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Transhumanist Bioweapon & Deactivating the Bluetooth Chips – Hope …

Posted: August 22, 2022 at 2:14 am

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Hope and Tivon from Fix the World Project Morocco are a husband and wife team with backgrounds in US Navy, energy engineering, and business.

They join us tonight to share new research on the Covid-19 Bioweapon shots, and deactivating the bluetooth chips that appear to now be inside human beings.

Check out Hope and Tivons EMF Protection Products here. References for the information presented in this interview can be foundhere.

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Learn How To Protect Your Life Savings From Inflation and An Irresponsible Government, With Gold and Silver

The opinions expressed by contributors and/or content partners are their own and do not necessarily reflect the views of Red Voice Media. Contact us for guidelines on submitting your own commentary. Red Voice Media would like to make a point of clarification on why we do not refer to any shot related to COVID-19 as a "vaccine." According to the CDC, the definition of a vaccine necessitates that said vaccine have a lasting effect of at least one year in preventing the contraction of the virus or disease it's intended to fight. Because all of the COVID-19 shots thus far available have barely offered six months of protection, and even then not absolute, Red Voice Media has made the decision hereafter to no longer refer to the Pfizer, Moderna, or Johnson & Johnson substances as vaccinations.

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The Importance of Medical Ethics Highlighted During the 75Th Anniversary of the Nuremberg Code – The Epoch Times

Posted: August 22, 2022 at 2:14 am

Morals are on our side, science is on our side, the law is on our side, and the Nuremberg Code is on our side.

Thousands of people from many different countries gathered on Aug. 20, 2022 in Nuremberg, Germany to commemorate the 75th anniversary of the creation of the Nuremberg Code. Many activists, physicians, musicians, and others came to speak or perform during the afternoon at an event set up by the World Council for Health in front of the attendees, and a multilingual livestream was set up so that viewers from across the world were able to join in.

The Nuremberg Code is a 10-point document highlighting a set of ethical research principles in experiments involving humans. Initially disregarded when the code was created in 1947, it has come into conversation in light of recent events such as the COVID-19 pandemic.

Dr. Vera Sharav, a medical doctor, Holocaust survivor, activist, and founder of the Alliance for Human Research Protection, was one of the speakers at the open-air event. She spoke about how human experimentation and eugenics never ended with Nazi Germany; how after World War II, thousands of Nazi scientists who operated closely with Hitler, were smuggled into the United States to continue their work.

These were brutal scientists, engineers, and technicians who actively participated in the human eugenics program during the Nazi era, she said, and they dont see people as humans. They legally infiltrated the United States and educated the next generation of scientists and taught them to be indifferent to humans, and ruthless. Sharav says that the reason President Dwight Eisenhower warned of the military-industrial complex during his farewell speech was precisely because many people in the military and weapons sector were no longer interested in the basic rights of humanity.

She refocused the speech on modern times and said that this mode of thinking had never gone away; it has been passed down until today and applied during the COVID-19 pandemic. There were many inhuman aspects to the development of the vaccines, she said, and many of them violated the Nuremberg Code established decades ago, such as waves of mass testing, vaccination, and medical passport efforts.

Sharav drew parallels between the Nazi eugenics movement and the transhumanist theories being promoted today, especially by globalists. The opinion that humans are perfectible through electronic components and biotechnology is known as transhumanism, and many pandemic response measures were in line with this vision.

Another speaker was Dr. Rolf Kron, who came under heavy scrutiny in Germany because he was one of the first doctors to question the COVID-19 narrative. After speaking out against the official policies, he was woken up one day by the police who came and searched his house. This act, however, did not intimidate Kron, and for the past 15 months he has continued to speak out against the vaccine mandates among other things.

Kron said he knew many doctors who were fired because they had written medical certificates for patients exempting them from wearing a mask in public. Doctors in Germany, he said, were under strict scrutiny of the government and had no choice to obey the government because they would otherwise face unemployment, social scrutiny, and other forms of pressure. Doctors are now being looked at like criminals [if they put the wrong foot forward].

He called for an end to the medical tyranny as it seemed like a repetition of the medical offenses that led to the Nuremberg Code in the first place. He strongly reemphasized the codes as the baseline of scientific experimentation and that which should never be violated.

Although the Nuremberg Code is not officially a part of any law in the world, it is still enforced internationally, much like laws against slavery and piracy, said Mary Holland, the president and general counsel of the non-profit organization Childrens Health Defense. It is an international standard established by lawyers and doctors, and the importance thereof cannot be reemphasized enough, especially given the current situation, she said.

Dr. Holland says that although the current situation seems unappealing, it is still not too late. We have been winning for the last two years! The narrative that these injections work is over, [along with testing asymptomatic people and similar former regulations]. Dr. Holland highlighted how crucial the Codes are today, and how vital it is for us to fight back.

