of Survival Rates – The New York Times
Posted: June 13, 2022 at 2:07 am
The patients had metastatic breast cancer that had been progressing despite rounds of harsh chemotherapy. But a treatment with a drug that targeted cancer cells with laserlike precision was stunningly successful, slowing tumor growth and extending life to an extent rarely seen with advanced cancers.
The new study, presented at the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology and published on Sunday in the New England Journal of Medicine, would change how medicine was practiced, cancer specialists said.
This is a new standard of care, said Dr. Eric Winer, a breast cancer specialist, director of the Yale Cancer Center and head of the A.S.C.O. Dr. Winer was not involved with the study. He added that it affects a huge number of patients.
The trial focused on a particular mutant protein, HER2, which is a common villain in breast and other cancers. Drugs that block HER2 have been stunningly effective in treating breast cancers that are almost entirely populated with the protein, turning HER2-positive breast cancers from those with some of the worst prognoses into ones where patients fare very well.
But HER2-positive cases constitute only about 15 percent to 20 percent of breast cancer patients, said Dr. Halle Moore, director of breast medical oncology at the Cleveland Clinic. Patients with only a few HER2 cells a condition known as HER2-low were not helped by those drugs. Only a small proportion of their cancer cells had HER2, while other mutations primarily drove the cancers growth. And that posed a problem because the cancer cells evaded chemotherapy treatments.
The clinical trial, sponsored by the pharmaceutical companies Daiichi Sankyo and AstraZeneca and led by Dr. Shanu Modi of Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, involved 557 patients with metastatic breast cancer who were HER2-low. Two-thirds took the experimental drug, trastuzumab deruxtecan, sold as Enhertu; the rest underwent standard chemotherapy.
In patients who took trastuzumab deruxtecan, tumors stopped growing for about 10 months, as compared with 5 months for those with standard chemotherapy. The patients with the experimental drug survived for 23.9 months, as compared with 16.8 months for those who received standard chemotherapy.
It is unheard-of for chemotherapy trials in metastatic breast cancer to improve survival in patients by six months, said Dr. Moore, who enrolled some patients in the study. Usually, she says, success in a clinical trial is an extra few weeks of life or no survival benefit at all but an improved quality of life.
The results were so impressive that the researchers received a standing ovation when they presented their data at the oncology conference in Chicago on Sunday.
Trastuzumab deruxtecan was already approved for patients with HER2-positive breast cancer, but few expected it to work because other drugs for such cancers had failed in HER2-low patients.
The drug consists of an antibody that seeks out the HER2 protein on the surface of cells. The antibody is attached to a chemotherapy drug. When trastuzumab deruxtecan finds a cell with HER2 on its surface, it enters the cell, and the chemotherapy drug separates from the antibody and kills the cell.
But what is unique and distinct about trastuzumab deruxtecan, Dr. Modi adds, is that the chemotherapy drug seeps through the cells membrane. From there, it can move into nearby cancer cells and kill them as well.
Like all chemotherapy, trastuzumab deruxtecan has side effects, including nausea, vomiting, blood disorders and, notably, lung injuries that led to the deaths of three patients in the trials.
But, Dr. Winer said, if I were a patient with metastatic breast cancer, and if I were to get a drug with chemotherapys side effects, Id prefer this drug.
Doctors have said they are planning to try the treatment in their breast cancer patients who have metastatic HER2-low cancers.
We are all going back and looking at our patients right now, said Dr. Susan Domchek, a breast cancer specialist at the University of Pennsylvanias Abramson Cancer Center. She says that even before the Food and Drug Administration approves trastuzumab deruxtecan for HER2-low patients, she will see if the data from the new study will be enough to convince insurers to approve the drug, which has a wholesale price of about $14,000 every three weeks.
Dr. Winer emphasized that trastuzumab deruxtecan is not a drug for earlier stage breast cancer; it still must be tested in that group of patients. But that is a likely next step, as is testing the drug in other cancers and extending its strategy beyond HER2.
This strategy is the real breakthrough, he said, explaining that it would enable researchers to zoom in on molecular targets on tumor cells that were only sparsely present.
This is about more than just this drug or even breast cancer, Dr. Winer said. Its real advantage is that it enables us to take potent therapies directly to cancer cells.
One patient in the current study, Mary Smrekar, age 55, of Medina, Ohio, said she felt she got a temporary reprieve from certain death.
She was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2010 and has undergone surgery, chemotherapy and radiation. Her cancer went into remission.
I thought I was free and clear, she said.
But in 2019, the cancer came back. It had spread to her pelvis. She had chemotherapy, but this time, there was little improvement.
Two years ago, she entered the trial at its Cleveland Clinic site. Her cancer has not gone away, but the tumors stopped growing.
Im so happy I got another two years, Ms. Smrekar said. My daughter is getting married next month. I didnt think Id make it to the wedding.
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