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Modern Health & Wellness of Lima institutes regenerative stem cell therapy – Lima Ohio

Posted: September 2, 2017 at 5:43 am

LIMA A chiropractic center that specializes in treating chronic pain is now offering regenerative stem cell therapy, a new healing procedure that is the first of its kind in the area.

Modern Health & Wellness, located at 2425 Allentown Road, has partnered with Ohio Stem Cell and the Stem Cell Institute of America to bring this procedure to the region. According to Ohio Stem Cells doctors, patients can experience a significant decrease in pain and an improvement in range of motion within weeks of one treatment.

The research behind this technology is showing amazing results, said Modern Health & Wellness owner Dr. Patrick Gorman. In time, its our hope that this truly amazing therapy will eliminate the need for drugs and surgery.

Ohio Stem Cell doctors will be on site to administer the regenerative stem cell therapy, which has been approved by the Food and Drug Administration. Gorman said painless stem cell injections will help with arthritic and/or degenerative conditions, especially those found in the knees, hips, shoulders, neck and lower back.

These treatments can repair tissue in the body that has been damaged from age, disease or degeneration. It is accomplished by pinpointing the impaired areas, removing the swelling with anti-inflammatory properties and healing them by regenerating new cells and tissue.

This type of therapy is particularly effective in treating conditions such as degenerative arthritis, degenerative cartilage and ligaments, bone spurs, degenerative joint disease, bursitis and tendinitis.

Stem cell injections and therapy can help people that have bone-on-bone arthritis in their knee, and it can actually regenerate the tissue like the cartilage and the meniscus to help heal that area and allow people to go back to activities and function like they did before, Gorman said.

For those who may be concerned that stem cell therapy is against their religious beliefs, Gorman said it is illegal in the United States to obtain stem cells via an abortion.

The clinics that are harvesting these stem cells actually have to demonstrate and prove beyond a shadow of a doubt that these have been harvested via a successful C-section, he said. No babies are being aborted to obtain these cells.

Gorman added that anyone who is thinking of undergoing regenerative stem cell therapy should set up a consultation at the wellness center, or attend monthly lectures on this topic. The lectures are provided two to three times a month at the Area Agency on Aging 3, which is located in the same building as the wellness center.

We have a lot of people attend those lectures, and its mainly there to help educate people and explain to them what stem cell has done in the past, and what it can do for you, he said.

The next lecture is scheduled for 10 a.m. Sept. 9 at AAA3. Another lecture will be held at 10 a.m. Sept. 23.

Dr. Patrick Gorman, owner of Modern Health & Wellness in Lima, speaks to attendees at a ribbon-cutting ceremony celebrating the centers newly implemented regenerative stem cell therapy on Thursday.

Reach John Bush at 567-242-0456 or on Twitter @Bush_Lima.

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Government website steers patients to unproven medical treatments – MyAJC

Posted: September 2, 2017 at 5:43 am

ClinicalTrials.gov, the federal governments public listing of medical trials, is providing false comfort to consumers and free advertising to for-profit stem-cell clinics offering unproven and loosely regulated treatments, a Sun Sentinel investigation has found.

Patients typically assume trials on the site must have government oversight and be carefully vetted.

They are wrong.

An official of the National Institutes of Health, which oversees the agency that operates ClinicalTrials.gov, confirmed that it does not verify information submitted for posting. Nor does it approve the trials listed, check the qualifications of those who run them, or monitor their results.

Yet unsuspecting patients, many facing diseases without traditional treatments or cures, routinely scour the site in search of experimental options. Their doctors encourage them to use ClinicalTrials.gov. So does the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

Experts say some for-profit stem-cell clinics are exploiting ClinicalTrials.gov as a powerful marketing tool and putting at risk patients who assume their trials are government-approved.

The cases of three women who had severe vision loss following injections at a Sunrise stem-cell clinic have cast scrutiny on the issue. All three traveled to South Florida for treatments at U.S. Stem Cell, and two said they heard about the clinic from its listing on ClinicalTrials.gov.

Florida is a hotspot for for-profit stem-cell clinics. A 2016 report by two professors on the growing number of these clinics nationwide found California had the most with 113, followed closely by Florida with 104. The third-highest was Texas, with 71.

Stem cells are considered one of medicines most promising tools because they have the unique capacity to regenerate and repair damaged tissue. Major U.S. universities and research institutions are exploring cutting-edge stem-cell treatments under established medical protocols.

But this medical frontier has also spawned a cottage industry of for-profit stem-cell clinics that operate with little oversight. They specialize in procedures that slide through an FDA regulatory loophole because they use a patients own cells, extracted from one part of the body and injected into another, in a process that takes no more than one day.

Listings of their trials can be found alongside those of universities, major research institutions and FDA-regulated studies on ClinicalTrials.gov. But their practices may be far different.

Some of these clinics charge thousands of dollars for treatments, unlike most traditional trials that are free to patients. Some dont follow up with patients or collect treatment results data, as is standard in true research trials. Some use the same procedure to treat a variety of maladies, like multiple sclerosis, erectile dysfunction and chronic lung disease.

Patients will find them all on ClinicalTrials.gov.

ClinicalTrials.gov runs on an honor system, said Dr. Michael Carome, health research group director for the nonprofit consumer advocacy group Public Citizen.

While the vast majority of ClinicalTrials.gov listings involve regulated research, Carome said he finds it deeply troubling that a well-intentioned consumer resource is being repurposed by some to promote unproven medical care.

Carrie Wolinetz, associate director for science policy at the National Institutes of Health, said it is the responsibility of those who submit information to ClinicalTrials.gov to be transparent.

They basically are declaring the information is true when they submit the application, Wolinetz said.

She said the NIH agency, the National Library of Medicine, does not have the money, staff or expertise to approve registrations or study results submitted by scientists and researchers.

Some stem-cell clinics listed on ClinicalTrials.gov market themselves as NIH-registered. That doesnt mean they are approved or monitored by the NIH.

The NIH monitors only the trials it funds, Wolinetz said. The FDA monitors trials it regulates.