Morals are on our side, science is on our side, the law is on our side, and the Nuremberg Code is on our side.

Overall, the energetic event went on for the entire afternoon and hosted many more speakers from a multitude of nations as well as contributing professional musicians.

Views expressed in this article are the opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times. Epoch Health welcomes professional discussion and friendly debate. To submit an opinion piece, please follow these guidelines and submit through our form here.

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Fringe: TV Has Never Been The Same Without This Sci-Fi Show – Fortress of Solitude

Posted: August 22, 2022 at 2:14 am

Since Fringe (one of the best TV shows / series ever) ended in 2013, TV has never been the same, missing an integral and interesting sci-fi link.

Science-fiction has always had a special place on TV, captivating audiences all over the world for decades. Shows like Doctor Who and The Twilight Zone have been fan favourites since the late 1950s, the former even having started in black and white and only in later seasons moving to colour.

Although no longer a popular choice for many studios producing series, network TV was responsible for many of the most influential sci-fi storylines in pop culture today. For example, J.J. Abrams Lost gripped audiences all around the world for over six seasons airing on ABC. Many others followed in its wake, possibly even inspired by the influential Lost, such as Alcatraz, Revolution and Flashforward.

One of the more recent and biggest series that was genre-defining for sci-fi, is another TV show that was spearheaded by Abrams (along with Alex Kurtzman and Roberto Orci): Fringe.

Fringe aired on Fox in 2008 and followed Olivia Dunham, portrayed by Anna Torv, who joined the FBIs Fringe Division after investigating a plane that lands full of dead passengers whose skin has completely crystallized.

She and her team (which included Joshua Jackson as Peter Bishop, John Noble as Dr. Walter Bishop, Jasika Nicole as Astrid Farnsworth, Lance Reddick as Phillip Broyles) look into bizarre cases involving transhumanist experiments that have gone wrong, doomsday cults, giant parasitic worms being smuggled inside illegal immigrants and much more.

The impressive cast also included Blair Brown as Nina Sharp, Michael Cerveris as The Observer, Kirk Acevedo as Charlie Francis, Jared Harris as David Robert Jones and Leonard Nimoy as Dr. William Bell.

Its practically impossible to mention sci-fi series and not think of Chris Carters The X-Files as that was a TV-redefining procedural drama that set one of the highest bars when it comes to mystery and intrigue. Fringe follows in its footsteps with an undeniably similar premise which the TV show is not afraid to flaunt. Its almost surprising how much Fox let them get away with.

The X-Files sees Fox Mulder, portrayed by David Duchovny, and Dana Scully, portrayed by Gillian Anderson, investigating aliens, mad scientists, and the supernatural, yet while following a similar format to the iconic series, Fringe knows its limits and has never tried to outdo its predecessor, never trying to go too big and sticks to experimental science. They have never had to do any more than keep their focus there as they dive into many fascinating directions within those limits, each episode could seemingly sustain a full season-long story all on its own.

Rewatching the sci-fi series today makes it clear that this dose of mystery and weirdness is exactly whats been missing from TV since Fringe ended in 2013.

Many fans hope for a reboot or continuation, however, many more feel that the show had a wonderful conclusion and are quite happy to rewatch the series, dreading that new episodes would break the wonder and mystery of the original. Dont fix what isnt broken, right?

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Economism vs Common Good Part Three | Demythicizing Economism – Patheos

Posted: August 22, 2022 at 2:14 am

Demythicizing EconomismCommon Good Part ThreeSilver Dollar

Just as the Philistine Giant Goliath bellowed threats to the cowering Hebrew army (1 Samuel1 17), economism has buffaloed and bullied our nation and our planet into surrendering to its myth. Might God raise up a humble warrior such as young David to engage the giant in combat?

Here, we will emulate Davids courage. Although the battle appears hopeless, we will carefully place two stones in our sling shot to attack the giant. We will select demythicization plus the common good. Will these hit their mark?

Continuing what we began in the previous posts, we will engage in demythicizing economism. More commonly, we plan on myth-busting economism.

By the Goliath economismwe refer to a set of beliefs that functions mythically in our worldview. Our economic beliefs provide a conceptual set of presuppositions we assume to be true without critical reflection. Like lenses over our eyes, they determine our very perception of reality. These presupposed beliefs define our epoch as the econocene. It [economism] functions as an unspoken worldview, says law professor and founder of Baseline Scenario, James Kwak. Economism provides a framework that people use for interpreting social reality, a style of thinking that shapes, consciously or unconsciously, their values and preferences(Kwak, 2017, 10).

Following economist Richard B. Norgaard and theologian John B. Cobb, Jr., we dub economisms beliefs to constitute a religious dimension within our culture. Whether or not we consciously realize it, we hold membership in the church of economism.

