Page 1,658«..1020..1,6571,6581,6591,660..1,6701,680..»

Gene therapy "seems extraordinary" at fighting blood cancer in study, experts say – CBS News

Posted: February 28, 2017 at 12:43 pm

In this May 2016 photo provided by Kite Pharma, cell therapy specialists at the companys manufacturing facility in El Segundo, Calif., prepare blood cells from a patient to be engineered in the lab to fight cancer. The experimental gene therapy, called CAR-T cell, turns a patients own blood cells into specialized cancer killers.

Kite Pharma via AP

An experimental gene therapy that turns a patients own blood cells into cancer killers worked in a major study, with more than one-third of very sick lymphoma patients showing no sign of disease six months after a single treatment, its maker said Tuesday. In all, 82 percent of patients had their cancer shrink at least by half at some point in the study. Its sponsor, California-based Kite Pharma, is racing Novartis AG to become the first to win approval of the treatment, called CAR-T cell therapy, in the U.S. It could become the nations first approved gene therapy. A hopeful sign: the number in complete remission at six months 36 percent is barely changed from partial results released after three months, suggesting this one-time treatment might give lasting benefits for those who do respond well.

Play Video

Genes are at the core of our identity, and they have been at the center of stunning advances in medical diagnosis, gene therapy and alteration. B...

This seems extraordinary ... extremely encouraging, said one independent expert, Dr. Roy Herbst, cancer medicines chief at the Yale Cancer Center. The worry has been how long Kites treatment would last and its side effects, which he said seem manageable in the study. Follow-up beyond six months is still needed to see if the benefit wanes, Herbst said, but added, this certainly is something I would want to have available. The therapy is not without risk. Three of the 101 patients in the study died of causes unrelated to worsening of their cancer, and two of those deaths were deemed due to the treatment. It was developed at the governments National Cancer Institute and then licensed to Kite. The Leukemia and Lymphoma Society helped sponsor the study. Results were released by the company and have not been published or reviewed by other experts. Full results will be presented at the American Association for Cancer Research conference in April. The company plans to seek approval from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration by the end of March and in Europe later this year. The treatment involves filtering a patients blood to remove key immune system soldiers called T-cells, altering them in the lab to contain a gene that targets cancer, and giving them back intravenously. Doctors call it a living drug permanently altered cells that multiply in the body into an army to fight the disease. Patients in the study had one of three types of non-Hodgkin lymphoma, a blood cancer, and had failed all other treatments. Median survival for such patients has been about six months. Kite study patients seem to be living longer, but median survival isnt yet known. With nearly nine months of follow-up, more than half are still alive. Six months after treatment, 41 percent still had a partial response (cancer shrunk at least in half) and 36 percent were in complete remission (no sign of disease).

These scans show a 62-year-old man with non-Hodgkin lymphoma, at left in December 2015, and three months after treatment with Kite Pharmas experimental CAR-T cell therapy at MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston. The scans are from a presentation by Drs. Fred Locke and Sattva Neelapu, provided by the American Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation and Kite.

ASBMT/Kite Pharma via AP

The numbers are fantastic, said Dr. Fred Locke, a blood cancer expert at Moffitt Cancer Center in Tampa who co-led the study and has been a paid adviser to Kite. These are heavily treated patients who have no other options.

One of his patients, 43-year-old Dimas Padilla of Orlando, was driving when he got a call saying his cancer was worsening, chemotherapy was no longer working, and there was no match to enable a second try at a stem cell transplant. I actually needed to park ... I was thinking how am I going to tell this to my mother, my wife, my children, he said. But after CAR-T therapy last August, he saw his tumors shrink like ice cubes and is now in complete remission. They were able to save my life, Padilla said. Of the study participants, 13 percent developed a dangerous condition where the immune system overreacts in fighting the cancer, but that rate is lower than in some other tests of CAR-T therapy. The rate fell during the study as doctors got better at detecting and treating it sooner. Roughly a third of patients developed anemia or other blood-count-related problems, which Locke said were easily treated. And 28 percent had neurological problems such as sleepiness, confusion, tremor or difficulty speaking, but these typically lasted just a few days, Locke said. Its a safe treatment, certainly a lot safer than having progressive lymphoma, and comparable to combination chemotherapy in terms of side effects, said the cancer institutes Dr. Steven Rosenberg, who had no role in Kites study. The first lymphoma patient Rosenberg treated this way, a Florida man, is still in remission seven years later. There were no cases of swelling and fluid in the brain in this or any other study testing Kites treatment, company officials said. That contrasts with Juno Therapeutics, which has had a CAR-T study put on hold twice after five patient deaths due to this problem. Company officials would not say what the treatment might cost, but other types of immune system therapies have been very expensive. Its also being tested for some other types of blood cancer.