Private trials without government oversight or funding, including those of for-profit stem-cell clinics, are required to list an Institutional Review Board on ClinicalTrials.gov. These boards are composed of industry professionals hired by the study runners to oversee protocols and progress.

Experts like Paul Knoepfler, a biomedical scientist and frequent blogger on the for-profit stem-cell industry, have questioned the quality of IRBs that serve the stem-cell industry.

Todays bottom line, unfortunately, is that IRB approval of experimental for-profit stem-cell offerings that lack FDA approval may in some cases carry very little weight on its own, Knoepfler, from the University of California, Davis, wrote in March.

He advised patients not to assume IRB approval means a trial is well-run and to ask serious questions about the boards history and track record.

Earl Stringer traveled from his home in Ohio to South Florida for a procedure he saw on ClinicalTrials.gov.

When you go to the website, you think its government-backed. I thought, wow, this is a real solution, he said.

Stringer, 35, was looking to regain vision he had been slowly losing since he was born with optic atrophy. He signed up for the Stem Cell Ophthalmology Treatment Study, a collaboration of a Connecticut-based company called MD Stem Cells and Dr. Jeffrey Weiss, a Margate, Fla., ophthalmologist.

While the MD Stem Cells website says the study is NIH-registered, it is not government-approved or -regulated. The site also says the trial is the largest and most comprehensive stem-cell eye study registered with (NIH).

Weiss said he doesnt need government approval, and his study and results are reviewed by an independent panel that is FDA-monitored. He said he has done stem-cell procedures for eye disease on about 500 patients.

I am using peoples own stem cells. I dont need the FDAs approval, Weiss said.

With others in the stem-cell industry, Weiss said his clinic is helping seriously ill people by offering cutting-edge medicine that would take years to come to market under the FDAs standard trial path. FDA approval requires years of studies showing a treatment is safe and effective.

Stringer, a fitness trainer, Stringer said he borrowed $19,000 from his family for the treatments. In June 2016, he had his own stem cells injected into both of his eyes by Weiss. He said he was disappointed that his vision did not improve and that he now constantly sees spots in his right eye. He stopped sending Weiss the follow-up reports required for the trial.

I thought, Ive wasted my money, he said.

Weiss said Stringers vision had improved when he last saw him, but that none of his patients are told that success is certain.

Weiss said his trial follows proper scientific standards, that he is doing research and publishing papers in medical journals.

There are four peer-reviewed articles attached to his eye studys listing on the website.

Three involve case results from individual patients. A fourth involves a five-patient group.

Vanna Belton, a 30-year-old, Baltimore-area restaurant owner who was almost legally blind, said she was one of those patients profiled. Belton said she dramatically regained much of her vision following her 2014 procedure.

She found the study on ClinicalTrials.gov. For Belton, the studys inclusion on the website meant it was NIH-approved, assuring her the trial was not a for-profit, back-alley clinic selling false promises, she said.

The trial Stringer and Belton participated in was one of 18 cited in a recent analysis that concluded some for-profit stem-cell clinics are using ClinicalTrials.gov to attract customers with the suggestion they are doing government-sanctioned research.

The report, by University of Minnesota bioethicist Leigh Turner and published in the peer-reviewed medical periodical Regenerative Medicine, looked at autologous adult stem-cell therapy trials that he believed required patients to pay for treatment. Twelve had a site in Florida. He found them using search terms online, including patient-funded, patient-sponsored and self-funded.

Experts say charging patients thousands of dollars to participate in a clinical study often is a red flag. Studies traditionally have been funded through drug companies, the government or private grants. Turner found some trials disclosed upfront that there were participation fees but others did not.

They have repurposed the NIHs site as a marketing device, he said. You can see its a powerful technique. Its intelligent and it works.

Duncan Ross, an immunologist who founded Kimera Labs in Miramar, also was included in Turners report. He charges lung disorder patients $7,000 to $10,000 but said he created the nonprofit Kimera Society to help finance needy patients.

To those who criticize clinics that charge for treatments, Ross would say he sees little difference between patients subsidizing research and taxpayer dollars going to NIH-funded studies at universities.

New federal guidelines are being phased in this year to help determine who is responsible for whats on ClinicalTrials.gov and what information must be posted. They would also add penalties for noncompliance and strengthen rules about reporting participants injuries.

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Sofa Vergara’s Ex Might Finally Be Out of Luck In His Battle for Custody of Their Frozen Embyros – Slate Magazine (blog)

Posted: August 31, 2017 at 11:44 pm

Sofa Vergaras embryos are citizens of California.

Christopher Polk/Getty Images for TNT

After years of battling ex-fiance Sofa Vergara in court for custody of a pair of frozen embryos they once made together, condiment entrepreneur Nick Loeb might finally be out of luck. Last week, a federal judge in Louisiana dismissed Loebs suit, saying that the embryos are citizens of California, where Vergara and Loeb conceived and froze them. Thus, the judge ruled, embryos have no legal standing to sue in Louisiana, the only state that gives embryos the right to sue and be sued.

Christina Cauterucci is a Slate staff writer.

Embryos are frozen when they are just clumps of a few dozen cells, equivalent to a vaginally inseminated egg that would still take another week to become embedded in the uterine wall. Louisiana law deems these cells juridical personsnot quite human beings, but deserving of legal rights. In Louisiana, embryos are not merely property of the two people who made them, so any legal disputes must meet the best interest of the in vitro fertilized ovum.

Thats the most likely reason why Loeb sued Vergara in Louisiana, despite the fact that neither party maintains a residence there.* (Loeb says he chose the state because the couple broke up there; he dropped an earlier California suit because he didnt want to name his previous girlfriends whod had abortions.) Actually, Loeb didnt exactly sue Vergarathe embryos, Emma and Isabella, did. Plaintiff EMMA is a female human being at the embryonic stage of life, five days old developmentally, the right to live suit read, claiming that Vergara had effectively abandoned and chronically neglected her children by keeping them frozen in a medical tank since 2013. Though Vergara and Loeb had signed a contract when they were together agreeing that the embryos would never be implanted anywhere without both parties consent, Loeb wanted to nullify the agreement and implant them in a surrogate.