Recall our distinction between demythologizing and demythicizing. I do not engage only in demythologizing, which is a form of interpreting a myth while living within the myths world of meaning. Rather, by demythicizing economism, I intend to liberate us from the grip of thinking only in economic terms when confronting economic injustice combined with threats to planetary wellbeing. We need language and symbols and values that orient us toward a planetary common good. We need a supra-economic vision of a just, sustainable, participatory, and planetary society to guide the ethics of our institutions.

This is the third in our series on the common good. In the first I alerted readers to grass roots support for common good governing. In the second, I announced our agenda: myth-busting economism. Here in the third post, I will uncover and disclose what lies hidden before our very eyes, namely, the myth of economism.

Is Economism a Religion? a Myth? or Both?

Why are you wearing black? I asked my teaching teammate in the Energy and Resources Program at the University of California at Berkeley and the Graduate Theological Union, Professor Richard Norgaard. He was wearing a black shirt, black pants, and black shoes. I bet his socks were black too, but I didnt check. We were co-teaching a course dealing with religious and ethical perspectives on environmental science. It had just dawned on me that this was the wardrobe he routinely wore to every class. I suddenly realized that I can be slow to observe the obvious.

Im in mourning for our planet, he answered.

In mourning? Are you without hope?

Since the year 2000, I wake up each morning and ask myself what I should wear. When the thought enters my mind that today, just as yesterday, our nation is still in the grip of economism with its unrestrained greed and disregard for the future of our planet, I decide once again to wear black. I mourn.

Economism is the term Richard Norgaard elects to describe economic theory as a religion in disguise. Worse. It is a destructive religion at that. Homo sapiens on Planet Earth have entered the Econocene era, he observes. We are at the stage in human evolution where human minds, beliefs, daily aspirations, institutions, and measurements of history are filtered and framed through a single dominating lens, namely, the economic narrative regarding what constitutes reality.

Economism provides the twenty-first century with its conceptual set, its worldview, its myth through which we understand ourselves and interpret the course of both personal and political events. Because of the totalization of the economic metanarrative, economism functions nearly invisibly as the religion which unites America if not the world across ethnic boundaries.

Economist Norgaard is not alone. With equal vehemence, process theologian John Cobb views economism as an idolatrous religion. Economism functions today as our shared religion.From a Christian point of view, it is the idolatrous worship of mammon (Cobb, The Earthist Challenge to Economism: A Theological Critique of the World Bank 1999, 1). Might Norgaard and Cobb agree on a theological analysis of the economy? Yes.

Economist Norgaard has reluctantly found himself in the business of religion. Hed like to convert from economism to something better. Whereas the church of economism estranges the human race from Earth, Norgaard prophesies a vision of an as-yet-unnamed global moral renewal that readies us for reformation, or better, for supersession. Might public theologians and ethicists aid in this vision construction?

I offer one modest amendment to Norgaards description of economism as a religion. Although describing economism as a religion helps illuminate some aspects of our present situation, one point I wish to make is the following: if we employ the term, myth, as an analytical tool, we will gain more direct access to the near invisible manner in which economism governs todays culture. I recommend we think of economism as a myth. By myth I mean a cultural mind-set, a frame of interpretation which heavily influences our view of reality.[1] My employment of myth overlaps largely though not exhaustively with Norgaards term, religion, and I hope it adds illumination.

Once designated a myth, economism becomes subject to de-mythologizing, to an interpretation that exposes its existential and moral underframe. The myth metaphor will prompt us then to de-mythologizeperhaps better, de-mythicizeeconomism, breaking its grip on the modern mind.

In place of this myth I offer a biblical vision of Gods promised future, a transformed future prefigured in Isaiahs vision of the Peaceable Kingdom where the lion lies down with the lamb (Isaiah 11). This prophetic vision opens the human imagination to ask two key ethical questions: (1) should the rich help the poor? and (2) does a vision of the common good bridge Gods eschatological promise with todays economic possibilities? I will answer both of the questions in the affirmative.

These questions are important because postcolonial critics of the global economy liken the market to an enslavement from which we need to be liberated. According to R.S. Sugirtharaja, the postcolonial task today is not territorial emancipation but freedom from the control of the market(Sugirtharajah 2012, 134). The role that economism understood as religion or myth plays is akin to an opiate, as Marx and Lenin might aver, to inoculate us against the pain of environmental degradation.

The economic-environmental crisis drove John Cobb along with Nobel Prize winning economist Herman Daly to produce a most prescient book in 1989, For the Common Good. The delusion of Homo economicus as an individual with no regard for the welfare of the larger biosphere needs to be corrected with a new global economic system, they contend. We call for rethinking economics on the basis of a new concept of Homo economicus as person-in-community(Daly 1989, 164). Each of us is a person-in-community, in community with the entire web of life that makes our planet green with fertility.

Religion is inherently at play in public morality, writes eco-justice ethicist Cynthia Moe-Lobeda. The question is not whether but how (Moe-Lobeda 2013, 9). Uncovering just how our economic belief system functions mythically requires fanning away the dust cloud that hides it.