2017 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Read this article:
Gene therapy "seems extraordinary" at fighting blood cancer in study, experts say - CBS News

Posted in Cell Therapy | Comments Off on Gene therapy "seems extraordinary" at fighting blood cancer in study, experts say – CBS News

Stem cell therapy can help treat diabetic heart disease – The … – Economic Times

Posted: February 28, 2017 at 12:43 pm

KARAIKAL: Recent advancements in stem cells research have given hope for successfully treating diabetic heart disease (DHD), renowned New Zealand-based researcher in cardiovascular diseases Dr Rajesh Katare said today.

DHD affected the muscular tissues of the heart leading to complications and it had been demonstrated that resident stem cells of myocardium can be stimulated to repair and replace e degenerated cardiac myocytes resulting in a novel therapeutic effect and ultimately cardiac regeneration, he said.

Katare, Director of Cardiovascular Research Division in the University of Otago, New Zealand, was delivering the keynote address at the continuing medical education programme on "Role of Micro-RNAs and stem cells in cardiac regeneration in diabetic heart disease" at the Karaikal campus of premier health institute JIPMER.

Presenting clinical evidences, Katare said stem cell therapy certainly presented a new hope for successfully treating DHD.

Jawaharlal Institute of Post Graduate Medical Education (JIPMER) Director Dr Subash Chandra Parija pointed out that it was the first such programme on the role of stem cells in cardiac regeneration in the whole of the country.

He said as diabetes was highly prevalent in the country, providing treatment for DHD had become a big challenge. Patients suffering from the condition have to undergo lifelong treatment and medications. "In this backdrop, advancements in stem cell therapy assume significance," he said.

Read the original here:
Stem cell therapy can help treat diabetic heart disease - The ... - Economic Times

Posted in Cell Therapy | Comments Off on Stem cell therapy can help treat diabetic heart disease – The … – Economic Times

Anti-Diabetes Plan Progressing In Kansas Legislature – KCUR

Posted: February 28, 2017 at 12:43 pm

When the Kansas Senate comes back after this weeks midsession break, it may consider legislation to form a comprehensive state plan to fight diabetes.

House Bill 2219 would instruct the Kansas Department of Health and Environment to conduct an analysis of state costs from diabetes, identify best practices to prevent and control the condition, and develop a budget to implement those practices.

It also would require the agency to report on the plans progress every two years.

Just before the break the House voted 117-7 to pass the bill, which is one of the main legislative priorities for the American Diabetes Association. Four other states passed similar plans in 2016, according to the organization.

According to the American Diabetes Association, diabetes affects almost 13 percent of the adult population in Kansas and leads to about $2 billion in health care costs annually.

The associations numbers include an estimated 69,000 Kansans who have undiagnosed diabetes. Numbers from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that include only those with diagnosed diabetes ranked Kansas at 21st highest in the country, at 9.5 percent.

People with diabetes are unable to produce or properly use insulin, a hormone that turns food into energy. There are two main forms:Type 1 diabetes, previously known as juvenile diabetes, andType 2 diabetes, the most common kind. Common complications of diabetes include heart and blood vessel disease, kidney damage, blindness and nerve damage.

Larry Smith is president of the National Diabetes Volunteer Leadership Council, a Kentucky-based nonprofit that testified for the Kansas bill. He said Kentucky was the first state to enact a diabetes action plan and about one-third of states have them now.