Over the past couple of years, the Vergara-Loeb embryo battle has become a proxy fight for anti-abortion advocates who think frozen embryos should be treated like people. Anti-abortion groups have funded or filed amicus briefs in the embryo disputes of split-up couples, including the case of a Missouri woman named Jalesia McQueen. In the middle of her own court battle over two frozen embryos (Noah and Genesis) with an ex-husband who wanted to dispose of them, McQueen founded an organization called Embryo Defense to advocate for all excess embryos in legal limbo. She aggregates news on the Vergara-Loeb case and uses their photos in images made for sharing on social media. The graphics say things like Sofia says its selfish to let the embryos be born without both parents being in a loving relationship. Shouldnt both parents just love the child? and Please pray for Sofia Vergara and those she called her frozen babies, that shed open her heart so they could be a blessing in her life. One pairs a picture of Loebs face with the question what about a fathers right to choose?

The concept of a fathers right to procreate without input from the woman whose egg created the embryo is a favorite rallying cry of the embryo-protector set. Loeb himself made this argument in a 2015 New York Times op-ed with the magnificent headline Sofa Vergaras Ex-Fianc: Our Frozen Embryos Have a Right to Live. A woman is entitled to bring a pregnancy to term even if the man objects, Loeb wrote. Shouldnt a man who is willing to take on all parental responsibilities be similarly entitled to bring his embryos to term even if the woman objects?

The federal judges decision against Loeb is only the latest in a string of disappointing court losses for those who believe embryos should be treated like people. When Barack Obama lifted a ban on federal funding for embryonic stem cell research in 2009, he was hit with a lawsuit from one Mary Scott Doe, a frozen embryo symbolizing all existing frozen embryos. A federal appeals court ruled that Doe had no standing as an amorphous class that could not prove any actual harm. In 2015, a California Superior Court judge ruled that a contract a divorced couple signed at the medical center where they created the embryo prevented either party from taking unilateral custody of the embryos unless one of the parties died. Even McQueen, the founder of Embryo Defense, lost her suit late last year when a St. Louis court ruled that embryos are marital property of a special character, not human beings with unalienable rights.

That St. Louis case might be the most promising decision yet for those who believe that no person should be able to incubate an embryo without the consent of the other person whose genetic material it carries. The others, which rest on the tenets of contract law, legal standing, and jurisdiction, say more about how the suits were filed than what rights adults have to the embryos they create. Still, Loebs loss could set a welcome precedent in these kinds of cases: Jurisdiction-shopping embryo protectors might find Louisiana to be a less hospitable home for a lawsuit than theyd imagined.

*Correction, August 31, 2017: This piece originally referred to "the most likely reason why Loeb sued Vergara in California, despite the fact that neither party maintains a residence there." It should have said Louisiana.

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North Korea, Mumbai, Texas: Your Friday Briefing – New York Times

Posted: August 31, 2017 at 11:44 pm

Above, Mr. Xi and the president of Tajikistan, Emomali Rahmon, who was in Beijing for official meetings ahead of the BRICS summit meeting that begins Sunday in the coastal city of Xiaomen.

_____

New dangers are emerging as floodwaters recede in Texas and the dwindling Harvey storm system moves through Louisiana and into Mississippi.

Explosions were reported overnight at a damaged chemical plant near Houston, a hub for chemical and petrochemical plants. More blasts are feared. And much of the city is still covered in a toxic stew of chemicals, sewage, debris and waste.

Heres a quick guide to our full coverage access is free. Check here for the latest.

_____

Pakistans most controversial murder trial ended in a verdict that stunned many.

A terrorism court acquitted five suspected Taliban and Al Qaeda militants in the 2007 assassination of the former prime minister Benazir Bhutto and declared the former ruler Pervez Musharraf, who is living in exile, a fugitive in the case.

He rejects any involvement in her death, and her party intends to appeal. The long-running case has been dogged by intimidation and threats to the judiciary from militants.

_____

Youve heard of Brexit. What about WAxit?

Thats what some are calling a proposal for the state of Western Australia to secede over a long-running grievance about tax revenues.

Its not the first time politicians in Perth, above, have considered such a move. Our team in Sydney takes a look at the reasons behind the campaign, and what comes next.

_____

The 20th anniversary of Princess Dianas death on Thursday stirred emotions and memories around the world.

Our correspondent in London at the time examines how, two decades on, her influence is still felt in unexpected ways. We also looked at Dianas life in photographs and headlines from The Times.

And a journalist who was at the Paris hospital when Prince Charles arrived to take Dianas body home answered readers questions in a Facebook Live segment.

Toshiba missed a second self-imposed deadline to choose an investor for its $18 billion microchip business. It continues to veer among offers from Bain Capital, Western Digital and Foxconn.

Qantas rerouted its Kangaroo Route from Sydney to London through Singapore, handing it a victory over its aviation-hub rival Dubai.

Emerging camera technologies like facial scanning, augmented reality and 3-D scanning are reshaping the future of the smartphone.

U.S. stocks were up. Heres a snapshot of global markets.

A building collapsed in rain-ravaged Mumbai, killing at least 14 people, according to a local official. Rescuers scrabbled through the rubble hunting for survivors. [The New York Times]

Nearly two million Muslims have arrived in Saudi Arabia for the hajj, including Iranian Shiites, who did not participate last year. [Reuters]

The Trump administration ordered Russia to close several diplomatic sites, in San Francisco, New York and Washington, in retaliation for Moscows limits on U.S. embassy staffing in Russia. [The New York Times]

Iraqs prime minister claimed victory in Tal Afar, one of the last Iraqi cities held by the Islamic State, after an 11-day battle. [The New York Times]

Casualties from cluster bombs more than doubled in 2016. The vast majority of victims were in Syria. Other countries reporting casualties were Laos, Yemen, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Iraq, Lebanon, Libya, Serbia, South Sudan and Vietnam. [The New York Times]

A man in Melbourne was charged with destroying wildlife after a video taken by a laughing friend showed him brutally killing an injured kangaroo that he addressed in Chinese. The video caught Australian authorities attention after it went viral on Chinese social media. [Shanghaiist]

Japanese scientists believe they are on the verge of a breakthrough in the treatment of Parkinsons disease. Their tests on monkeys show that transplanting dopamine-producing nerve cells created from human stem cells can reduce symptoms. [The Asahi Shimbun]

Tips, both new and old, for a more fulfilling life.