Why might one even suggest that economics could create its own religion? After all, economics deals with the material world whereas religion deals with what is spiritual, right? In addition, economics does not enlist church memberships or belief systems or moral codes, right? Economics is based on science, whereas religious people live out of faith, right? Economics can be sharply distinguished from politics and culture, right? No, none of this is right. In fact, all these assumptions kick up a cloud of dust which hides the invisible religious character of economism. Here is how Norgaard describes economism.

Our concern here is with economism as a widely held system of faith. This modern religion is essential for the maintenance of the global market economy, for justifying personal decisions, and for explaining and rationalizing the cosmos we have created. This uncritical economic creed has colonized other disciplines, including ecology, as ecologists increasingly rely on economistic logic to rationalize the protection of ecosystems. More broadly, economism often works syncretically with the worlds religions even though it violates so many of their basic tenets. A Great Transition is needed to replace economism with an equally powerful and pervasive belief system that embraces the values of solidarity, sustainability, and well-being for all (Norgaard 2015).

Even though ecnomismthe greed creedis most dominant in the United States, Norgaard observes that economism has reshaped diverse cultures to become for the planet its modern secular religion(Norgaard 2015).[2]John Cobb, Claremont School of Theology

Theologian Cobb provides a parallel definition: economism is the belief that the economy is the most important dimension of human life, that the whole of society should be organized around it (Cobb, Spiritual Bankruptcy: A Call to Prophetic Action 2010, Chap 7). Once we get the economist and the theologian to agree on nomenclature, we are ready for creative mutual interaction.[3] We are ready for discourse clarificationwe are ready for demythicizing economism, one of the two main tasks of the public theologian.

Within the frame of public theology, my own method for dealing with economism as a secular religion includes a hermeneutic of secular experience. This is a method I have employed elsewhere to analyze the structure of myths that model reality for modern and emerging postmodern culture. The hermeneutic of secular experiencea form of demythologizing, actuallyidentifies hidden or disguised dimensions of ultimacy which lurk below the surface of secular practices or ideologies, dimensions of ultimacy which interpret reality in such a way that they enlist faithful adherence.[4] Subsequent to this demythologizing of secular experience, I then try to de-mythicize the myth that governs so much of our social and cultural thinking.[5] First, demythologize economism. Then, demythicize economism.

Of the four main social driverseconomics, politics, culture, and communicationthe churches and other religious institutions may lack economic or political power but they have access to culture. The path to public policy for the church is through culture, and demythicising economism is the first step to influencing public reaction to, if not resistance to, the economy.

With this method in hand, we turn now to economism in more detail to uncover the mythical framework through which existential and moral questions get posed. That we are dealing with the dimension of ultimacy is clear when we recall the rise of the discipline of economics over the last century. One of the founders of the market-oriented Chicago school of economics, Frank Knight, already in 1932 declared that economics would have to become the equivalent of a religion with basic tenets hidden from public view. There must be ultimates, and they must be religious contended Knight. He went on to propose that if someone were to question the purported objectivity of economic tenets the questioner should be treated as if in violation of what is sacred. To inquire into the ultimates behind accepted group values is obscene and sacrilegious, he added(F. Knight 1932). We today can see how nearly a century ago the discipline of economics was deliberately taking on dogmatic status with an authority that relegates criticism to heterodoxy(F. a. Knight 2015). Move over religion! Economics wants to take your place!

When in religion a dogma is proclaimed, then it becomes easy to draw a line between orthodox and heterodox alternatives. This does not exactly apply to economism, however. What turns economic theory into the religion of economism is not outright dogma. Rather, it is the power of its submerged myth to screen the questions society asks. Its presupposed conceptual set functions to filter language and ideas in such a way that our mental assessments and values become pre-structured, so to speak. Relentless economic discourse fogs our minds with interpretations of reality offered hourly in radio, television, and internet communications. The televised Sunday morning worship services of the 1950s have been gradually replaced with stock market reports, economic projections, and investor hand ringing. Hunting bear has been replaced by bear markets, and milking cows with bull markets.

Through discourse clarification, we can sift through what is said to the unsaid. We can search the presuppositions to find the dogmas. Here is what we find: the tenets of belief in the creed of economism.[6] On the one hand, these beliefs are promulgated as dogmas by the high priests of neo-liberalism. On the other hand, we the hoi polloi simply accept them as dogma, usually without question. This widespread acceptance makes them virtually invisible as creedal commitments. Here is a list of seven tenets I plan to lift from obscurity into visibility through discourse clarification.

The problem posed by economism is threefold: (1) economic injustice; (2) ecological deterioration; and (3) degradation of the human soul.