It has opened the eyes of the Legislature and the government that there is a problem and its a big drain on their budget, said Smith, whose daughter has Type 1 diabetes.

Smith said the push to fight diabetes in Kentucky began with Gov. Ernie Fletcher, a Republican physician who led the state from 2003 to 2007.

He realized the cost that diabetes put on the state budget was substantial and held them back on a number of things they wanted to do in terms of education or infrastructure and so forth, Smith said.

A similar bill died in the Kansas House in 2015. But Rep. Susan Concannon, a Republican from Beloit who brought this years bill, said the current version was voted through in part due to testimony from Rep. Blaine Finch, a Republican from Ottawa, and from his teenage daughter who has diabetes.

It was a little more meaningful for us this year to have one of our colleagues make it more personal, Concannon said.

Andy Marso is a reporter for KCURs Kansas News Service, a collaboration of KCUR, Kansas Public Radio and KMUW covering health, education and politics in Kansas. You can reach him on Twitter@andymarso. Kansas News Service stories and photos may be republished at no cost with proper attribution and a link back to kcur.org.

Read the original here:
Anti-Diabetes Plan Progressing In Kansas Legislature - KCUR

Posted in Diabetes | Comments Off on Anti-Diabetes Plan Progressing In Kansas Legislature – KCUR

China Diabetes Market Report 2017: Patients, Prevalence, Oral Antidiabetics, Insulin and Diagnostics – Research and … – Yahoo Finance

Posted: February 28, 2017 at 12:43 pm

DUBLIN--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

Research and Markets has announced the addition of the "China Diabetes Market Report: Patients, Prevalence, Oral Antidiabetics, Insulin and Diagnostics" report to their offering.

China currently has the highest number of diabetics in the world. The disease has presently reached epidemic proportions in the adult population. Around three decades ago, less than one percent of the Chinese adult population had diabetes. These levels, however, have increased to around 12 percent - making it the diabetes capital of the world.

The rise of diabetes in China can be attributed to a number of factors. Driven by a strong economic growth over the past few decades, the Chinese population has become richer, fatter and less mobile. Apart from urbanisation and sedentary lifestyles, Chinese people are also genetically more vulnerable to diabetes compared to Europeans and many other population groups. Other factors such as poor awareness of health issues, high consumption of white rice, poor healthcare infrastructure, etc. have also driven the prevalence of the disease.

China's diabetes statistics may ring alarm bells for the government and healthcare authorities, for drug and diagnostic manufacturers, however, it represents a goldmine. Fuelled by a continuous increase in healthcare expenditures, the market for diabetes drugs and diagnostics is expanding robustly in the country. This is creating lucrative opportunities for global healthcare companies at a time when growth rates in the more developed markets have declined.

The report provides both current and future trends in the prevalence, demographical breakup, diagnosis and treatment of diabetes in China. The research study serves as an exceptional tool to understand the epidemiology, market trends, therapeutic structure, competitive structure and the outlook of the Chinese diabetes market. This report can serve as an excellent guide for investors, researchers, consultants, marketing strategists and all those who are planning to foray into the China diabetes market in any form.

Key Topics Covered:

1 Preface

2 Research Methodology

3 Executive Summary

4 Introduction

5 Diabetes Disease Overview

6 China Diabetes Epidemiology

7 China Diabetes Market

For more information about this report visit http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/9h3kbw/china_diabetes

View source version on businesswire.com: http://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20170228006026/en/

Read the original post:
China Diabetes Market Report 2017: Patients, Prevalence, Oral Antidiabetics, Insulin and Diagnostics - Research and ... - Yahoo Finance

Posted in Diabetes | Comments Off on China Diabetes Market Report 2017: Patients, Prevalence, Oral Antidiabetics, Insulin and Diagnostics – Research and … – Yahoo Finance

Washington-Lee student working to raise $100000 for diabetes research – Inside NoVA

Posted: February 28, 2017 at 12:43 pm

Ever since he was diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes as a fifth-grader at Claremont Elementary School, Alex Simmons has been committed to raising funds for the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation (JDRF).