Recipe of the day: Some days, you just want to relax on the couch with a cheese-steak sub.

Exercise can have contradictory effects on appetite.

Theres a simple method to expedite creativity: Gather tools, remove distractions.

Theres been royalty, tennis and otherwise, at the U.S. Open: Nick Kyrgios, a 22-year-old Australian known for his talent and temper, is always accompanied by his mother, Norlaila, a Malaysian princess.

How to get rich in Trumps Washington. The Times Magazine examines how the rules of influence have changed in the U.S. capital and spawned a new breed of lobbyist.

In Myanmar, river dolphins help fishermen herd fish into nets on the Irrawaddy River, but overfishing, pollution and a lack of interest among the young threaten that relationship.

On Sunday, Princess Mako, the eldest grandchild of Emperor Akihito of Japan, and Kei Komuro, her college boyfriend, are set to officially announce their engagement.

Law and tradition dictate that the princess, by marrying a commoner, will become a commoner herself. (Above, the princess with her father.)

Although this has happened before, the engagement has fanned a debate about whether the Imperial Household Law, which regulates Japans first family, needs changing.

To the Japanese public, the tradition appears increasingly anachronistic. Opinion polls find large majorities favor allowing women to remain in the imperial family after marriage, and allowing them to become sovereign.

After all, the wife of Akihito was a commoner before their marriage. Akihitos successor, Crown Prince Naruhito, also married a commoner.

Even conservatives who oppose such changes see the threat of a potential succession crisis. The family now has only five men, including Akihito.

Japan has the oldest continuous monarchy in the world, but only eight women have ruled in the nearly 2,700-year history of the Chrysanthemum Throne.

People close to the emperor say that he agrees women should be allowed to succeed him.

I dont think he sticks to the narrow idea that only a male on the throne is acceptable, a friend of the emperor recently told our correspondent.

Patrick Boehler contributed reporting.

_____

If photographs appear out of order, please download the updated New York Times app from iTunes or Google Play.

We have briefings timed for the Australian, Asian, European and American mornings. You can sign up for these and other Times newsletters here.

Your Morning Briefing is published weekday mornings and updated online.

What would you like to see here? Contact us at asiabriefing@nytimes.com.

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Daily on Healthcare: Kasich and Hickenlooper unveil Obamacare rescue plan…don’t count on conservative support – Washington Examiner

Posted: August 31, 2017 at 11:44 pm

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Kasich and Hickenlooper unveil Obamacare rescue plan: Republican Gov. John Kasich of Ohio and Democrat Gov. John Hickenlooper of Colorado on Thursday unveiled a plan to fix Obamacare's exchanges that includes injecting new funds into the controversial law. The plan calls for Congress to create a temporary stability fund that states can use for a reinsurance program, which reimburses insurers for major losses. The governors don't give an exact figure for the stability fund. But they pointed to a recent failed Obamacare repeal bill that would have given states $15 billion a year to address issues in Obamacare's individual marketplaces. "We recommend funding the program for at least two years and fully offsetting the cost so it does not add to the deficit," according to the letter outlining the plan. The letter was sent a week before Congress returns and starts work on a bipartisan stabilization plan. The Kasich-Hickenlooper plan also aims to boost rural insurer competition by exempting the health insurance tax for any insurer that offers plans in counties that have only one carrier. It would allow residents to buy into the Federal Employee Benefit Program, which gives rural residents the same healthcare access that federal workers get.

For Kasich, its the next phase in a long progression toward embracing Obamacare. In 2010, Kasich ran as a Tea Party candidate vowing to fight Obamacare. Even after bypassing his state legislature to impose Obamacares Medicaid expansion, he insisted he was still in favor of repealing Obamacare, a stance he took during his presidential run. This year, however, as Republicans in Congress worked on a plan to repeal and replace Obamacare that would have phased out the Medicaid expansion, Kasich became increasingly defensive of the law, culminating with his latest plan aimed at rescuing Obamacare. Additional signatories on the plan are Govs. Brian Sandoval of Nevada, Bill Walker of Alaska, Tom Wolf of Pennsylvania, Terry McAuliffe of Virginia, Jon Bel Edwards of Louisiana, Steve Bullock of Montana.

Conservatives wont support Obamacare rescue detached from broader changes: Though the Kasich-Hickenlooper plan notes that the U.S. House and Senate proposed $15 billion a year in aid to states to stabilize markets, its important to remember that this plan was only supported by conservatives as a compromise with moderates as part of a broader plan that would have repealed a lot of Obamacares taxes and spending. Absent those changes, it doesnt stand a chance with conservatives. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., himself noted that it was controversial to offer bailout money without greater reforms. So any plan would likely have to pass, as many budget agreements have in recent years, with Democratic support and amid massive defections from Republicans. Even if such a coalition were theoretically plausible, would McConnell, already embarrassed by the failure to deliver on the seven-year promise to repeal and replace Obamacare, really want the only thing he does on healthcare be a major rescue package for the law he vowed to undo root and branch?

Welcome to Philip Kleins Daily on Healthcare, compiled by Washington Examiner Managing Editor Philip Klein (@philipaklein), Senior Healthcare Writer Kimberly Leonard (@LeonardKL) and Healthcare Reporter Robert King (@rking_19). Email dailyonhealthcare@washingtonexaminer.com for tips, suggestions, calendar items and anything else. If a friend sent this to you and youd like to sign up, click here. If signing up doesnt work, shoot us an email and well add you to our list.