Degradation of the human soul is almost forgotten by todays progressive theologians. But, the souls health was paramount at the birth of liberal Protestant theology more than a century ago. Writing in 1895, Dutch public theologian Abraham Kuyper (1837-1920) drilled down to the coveting of money in the human heart measured against the teachings of Jesus. Everything stalks money. Everything thirsts for money. Virtually all senses and thoughts are set on acquiring money. To gain control over money people will use cunning and guile; they will cheat and deceive each other; they will risk the goods of their wives and children, and sometimes even the goods of strangers that have been entrusted to them. Everything is measured by money. Whoever is rich is a celebrated and honored man. This is just what Jesus does not want (Kuyper 2022, 78-79). What does a healthy soul look like? The souls longing and the hearts desire must be focused on something entirely differenton spiritual goods, on heavenly goods, on the treasures that neither moth nor rust corrupt and where no thief can break through and steal (Kuyper 2022, 79).

If we turn our soul toward spiritual flourishing, what do we get? We get ecodomy. Theologians Barbara Rossing and Johan Buitendag employecodomy within ecotheology to stress the kairotic dimension of the present moment in the face of Gods eschatological promises. By approaching the ecological crisis from an eschatological or even apocalyptic perspective, the concept of ecodomy will help us envision future hope for a new creation and life on earth. If ecodomy is eschatology put into practice, it can help us address the climate crisis. We can name our moment as akairos moment, a moment of hope and urgency. And we can draw on the apocalyptic witness of Scripture to address this crisis, not with despair but with hope hope for what the Gospel of John calls abundant life, hope for a renewal of the whole community of earth, the ecodomy, hope for life in all its fullness.

This has been Part Three on demythicizing economism on behalf of the common good. In Part Four of our Common Good series, we will explicate and analyze each of these seven tenets.

Ted Peters pursues Public Theology at the intersection of science, religion, ethics, and public policy. Peters is an emeritus professor at the Graduate Theological Union, where he co-edits the journal, Theology and Science, on behalf of the Center for Theology and the Natural Sciences, in Berkeley, California, USA. His book, God in Cosmic History, traces the rise of the Axial religions 2500 years ago. He previously authored Playing God? Genetic Determinism and Human Freedom? (Routledge, 2nd ed., 2002) as well as Science, Theology, and Ethics (Ashgate 2003). He is editor of AI and IA: Utopia or Extinction? (ATF 2019). Along with Arvin Gouw and Brian Patrick Green, he co-edited the new book, Religious Transhumanism and Its Critics hot off the press (Roman and Littlefield/Lexington, 2022). Soon he will publish The Voice of Christian Public Theology (ATF 2022). See his website: TedsTimelyTake.com.

This fictional spy thriller, Cyrus Twelve, follows the twists and turns of a transhumanist plot.

Chung, Paul. 2016. Postcolonial Public Theology: Faith, Scientific Rationality, and Prophetic Dialogue. Eugene OR: Cascade Books.

Clague, Julie. 2011. Political Theologies Ten Years after 9/11. Political Theology 12:5 645-659.

Cobb, John. 1982. Process Theology as Political Theology. Louisville KY: Westminster John Knox.

. 2010. Spiritual Bankruptcy: A Call to Prophetic Action. Nashville TN: Abingdon.

. 1999. The Earthist Challenge to Economism: A Theological Critique of the World Bank. New York: St. Martins Press.

Daly, Herman E. and John Cobb, Jr. 1989. For the Common Good: Redirecting the Economy Toward Community. Boston: Beacon Press.

Gilkey, Langdon. 1976. Reaping the Whirlwind: A Christian Interpretation of History. New York: Seabury Crossroad.

Juergensmeyer, Mark. 2013. The Sociotheological Turn. Journal of the American Academy of Religion 81:4 939-948.

Knight, Frank. 1932. The Newer Economics and the Control of Economic Activity. Journal of Political Economy 40:4 448-476.

Knight, Frank, and Thornton Merriam. 2015. The Economic Order and Religion. Manfield CT: Martino Publishing.

Kuyper, Abraham, 2022.On Charity and Justice: Collected Works in Public Theology. Bellingham WA: Lexham.

Kwak, James, 2017.Economism: Bad Economics and the Rise of Inequality. New York: Pantheon.

Lee, Hak Joon. 2015. Public Theology. In The Cambridge Companion to Christian Political Theology, by eds Craig Hovey and Elizabeth Phillips, 44-65. Cambridge UK: Cambridge University Press.

Merchant, Carolyn. 1980. The Death of Nature: Women, Ecology and the Scientific Revolution. New York: Harper.

Metz, Johannes. 1969. Theology of the World. New York: Herder and Herder.

Moe-Lobeda, Cynthia. 2013.Resisting Structural Evil.Minneapolis MN: Fortress.

Norgaard, Richard. 2015. The Church of Economism and Its Discontents. Online Post, ), http://www.greattransition.org/publication/the-church-of-economism-and-itsdiscontents .