Now a Washington-Lee High School sophomore, he moves closer to his goal of raising $100,000 for diabetes research during a Feb. 25 event that drew more than 130 neighbors and friends to the Lyon Park Community Center.

The party, which included a silent auction, was hosted by five Arlington families who have supported Simmons since his diagnosis. The event raised more than $15,000, with all proceeds going directly to the JDRF, and boosted Alex Simmonss fund-raising totals so far to $75,500 in donations.

Ever since our son Alex was diagnosed with diabetes five years ago, the JDRF has been a big part of our lives, said Anita Simmons, a new member of the board of directors of the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation Greater Chesapeake and Potomac Chapter. They provide hope and guidance for so many families as we learn to cope with this diagnosis and protect our childrens health.

At the celebration, guests enjoyed a fully catered dinner by the Hard Times Caf, beverages from Dogfish Alehouse, a silent auction and the musical sounds of the Roger Taylor Quartet as they connected over a common cause.

Many Arlington businesses made donations, including local artist Sabrina Cabada, independent bookstore One More Page and SPARK Business Academy.

Previous fund-raisers have included local basketball tournaments, small parties with a purpose and a bingo night hosted by Simmons grandmother, Alease Brooks, a resident of Arlingtons The Carlin.

Bill Parsons, executive director of the Greater Chesapeake and Potomac Chapter, said the Feb. 25 event was one of the largest peer-to-peer fund-raising events his organization has seen in this area.

The commitment this family has made to bringing awareness to juvenile-diabetes issues and raising money for research has been incredible, he added. We all love the Simmons family Anita Simmons is a force of nature.

Complications of juvenile diabetes can be disabling and life-threatening. Each day, Alex Simmons who over the winter played on the varsity boys basketball team at Washington-Lee must monitor his blood sugar levels and give himself six to eight insulin shots, yet he remains focused on the positive.

I am not on this journey alone, and my close friends, family and relatives make this process much easier for me, he said. I encourage everyone who can to please donate money to the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation, not only for me, but for all of the children throughout the country who dont have it as easy as I do.

Alex Simmons is now a youth ambassador for the organization, and also leads a team that takes part in the annual OneWalk event on the National Mall.

Anita Simmons said their family is especially grateful to Rich Kelly and Cindy MacIntyre of the Hard Times Caf for providing all of the food for the fund-raising event, as well as for the help they extended to Alex and his family when he was first diagnosed with the disease. The Kellys daughter also has Type 1 diabetes, and they are strong supporters of Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation.

For information on Alex Simmons fund-raising efforts, see the Web site at http://bit.ly/2mmGi5g.

Read more:
Washington-Lee student working to raise $100000 for diabetes research - Inside NoVA

Posted in Diabetes | Comments Off on Washington-Lee student working to raise $100000 for diabetes research – Inside NoVA

Should Dentists Screen Periodonitits Patients for Diabetes? – Endocrinology Advisor

Posted: February 28, 2017 at 12:43 pm

Should Dentists Screen Periodonitits Patients for Diabetes?
Endocrinology Advisor
In people who had never been diagnosed with diabetes, the researchers found that 47% of the group with severe periodontitis had prediabetes, and 18.1% had type 2 diabetes. In the mild-to-moderate group, 46% were found to have prediabetes and 9.9% ...

Go here to read the rest:
Should Dentists Screen Periodonitits Patients for Diabetes? - Endocrinology Advisor

Posted in Diabetes | Comments Off on Should Dentists Screen Periodonitits Patients for Diabetes? – Endocrinology Advisor

‘Small Town Throwdown’ for Zach Standen on March 11 – The Redding Pilot

Posted: February 27, 2017 at 4:42 pm

Bobby Paultauf and his band will play the throwdown.

Those in the Redding, Easton area are probably aware of what happened to Joel Barlow High School student Zach Standen in the summer of 2016. Zach was in a devastating auto accident that left him partially paralyzed.

He needs hope and support from as many people as possible. He needs countless medical procedures in order to gain movement to his legs again through stem cell treatment due to a tragic car accident that made him paralyzed.