Sen. Kamala Harris endorses Bernie Sanders single payer bill Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., said during a town hall Wednesday that she will endorse Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., bill to extend Medicare to all Americans. The move comes as Harris has taken heat from Sanders supporters over her progressive bonafides. Harris, said to be a top Democratic prospect for the 2020 presidential election, had previously announced she supports the idea of a single-payer system because it makes sense from a fiscal perspective. "Healthcare should be a right, not a privilege," Harris said. "This should not be a partisan issue. It shouldn't even be a bipartisan issue. It should be a nonpartisan issue."

Trump administration may not have an Obamacare signup target The Trump administration may break with former President Barack Obama and not establish an enrollment target for Obamacare for next year. An administration official refused to offer a target for 2018 signups Wednesday, saying too many factors could affect how to set that target, chief among them high prices for Obamacare next year. "It is hard to say that we can get to this target or that target because there are so many things going on in the market," said the official, speaking on background. "The bottom line is the prices continue to go up." Last year, the Obama administration set an ambitious goal of signing up 13.8 million people by the end of open enrollment in January. About 12.2 million people signed up, and about 10 million paid their premiums as of June. Open enrollment for 2018 is scheduled to start on Nov. 1 and run until Dec. 15, which is about six weeks shorter than 2017's open enrollment.

Investigation into Zinke health threats ends An investigation into Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke's alleged healthcare threats against Alaska's senators has ended. The Interior Department inspector general concluded "further investigation would be unproductive." In July, two top House Democrats wrote a letter asking for an investigation into a phone call Zinke had with Sens. Dan Sullivan and Lisa Murkowski, reportedly saying Murkowski's vote against the legislation had put Alaska in jeopardy with the administration. Murkowski later voted against Obamacare repeal. She also put a temporary hold on some nominees that Zinke had been requesting the Senate to confirm. Murkowski is the chairwoman of the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources. The letter also asked investigators to look into whether Zinke violated federal anti-lobbying laws as well as the Hobbs Act, which "prohibits actual or attempted robbery or extortion affecting interstate or foreign commerce."

Revolutionary cancer treatment comes with hefty price tag A new cancer treatment will be sold for nearly half a million dollars, sparking criticism from some patient advocates.

On Wednesday, the Food and Drug Administration approved the first gene therapy in the U.S. called Kymriah, which customize a patient's own immune cells to fight a type of leukemia through a therapy called CAR-T. The drug's maker, Novartis, plans to sell the treatment for $475,000 for the one-time dose. The company said the price is actually below some independent estimates, including an appraisal from the United Kingdom's National Institute for Cost Effectiveness that pegged a cost-effective price between $600,000 and $750,000.

"We looked at the current standards of care, such as the cost of allogenic stem cell transplants, which is between $540,000-$800,000 for the first year in the U.S.," Novartis said in a statement to the Washington Examiner. "These external assessments as well as our own health economic analysis of the value of Kymriah, all indicated that a cost effective price would be $600,000 to $750,000." But some advocates are upset at the high price tag. "Kymriah's price tag is simply a continuation of the pattern of sky-high launch prices that spins further out of control each year," according to the Campaign for Sustainable Rx Pricing, an advocacy group that includes insurers, nurses, hospitals and doctors.

Groups to petition FDA to remove some opioids A coalition of doctor and related advocacy groups plan to petition the Food and Drug Administration on Thursday, which is International Opioid Awareness Day, to remove specific opioid products. The groups plan to hold a candlelight vigil Thursday night and then march to the White House. The groups participating are the Association of State and Territorial Health Officials, National Safety Council and Physicians for Responsible Opioid Prescribing. It remains unclear what opioid products the groups want to remove. The FDA has faced criticism from advocates for approving too many opioids as the opioid epidemic has raged across America. Federal data shows that opioid overdoses kill about 77 Americans a day.

Senate Finance to hold CHIP hearing The Senate Finance Committee plans to hold a hearing to kickstart moves to reauthorize the Childrens Health Insurance Program, which needs to be reauthorized by the end of September. The committee will hold a hearing on Sept. 7 on the program. By bringing together those most familiar with CHIP, this hearing will allow members to learn about the current state of the program, which has long enjoyed strong bipartisan support. I look forward to continuing to work with members on the Committee and the administration to ensure continued funding and uninterrupted services for CHIP. The hearing will feature the mother of a CHIP recipient, an administration official in charge of the program and a state director of medical assistance services from Virginia.

RUNDOWN

Axios How to keep Obamacare stabilization narrowThe Hill Five public health crises facing Houston after HarveyAssociated Press Medicare to foot the bill for treadmill therapy for leg painWashington Post Some hospitals evacuated, but Houstons medical world mostly withstands HarveyWall Street Journal Voters urge bipartisanship as Congress returns to WashingtonNPR Why the toxin trouble with tiny turtles continues

THURSDAY, AUG. 31

7 p.m., Rockville, Md. Maryland Sen. Ben Cardin holds a town hall to discuss healthcare at Johns Hopkins Universitys Rockville, Md., campus. 9601 Medical Drive. events2@cardin.senate.gov

FRIDAY, SEPT. 1

8:15 a.m. Bethesda, Md., National Institutes of Health holds a meeting of the Council of Councils. Details.

WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 6

10 a.m. 430 Dirksen. The Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee will hold a hearing on stabilizing the Obamacare exchanges. State insurance commissioners will testify. help.senate.gov/hearings/stabilizing-premiums-and-helping-individuals-in-the-individual-insurance-market-for-2018-state-insurance-commissioners

THURSDAY, SEPT. 7

9 a.m. 430 Dirksen. The Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee will hold a second hearing on stabilizing the Obamacare exchanges, with several governors testifying. help.senate.gov/hearings/stabilizing-premiums-and-helping-individuals-in-the-individual-insurance-market-for-2018-governors

10 a.m., 215 Dirksen. The Senate Finance Committee holds a hearing on reauthorizing the Childrens Health Insurance Program. https://www.finance.senate.gov/hearings/the-childrens-health-insurance-program-the-path-forward

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Daily on Healthcare: Kasich and Hickenlooper unveil Obamacare rescue plan...don't count on conservative support - Washington Examiner

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Penn Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeon Driven by Desire to ‘Make Someone Whole Again’ – Penn Current

Posted: August 31, 2017 at 11:44 pm

In his office at the University of Pennsylvania, oral and maxillofacial surgeon Rabie Shanti sits at his computer, clicking through photos of patients hes operated on.