Peters, Ted. 2017. God in Cosmic History: Where Science and Big History Meet Religion. Winona MN: Anselm Academic ISBN 978-1-59982-813-8.

. 2nd Ed, 2003. Playing God? Genetic Determinism and Human Freedom. London and New York: Routledge ISBN0-415-94248-0-415-94249-7.

Peters, Ted. 2018. Public Theology: Its Pastoral, Apologetic, Scientific, Politial, and Prophetic Tasks. International Journal of Public Theology 12:2 153-177; https://brill.com/abstract/journals/ijpt/12/1/ijpt.12.issue-1.xml.

Peters, Ted. 2018. Toward a Galactic Common Good. In The Palgrave Handbook of Philosophy and Public Policy, by ed David Boonin, 827-843. New York: Macmillan Palgrave.

Reich, Robert. 2018. The Common Good. New York: Vintage.

Schmitt, Carl. 2007. The Concept of the Political. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Slessarev-Jamir, Helene. 2011. Prophetic Activism: Progressive Religious Justice Movements in Contemporary America. New York: New York University Press.

Sugirtharajah, RS. 2012. Exploring Postcolonial Biblical Criticism. Oxford UK: Oxford University Press.

Taylor, Charles. 2007. A Secular Age. Cambridge MA: Harvard University Press.

Tracy, David. 1981. The Analogical Imagination. New York: Crossroad.

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History of a hard man: Neil Balme memoir stands out from the pack – Sydney Morning Herald

Posted: August 22, 2022 at 2:14 am

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Book critics Fiona Capp and Cameron Woodhead cast their eyes over recent fiction and non-fiction titles. Here are their reviews.

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Neil Balme: A Tale of Two MenAnson Cameron, Viking, $34.99

When former Richmond strongman Neil Balme contacted novelist (and Age columnist) Anson Cameron in 2020 and asked if he would be interested in writing his story, Balme chose well.

The result is not just the tale of a footballers life, but a thoughtful character study of an intriguing figure: a man of paradoxes and contradictions, a thug on the field with a history of violent episodes, but to those who know him a thinker, mild mannered, someone who goes his own way, but also a players player keenly aware of the collective of football itself.

Cameron covers his playing life, his coaching and key administrative roles at various clubs, plus the impact of football on his private life with sympathy, wit (he has a great turn of phrase) and the kind of intellectual inquiry his complex subject requires. A genuine cut above usual sports writing.

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RiggedCameron K. Murray & Paul Frijters, Allen & Unwin, $32.99

For all our nonsense talk of being an egalitarian country, Australia according to World Bank data is one of the most unequal in the developed world. Cameron Murray and Paul Frijters boil this down to something they call the game of mates, the title of their 2017 study, Rigged being an updated version.

In the nature of a parable, they invent a devious, corrupt villain called James, and an ordinary sucker, Sam, who indirectly foots the bill. But its a real-life tale of networks within networks. James works for a government department in land development, gets to know certain developers, jumps the fence and joins them armed with all his inside knowledge and contacts, resulting in massive government contracts.

Transport, mining, banking, COVID schemes that lined companies profits, you name it. The same principle applies.

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The WitnessTom Gilling, Allen & Unwin, $34.99

Much has been written about the infamous Sandakan death marches in Borneo during World War II, this latest study focusing on one controversial figure: Australian Warrant Officer Bill Sticpewich. Of the 2400 Australian and British POWs sent to Sandakan, only six escapees survived. Sticpewich was one of them.

Drawing on records and other texts (especially Tim Bowdens interviews with survivors), Tom Gilling creates a vivid picture of the brutality of camp life and sadism of the commander Captain Hoshijima. Sticpewichs evidence during war crimes trials was so compelling it sent Hoshijimi and others to the gallows.

But was he a heroic survivor or a collaborative opportunist out for himself at the expense of everyone else? The truth is possibly somewhere in between. Whatever, its a dramatic tale of war and survival.

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My Father and Other AnimalsSam Vincent, Black Inc., $32.99When Sam Vincent, a would-be writer in his 20s, offered to help out on the family farm just outside Canberra after his fathers hand was damaged in an accident, he could not have seen how events would unfold.

At first, he worked alongside his father, a sort of unpaid apprentice learning the trade, at the same time getting to know his father, warts and all. Then his mother suggested he needed a project of his own, which led to him becoming an orchardist, specialising in the Smyrna fig, which in turn led to grazier school and learning about holistic farming. Then, seven years later, his parents moved off the property, and he was suddenly in charge: a farmer, albeit a kind of accidental one.

True to his title, Vincent recounts it all in a droll, amused and bemused Durrell-esque style. Its also a window onto the new rural Australia.

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Every Version of YouGrace Chan, Affirm, $32.99

Set in a 2080s Melbourne ravaged by climate change, Every Version of You envisages a world where those who can afford it gel up and plug in to spend time on an unspoilt virtual planet known as Gaia. When the tech to allow a full upload into Gaia emerges, people choose to leave their physical bodies behind.