To help support Standens recovery, local musicians Bobby Paltauf, of the Bobby Paltauf Band, and Grayson Hugh, of Grayson Hugh & the Moon Hawks, will play a benefit show on Saturday, March 11 at the Fairfield Theater Company.

The family has started a GoFundMe account where people are able to donate to this expensive treatment. Lets all get together and help him walk again, Paultaufs mother, Tiffany, wrote in a press release.

Bobby Paltauf is a senior at Joel Barlow High School, where Standen goes.

Lets all get together and support local live music, especially where it benefits the hope of Zach being able to walk again, his mother wrote.

For the concert benefitting Standen, more information can be found on The Bobby Paltauf Band page on Facebook, and tickets are available at http://www.fairfieldtheatre.org.

Zach Standen coached soccer Oct. 8 at Seaside Park in Bridgeport with, back row, left to right, Mark Roman, Alastair Bruce and Peter Syku.

Standen may be helped by stem cell medical treatments that can be administered in Panama.

The Standen family is in discussions and communication with the Cell Medicine Institute in that country and are pursuing this line of treatment for the young man, who is paralyzed.

We have done much research into stem cell therapy for spinal cord injuries here in the U.S. and Canada, and there just are no clinical trials or clinics that have the experience and track record like this one, the family said in a recent letter. Cell Medicine has been doing this specific treatment since 2006 and has a 60% to 70% success rate of some kind of improvements in most patients within a year.

Each procedure costs $37,200, which includes all medical procedures and ancillary needs. This is not covered by medical insurance.

The family is hoping everyone reading this could go to his GoFundMe page and donate $25, to help Zachs recovery.

To donate, visit: https://www.gofundme.com/stem-cell-therapy-for-zach-standen.

See the original post:
'Small Town Throwdown' for Zach Standen on March 11 - The Redding Pilot

Posted in Cell Medicine | Comments Off on ‘Small Town Throwdown’ for Zach Standen on March 11 – The Redding Pilot

Stem cell therapy may be effective for multiple sclerosis – Clinical Advisor

Posted: February 27, 2017 at 4:41 pm


Clinical Advisor
Stem cell therapy may be effective for multiple sclerosis
Clinical Advisor
Patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) and treated with autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (AHSCT) have approximately a 50% chance of remaining free from neurologic progression for 5 years after transplant, according to a study published ...

and more »

Read the original here:
Stem cell therapy may be effective for multiple sclerosis - Clinical Advisor

Posted in Cell Therapy | Comments Off on Stem cell therapy may be effective for multiple sclerosis – Clinical Advisor

Parents sentenced in murder of emaciated teen with untreated diabetes – Fox News

Posted: February 27, 2017 at 4:41 pm

The parents of a teenage boy who died as a result of starvation and untreated diabetes have been sentenced to life in prison without parole for 25 years.

WARNING: DISTURBING CONTENT

Alexandru Radita, 15, weighed just 35 pounds when he was found dead at his home in Calgary, Canada, after suffering years of untreated diabetes.

WHO IS 'BABY SARAH'? POLICE USE DNA TO HELP SOLVE 42-YEAR-OLD COLD CASE

His parents Emil, 60, and Rodica Radita, 54, had made it their mission to isolate Alex from anyone who could monitor his insulin treatment since his diagnosis at the age of two, a court heard.

The Raditas were found guilty of first degree murder on Friday at the end of a trial that saw harrowing testimony from witnesses, including a social worker who tried desperately to save the boy.

Paramedic Deborah Baumback gave distressing evidence regarding the condition of Alexs body when she was called to the scene of his death in 2013.

She described him as emaciated to the point where he appeared mummified, Judge Karen Horner said at the couples sentencing hearing.

His face had no visible flesh left and his left jaw had open sores so deep she could see his jawbone.

Click for more from news.com.au

Read more here:
Parents sentenced in murder of emaciated teen with untreated diabetes - Fox News

Posted in Diabetes | Comments Off on Parents sentenced in murder of emaciated teen with untreated diabetes – Fox News

Lancers’ Rylie Rucker refuses to be sidelined by diabetes – Quad City Times

Posted: February 27, 2017 at 4:41 pm

ELDRIDGE Rylie Rucker was losing weight rapidly. She was getting out of bed and going the bathroom at least five times a night. She could not make it through a two-mile middle school cross country race without walking.