He pulls up an image of a mouth open wide, tongue extended.

This is a recent case, he says, pointing to one side of the tongue that looks slightly different from the other. This is forearm skin with an artery and vein taken from the arm. That surgery was done the same day the patient had their tongue cancer resected. We used those tissues and vessels to reconstruct the tongue to allow this patient to maintain their ability to eat and speak after having almost half of their tongue removed.

Those familiar with grafting surgery may understand that, after a burn, for example, surgeons can take portions of skin from one part of the body to replace skin lost from another area. But what Shanti is describing is something even more mind-bending. He reconstructs tongues, as well as other portions of the oral cavity, using tissues and bone harvested from other parts of the patients own body.

The work is remarkable, but taxing for the patient. So when hes not busy in the clinic, Shanti, who joined Penns School of Dental Medicine as an assistant professor last year, is devoting energy in the lab to better understand what drives oral cancers and to design new structures that will more effectively replace the tissues his patients lose during surgery, whether due to cancerous or benign tumors, trauma or inflammatory conditions.

I think that I was always fascinated with the idea of putting something back together, says Shanti, who also holds an appointment as assistant professor in Penns Perelman School of Medicine. Most of what is done in dentistry is really reconstructive, whether its rebuilding the tooth surface or part of the jaw.

When Shanti was a college student at Florida Atlantic University, he became interested in pursuing dental medicine as a career, though being a surgeon was not on his radar.

At that time, aside from having braces, I had no deep experience with dentistry, he says. I thought I wanted to be an orthodontist. I didnt know what an oral and maxillofacial surgeon was until I was in dental school.

He attended dental school at Harvard University, pausing his studies to spend two years as a Howard Hughes Medical Institute research scholar working in an orthopedics laboratory at the National Institutes of Healths National Institute for Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases. The lab was headed by Rocky Tuan, who is now at the University of Pittsburgh. At the NIAMS, Shanti delved into tissue engineering, focusing on designing new materials to help regrow muscle and bone.

I quickly noticed that my research interests were fueled by my clinical interests, and one area that really interested me was reconstructive surgery of the jaw and tongue, particularly reconstruction for pathology, he says. Seeing someone who had a benign tumor or cancer that involved their upper or lower jaw bone, and now theyve lost that part of their body, but being able to make someone whole again, that really drew me in.

After completing his dental degree, Shanti went on to pursue his residency in oral and maxillofacial surgery at Rutgers University, an experience he likens to being a kid in a candy store, enticed by all the possible areas in which to focus. He earned his M.D. at Rutgers along the way. He then went on to Louisiana State University for a two-year fellowship, pursuing research and bolstering his experience in reconstructive microsurgery, which involves taking tissues and blood vessels from one part of the body and connecting them to another part of the body to make it a living tissue. Shanti left LSU for Penn in 2016.

Through much of his training and still today, Shanti has pursued research in an area that sparked his interest early on in dental school: ameloblastoma, a rare tumor of the jaw, affecting 1 in 2 million people. This tumor type is resistant to most forms of treatment, leaving patients with surgery as the only viable option. These procedures often result in the loss of large portions of the lower or upper jaw.

Shantis investigations have examined the role of mesenchymal stem cells, which dwell in the bone marrow, in supporting ameloblastoma tumors. Working with his research mentor, Anh Le, the Norman Vine Endowed Professor of Oral Rehabilitation and chair of the Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery/Pharmacology at Penn Dental Medicine, Shanti has looked for ways to disrupt the communication between these stem cells and tumor cells as a way of possible preventing their aggressive growth.

A second research interest for Shanti is tissue engineering, specifically to improve tongue reconstructions. The tongue can be affected by invasive squamous cell carcinoma, and to treat it can involve removing large portions of tissue. Shanti works closely with Le in her lab at Penn Dental Medicine towardengineering constructs that could help a patient regrow tissue rather than using tissue taken from another body part.

I think were on the cusp with tissue engineering and using engineered stem-cell-based constructs to reconstruct tissues of the head and neck, says Shanti. I think thats going to be a really significant advancement in reconstructive surgery that I hope to be a part of during my career and lifetime.

In the clinic, Shanti alternates time seeing patients at the Hospital of the University Pennsylvania and Pennsylvania Hospital, working with colleagues to address the diverse needs of his patients. He notes that the comprehensive and collaborative care offered by Penn was part of the appeal of joining the faculty here.

For patients with head and neck cancer, the part of the body that is affected, our face and head, is not only part of our identity, but it has significant functions, Shanti says. Penns Abramson Cancer Center, of which the faculty of Penn Dentals Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery are part, brings all the specialists together to get these patients back to their day-to-day. Our team includes surgeons, radiation oncologists, medical oncologists, nurse navigators, speech language pathologists, nutritionists, social workers, oral-medicine specialists, prosthodontists, and we all go over each case together. Its patient-centered rather than practitioner-centered.

Shanti has seen a lot of progress in his field. Today, hes able to plan out surgeries thoroughly in advance using digital tools.

I can get on a computer with images of the patient, design the surgery, simulate it and identify where Im going to make the cuts in bone, how the tumor is going to come out and how Im going to rebuild it, he says. Then Im provided with customized materials, cutting guides and plates designed specifically for the patient. It not only helps increase the precision and accuracy of the surgery, but it also minimizes the time we spend in the operating room because were not doing that guess work thats already done.

Still he feels there is a long way to go.

Describing another case, Shanti this time shows a photo of a bright, healthy-looking smile.

This is from a patient I saw Monday, he says. She had an ameloblastoma and we did a computer planned and customized free-flap reconstruction using bone and skin from her lower leg. She has a dental prosthesis and is doing well.

Shanti hopes it wont be long before many more patients will be able to arrive at this stage, with fewer invasive procedures.