For Tao-Yi, her boyfriend Navin and their friends, the decision tempts and torments: Navin, plagued by ill-health, hopes to find release from suffering; Tao-Yi is left to wonder why shes so reluctant to surrender, as her friends upload themselves one by one.

With an intriguing blend of cli-fi, philosophy of mind and transhumanist themes, Grace Chans novel delivers striking science fiction steeped in absurdity and dystopian menace.

Grace Chan is a guest at the Melbourne Writers Festival.

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Cult ClassicSloane Crosley, Bloomsbury, $29.99

Sloane Crosley, author of the sharp-witted essay collection I Was Told Thered Be Cake, takes on the New York dating scene with a twist in her second novel, Cult Classic.

We follow the disgruntled editor of a psychology magazine, Lola, who is newly engaged to a devoted fiance, Boots, but might be developing an acute case of cold feet. Awkwardly, Lola keeps running in to her exes. With the first, outside a Chinese restaurant, she relights an old flame, but when she continues to run intoher exes again and again, something more bizarre than a coincidence is afoot.

Cult Classic is Twilight Zone-style speculative fiction that fuses acerbic dating memoir and digital media satire into a romantic parable with a neat twist.

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Isaac and the EggBobby Palmer, Headline Review, $32.99

This sensitive and assured debut novel from Bobby Palmer deep-dives into the perils of extreme grief. After the sudden death of his wife, Isaac Addy is in such anguish he finds himself on a bridge about to jump off. A nearby cry of suffering stays Isaacs hand; he heads into the woods and discovers Egg, a mysterious creature who starts as an inarticulate companion then evolves, ushering in an emotional transformation.

Isaac and the Egg could easily have been twee, but this unstinting study of grief is delivered with the seriousness of a fairytale. And while he uses a whimsical premise, Palmer is at pains to avoid sentiment and always has a well-judged flash of gallows humour at hand to leaven the novels bleaker intensities.

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HydraAdrienne Howell, Transit Lounge, $29.99

A young antiquarian, Anja, snaps at work and gets fired. She has a lot going on already: her mother has died recently and her husband left her after a hellish trip to Greece.

When Anja hits rock-bottom, shes drawn to an eerie sea change, using her inheritance to lease an isolated cottage by the sea. But it isnt long before she becomes convinced that shes not alone in the bush, that her every move is being watched, and tension builds as Anja begins to seek an unseen presence and confront the cause of her unease.

Adrienne Howell has written a paranoia-inducing modern gothic. It does suffer from the letdown of an uninspired reveal, but not before showing off the authors distinctly gothic vision and talent for creating suspenseful atmospherics.

The Booklist is a weekly newsletter for book lovers from books editor Jason Steger. Get it delivered every Friday.

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History of a hard man: Neil Balme memoir stands out from the pack - Sydney Morning Herald

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Researchers Identify the Target of Immune Attacks on Liver Cells in Metabolic Disorders – Weill Cornell Medicine Newsroom

Posted: August 22, 2022 at 2:12 am

When fat accumulates in the liver, the immune system may assault the organ. A new study from Weill Cornell Medicine researchers identifies the molecule that trips these defenses, a discovery that helps to explain the dynamics underlying liver damage that can accompany type 2 diabetes and obesity.

In a study published Aug. 19 in Science Immunology, researchers mimicked these human metabolic diseases by genetically altering mice or feeding them a high-fat, high-sugar diet. They then examined changes within the arm of the rodents immune system that mounts defenses tailored to specific threats. When misdirected back on the body, this immune response, which involves B and T cells, damages the organs and tissues it is meant to protect.

For the longest time, people have been wondering how T and B cells learn to attack liver cells, which are under increased metabolic stress due to a high fat high sugar diet, said lead investigator Dr. Laura Santambrogio, who is a professor of radiation oncology and of physiology and biophysics, and associate director for precision immunology at the Englander Institute for Precision Medicine at Weill Cornell Medicine. We have identified one protein probably the first of many that is produced by stressed liver cells and then recognized by both B and T cells as a target.

Back row from left to right: Madhur Shetty; Marcus DaSilva Goncalves; Laura Santambrogio; Lorenzo Galluzzi; Aitziber Buqu. Front row from left to right: Jaspreet Osan; Shakti Ramsamooj; Cristina Clement; Takahiro Yamazaki

The activation of the immune system further aggravates the damage already occurring within this organ in people who have these metabolic conditions, she said.

In type 2 diabetes or obesity, the liver stores an excessive amount of fat, which can stress cells, leading to a condition known as nonalcoholic steatohepatitis, commonly called fatty liver disease. The stress leads to inflammation, a nonspecific immune response that, while meant to protect, can harm tissue over time. Researchers now also have evidence that B and T cells activity contributes, too.