Her mother, Dena, knew something was wrong.

The symptoms resulted in a visit to Trinity Hospital in the Quad-Cities before she was transported to the University of Iowa Hospital and diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes. The date is stamped firmly in her mind: Sept. 7, 2013.

I was so emotional that first day, Rucker said. After that, it sunk in thats how life is going to be for me. You cant do anything about it so youve got to make the best of it.

It has not stopped Rucker from living an active life.

The sophomore is a starter on the Class 4A eighth-ranked North Scott girls basketball team, which opens state tournament play at 6:45 p.m. Tuesday against second-ranked Nevada at Wells Fargo Arena in Des Moines.

Type 1 diabetes is a chronic, lifelong disease where the body doesnt produce enough insulin, a hormone to convert sugar, starches and other food into energy needed for daily life.

For Rucker, it is a daily struggle. She is required to monitor her blood sugar constantly and takes six insulin shots per day on average.

We all know what she really has to go through, but a lot of people dont realize it, senior teammate Erica Loussaert said. She puts on a really tough face and comes out and plays basketball every day. Nobody knows how hard that really is for her. It is just inspiring to see.

Rucker wears a glucose monitor device, part of it clipped to her athletic shorts and a patch under her tricep, that tracks her blood sugar count every five minutes. North Scott assistant coach Devvin Rolston receives the numbers and monitors it closely during workouts and games.

If Rucker is too high or too low, she sits.

Usually during games, Im not low because of the adrenaline, she said. It really kicks into my blood sugar and pumps it up. Im usually 300 during games which is not good.

There have been occasions shes been too low. She was scratched from the starting lineup in one meeting against Bettendorf this season and played sparingly because of it.

She was a spectator at the start of last Fridays practice because of a low count.

Every day you get to see what she goes through, coach TJ Case said. The girls really respect her and know what shes battling.

They know if Rylie can fight through some of this stuff, then some of the stuff theyre dealing with isnt that bad. It is very inspirational to us.

Rucker is a key component of North Scotts success. She is the teams second-leading scorer at 8.5 points per game, shoots almost 80 percent at the foul line and is among its best defenders.

She would go through a brick wall for her teammates, Case said. She does a lot of the little things for us and cleans up things defensively. Shes always around the ball, a very smart offensive player. We lean on her a lot.

Nobody else in Ruckers immediate family has diabetes.

So when she was diagnosed, there was an initial shock. She spent more than two days in an Iowa City hospital room.

The details of that September Saturday are still fuzzy for Rucker. Her older sister, Karli, the teams leading scorer, remembers it well.

Karli was a freshman and playing volleyball at the Muscatine Invitational. Afterward, she and her grandmother met the family in Iowa City.

Everyone was emotional, Karli said. Just that initial time seeing her in that hospital bed, it hurt in your heart because you knew her life just got changed a lot. It is an every day thing, and it is not going to go away until maybe one day they can find a cure.

Rucker tries to keep her blood sugar count between 120 and 180. She doesnt recall what it was at the time of her diagnosis, but she knows it has been as high as 400 during a basketball game.

When it gets like that, I just space out and cant pay attention at all, Rucker said. My mouth gets super sticky.

Conversely, Rucker gets fatigued when the number dips below 100.

Shes very disciplined and a really healthy eater, Karli said. If her numbers are low, she has a really good mindset about it. She doesnt get down about it.

Rucker has learned to embrace the numbers game. Some days are better than others.

Ive just had a determination to not let it get the best of me, she said. It hasnt just been me having to do everything on my own.

My family has been so supportive and helped me through it. It is part of who we are now.

See the rest here:
Lancers' Rylie Rucker refuses to be sidelined by diabetes - Quad City Times

Posted in Diabetes | Comments Off on Lancers’ Rylie Rucker refuses to be sidelined by diabetes – Quad City Times

Page 1,658«..1020..1,6571,6581,6591,660..1,6701,680..»