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Penn Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeon Driven by Desire to 'Make Someone Whole Again' - Penn Current

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FDA announces first US gene therapy approval for cancer treatment – East Idaho News

Posted: August 31, 2017 at 11:44 pm

National 0Updated at 3:22 pm, August 30th, 2017 By: Michael Nedelman, CNN We Matched

(CNN) The US Food and Drug Administration approved a new leukemia treatment, which the agency considers the first gene therapy it has cleared to hit the market in the United States.

The treatment, called Kymriah, aims to give some patients a second chance after first-line drugs have failed. This may happen in up to a fifth of patients, according to the FDA.

Each dose of Kymriah contains a patients own immune cells, which are sent to a lab to be genetically modified using a virus. This therapy known as chimeric antigen receptor T-cell therapy, or CAR-T gives the cells the ability to recognize and kill the source of the cancer.

Were entering a new frontier in medical innovation with the ability to reprogram a patients own cells to attack a deadly cancer, FDA Commissioner Dr. Scott Gottlieb said in a statement.

Weve never seen anything like this before and I believe this therapy may become the new standard of care for this patient population, said Dr. Stephan Grupp, director of cancer immunotherapy at Childrens Hospital of Philadelphia, which spearheaded this research.

An FDA advisory committee had recommended the therapy for approval in July to treat the relapse of a blood cancer known as B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia, or ALL.

Based on available data, patients on the treatment have had an 89% chance of surviving at least six months and a 79% chance of surviving at least a year, with most being relapse-free at that point.

Almost 5,000 people were diagnosed with ALL in 2014, according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. More than half were children and teens. ALL is the most common type of cancer among children, according to the National Cancer Institute.

Most patients with ALL recover through other treatments such as radiation, chemotherapy and stem cells. But if the cancer recurs, the prognosis is poor.

There has been an urgent need for novel treatment options that improve outcomes for patients with relapsed or refractory B-cell precursor ALL, Novartis, the drug company that makes Kymriah, said in a statement.

Kymriah is a first-of-its-kind treatment approach that fills an important unmet need for children and young adults with this serious disease, Dr. Peter Marks, director of the FDAs Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research, said in a statement.

The one-time treatment has a boxed warning for cytokine release syndrome or CRS, a life-threatening side effect that can cause blood pressure to drop dangerously low. It is caused by overactive genetically modified immune cells. The FDA said hospitals and clinics must become certified to distribute the treatment, meaning they are prepared to recognize and treat CRS and other potentially fatal neurological events. Novartis said it hopes to have an initial network of 20 treatment centers within a month with plans to expand that to 32 by the end of the year.

Kymriah has a $475,000 price tag; however, patients who do not respond within a month of treatment will not be charged, according to Novartis.

Novartis is collaborating with (Centers for Medicaid Services) to make an outcomes-based approach available to allow for payment only when pediatric and young adult ALL patients respond to Kymriah by the end of the first month. Future potential indications would be reviewed for the most relevant outcomes-based approach, the drug company said in a statement.

On Wednesday, the FDA also expanded approval for another drug, tocilizumab, to treat CRS in patients 2 and older.

In the main study that informed the advisory committees decision in July, roughly half of 68 patients experienced high-grade CRS, though none died from it. Slightly fewer patients experienced neurological events, such as seizures and hallucinations.

Novartis is required to conduct followup study to assess the safety of the treatment long-term.

CNN Wire and the CNN Video Affiliate Network is an online syndication service providing text and video versions of CNN's award-winning news coverage. Articles featured include reporting on world news, politics, finance, health, entertainment and technology.

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FDA announces first US gene therapy approval for cancer treatment - East Idaho News

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First genetic engineering therapy approved by the FDA for leukemia – Ars Technica

Posted: August 31, 2017 at 11:42 pm

Enlarge / Scanning electron micrograph of a human T cell.

For the first time, the Food and Drug Administration has approved a therapy that involves genetically engineering a patients own cells, the agency announced Wednesday.

The therapy, called Kymriah (tisagenlecleucel) by Novartis, will be used to reprogram the immune cells of pediatric and young adult patients with a certain type of leukemia, called B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia. During a 22-day out-of-body retraining, patients immune cellsspecifically T cells that patrol the body and destroy enemiesget a new gene that allows them to identify and attack the leukemia cells.

Such therapies, called CAR-T therapies, have shown potential for effectively knocking back cancers in several trials, raising hopes of researchers and patients alike. But they come with severe safety concernsplus potentially hefty price tags.

Nevertheless, the FDA announced its approval with fanfare and optimism, calling it a historic action. In the announcement, FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb said:

Were entering a new frontier in medical innovation with the ability to reprogram a patients own cells to attack a deadly cancer. New technologies such as gene and cell therapies hold out the potential to transform medicine and create an inflection point in our ability to treat and even cure many intractable illnesses. At the FDA, were committed to helping expedite the development and review of groundbreaking treatments that have the potential to be life-saving.

Like all CAR-T therapies, Kymriah involves reprograming body-guard T cells to contain a gene that codes for a protein called chimeric antigen receptor or CAR. This protein allows the T cells to recognize and attack cells that have a protein called CD19 hanging off themwhich leukemia cells do.

In the Kymriah procedure, researchers first harvest T cells from a patient and then send them to a manufacturing center. There, researchers insert the CAR gene into the immune cells using a virus. The process takes 22 days, Nature reported.

In an earlier trial, 52 of 63 participants (82.5 percent) achieved overall remission after undergoing the therapy. The trial is unpublished and lacked controls, so its not possible to determine Kymriahs influence. But trials of other CAR-T therapies have shown similarly high rates of remission. And the early results were enough to sway an external panel of FDA scientific advisors in July. In a unanimous vote on July 12, the panel recommended that the FDA approve Kymriah.

This is a major advance and is ushering in a new era, panel member Malcolm Smith, a pediatric oncologist at the US National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Maryland, told Nature at the time.

But, the story isnt all rosy. CAR-T therapies are known to cause life-threatening immune responses called cytokine storms or cytokine release syndrome (CRS). This can lead to systemic full body inflammation, with organ failure, seizures, delirium, and brain swelling. Several trials of therapies similar to Kymriah have reported deaths.

In the Kymriah trial, 47 percent of patients experienced some level of CRS, but none died. Novartis reported that it was able to manage all the cases of CRS.

The FDA noted the risk in todays announcement and also revealed that it had expanded the approved use of a drug called Actemra, which treats CRS, so it can be used in patients who receive CAR-T therapy. The FDA also approved Kymriah with a risk evaluation and mitigation strategy or (REMS). This involves additional safeguards such as extra training and protocols for healthcare providers.

For now, though, Kymriah is only approved for use in patients aged 25 or younger who have failed conventional therapies or relapsed since undergoing those therapies. Of the roughly 3,100 patients aged 20 or younger who are diagnosed each year with acute lymphoblastic leukemia, about 15 to 20 percent will fail treatment. For these patients, Kymriah may be a literal life-saver, as there are few alternatives.

But along with the frightening side effects, gene therapy may also come with a hefty price tag. UK experts have appraised one round of therapy at $649,000. Its still unclear what the actual cost will be and what patients will end up having to pay.

In a press release, Novartis announced that its working with Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to come up with outcomes-based pricing. Also in the release, Bruno Strigini, CEO of Novartis Oncology, added:

We are so proud to be part of this historic moment in cancer treatment and are deeply grateful to our researchers, collaborators, and the patients and families who participated in the Kymriah clinical program. As a breakthrough immunocellular therapy for children and young adults who desperately need new options, Kymriah truly embodies our mission to discover new ways to improve patient outcomes and the way cancer is treated.

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First genetic engineering therapy approved by the FDA for leukemia - Ars Technica

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The Secret Ingredient That Stops Honeybees From Becoming Queens – New York Times

Posted: August 31, 2017 at 11:42 pm

Neither substance is sufficient alone, said Dr. Chen-Yu Zhang, co-author of the study and a professor of biochemistry at Nanjing University in China. The royal jelly and plant microRNA work together to affect caste formation.

Were taking you on a journey to help you understand how bees, while hunting for pollen, use all of their senses taste, touch, smell and more to decide what to pick up and bring home.

Researchers raised honeybees in the lab to study the effects of the plant microRNA in bee bread. They found that larvae raised on diets supplemented with the plant material had smaller bodies and smaller ovaries than those raised without the supplement. Further experiments showed that one of the most common types of plant microRNA found in bee bread targets a gene in honeybees, TOR, which helps determine caste.

They did a nice job documenting the specific role of microRNA that has a very profound impact on this development, said Xiangdong Fu, a professor of cellular and molecular medicine at UC San Diego who was not involved with the study. Its fascinating. Depending on what you eat, you can end up a different way.

This information could provide new insight into the mysterious trend of rising honeybee deaths in the last decade, which could have a large impact on agriculture.

Xi Chen, a co-author of the paper and a professor of biochemistry at Nanjing University, said plant microRNA could play a role. We could check if changing microRNA in certain plants can cause the disappearance of the honeybee, he said.

The study also points to the interdependence of plants and honeybees. The plant substance that affects bee development is also important for the formation of certain flowers, Dr. Zhang said. The molecules can make a flower larger and more colorful, which attracts more bees and helps spread its seed, a sign of plant and insect co-evolution.

This is a large, emerging area of research, according to Dr. Philip Askenase, a professor of medicine and pathology at Yale University School of Medicine, who was not involved in the study. Here you have evolutionary dependence of the creature and the plants, he said. MicroRNA from plants can influence bee development and microRNA from bees can influence the pollen they spread, affecting the next generation of plants. They are mutually contributing microRNA to each other. Thats a big deal.

Learning more about how these molecules can affect species in different kingdoms like plants and insects or plants and humans could help identify therapeutic applications for cancer treatments or to suppress allergic reactions, Dr. Askenase said. Some important biological problems could now be addressed with this new knowledge of how nature works, he said.

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The Secret Ingredient That Stops Honeybees From Becoming Queens - New York Times

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Hofstra and Northwell rename medical school following $61 million donation – The Island Now

Posted: August 31, 2017 at 11:42 pm

Donald and Barbara Zuckers foundation donated $61 million to the medical school founded by Hofstra University and Northwell Health, the organizations announced on Wednesday, leading to renaming the school for the couple.

Most of the donation or $50 million will go towards a permanent endowment to provide students need-based scholarship support in the Zucker School of Medicine.

Some $10 million meanwhile goes towards creating and endowing the Barbara Hrbek Zucker Emerging Scientists Program at the Feinstein Institute for Medical Research, which is headquartered in Manhasset.

The program is intended to prepare postdoctoral fellows for successful careers and support early career faculty in developing research programs.

More so than any other donors in our history, Don and Barbara Zucker have been extraordinary supporters of causes where we have historically struggled to get financial support, Michael J. Dowling, president and chief executive officer of Northwell Health, said in a statement.

Their latest gifts are a testament to the Zuckers leadership as philanthropists who recognize the vital role of medical education and research in transforming the future of medicine.

Donald Zucker, 86, a New York City real estate developer from Sands Point, and his wife Barbara, donated to Northwell in the past. The couple gave to organizations like the Zucker Hillside Hospital in Glen Oaks, Lenox Hill Hospital in Manhattan and the Elmezzi Graduate School of Molecular Medicine in Manhasset.

Lawrence Smith, the founding dean of the Zucker School of Medicine and physician-in-chief at Northwell Health, said that the couple recognized how important it is to support students financially.

Their generosity will ensure that our medical school will continue to be represented by a highly diverse, talented student body that reflects the communities we serve throughout the New York metropolitan area, Smith said.

Hofstra University and Northwell Health first launched the medical school in 2008. It currently has 400 students enrolled and had more than 7,000 applicants competing for 100 spaces in 2016.

Almost a decade ago, we set out to create a new model of medical education that would improve health care in our region and today we mark another milestone in that journey, said Stuart Rabinowitz, the president of Hofstra University. The Zuckers support solidifies and expands our commitment to train innovative physicians whose backgrounds and experiences are as diverse as the people they treat.

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Hofstra and Northwell rename medical school following $61 million donation - The Island Now

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