B cells produce proteins called antibodies that neutralize an invader by latching onto a specific part of it. Likewise, T cells destroy infected cells after recognizing partial sequences of a target protein. Sometimes, as happens in autoimmune diseases, these cells turn on the body by recognizing self proteins.

Dr. Santambrogio and her colleagues, including Dr. Lorenzo Galluzzi, assistant professor of cell biology in radiation oncology at Weill Cornell Medicine and Dr. Marcus Goncalves, assistant professor of medicine at Weill Cornell Medicine and an endocrinologist at NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center, as well as researchers from Dr. Lawrence Sterns group at the University of Massachusetts Medical School, wanted to know what molecule within liver cells became their target.

Examining the activity of another type of immune cell, called dendritic cells, led them to a protein, called PDIA3, that they found activates both B and T cells. When under stress, cells make more PDIA3, which travels to their surfaces, where it becomes easier for the immune system to attack.

While these experiments were done in mice, a similar dynamic appears to be at play in humans. The researchers found elevated levels of antibodies for PDIA3 antibodies in blood samples from people with type 2 diabetes, as well as in autoimmune conditions affecting the liver and its bile ducts.

Unlike in autoimmune conditions, however, improving ones diet and losing weight can reverse this liver condition. The connection with diet and a decrease in fatty liver disease was already well established, Dr. Santambrogio said.

We have added a new piece to the puzzle, she said, by showing how the immune system starts to attack the liver.

Many Weill Cornell Medicine physicians and scientists maintain relationships and collaborate with external organizations to foster scientific innovation and provide expert guidance. The institution makes these disclosurespublic to ensure transparency. For this information, see profiles for Dr. Lorenzo Galluzzi and Dr. Marcus Goncalves.

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Researchers Identify the Target of Immune Attacks on Liver Cells in Metabolic Disorders - Weill Cornell Medicine Newsroom

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Why Is CAR T-Cell Therapy One of the Most Phenomenal Advances in Science? – University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus

Posted: August 22, 2022 at 2:12 am

Announcer:Welcome to CU Anschutz 360, a podcast about the CU Anschutz Medical Campus.

Today's installment focuses on a promising breakthrough therapy for patients with large B-cell lymphoma, an aggressive subtype of lymphoma. In a clinical trial for relapsed patients, or patients who didn't respond to treatment initially, CAR T-cell therapy with lisocabtagene maraleucel, or liso-cel, showed significant improvement in keeping patients in remission when compared to the standard of care, which consisted of chemotherapy followed by stem-cell transplantation.

Our guest is Dr. Manali Kamdar, associate professor and clinical director of the lymphoma program in the Division of Hematology at the University of Colorado School of Medicine and a member of the CU Cancer Center. Dr. Kamdar led this groundbreaking study, which was a phase III global clinical trial known as TRANSFORM.

Co-hosting our discussion today are Dr. Thomas Flaig, CU Anschutz's vice chancellor of research, and Chris Casey, director of digital storytelling in the Office of Communications.

Manali Kamdar:Hi everyone. My name's Manali Kamdar. I am an associate professor and the clinical director of the lymphoma program within the Division of Hematology. I am a member of the CU Cancer Center. Looking forward to talking to you today.

Chris Casey:Terrific. And thanks for being here both Dr. Flaig and Dr. Kamdar. Dr. Kamdar, could you start us off by just giving a broad overview of lymphoma?

Manali Kamdar:Sure. So lymphoma is the most common blood cancer. It accounts for the fifth-most common cancer in the United States, so that makes up for about 80,000 patients in the United States. And lymphoma is not really one disease it's made up of nearly 85 different subtypes. So to really understand how to manage lymphomas, it's really important to understand what subtype of lymphoma because the management is very nuanced.

Just to briefly talk about the subtypes, they're primarily divided into aggressive lymphomas and non-aggressive lymphomas. And then the others, where there is a mix of non-aggressive going into aggressive. The current unmet need within the world of aggressive lymphomas is the fact that whenever we have a patient with aggressive lymphoma the frontline therapy is always intensive chemotherapy.

The good news is that we can actually cure at least 40 to 50% of patients, which basically makes the remainder either respond initially to relapse later, or not respond at all. So, that's an unmet need where we need to do better. And in patients with non-aggressive lymphomas, it's basically living with a chronic disease wherein therapies work but, so far whatever we have, these therapies don't have as much of a durability. So, we want to make sure that in these patients, if we are treating it as a chronic disease, we hope to give them treatments that are efficacious, durable, as well as less toxic. So, these are some of the unmet needs within lymphomas as a whole.

Thomas Flaig:Yeah, so it's great to have you here today, by the way. And I've been looking forward to this conversation since we first started talking about it.

So, I'm an oncologist by training. I treat urologic cancers, but, from my perspective in that realm, lymphomas are incredibly complicated. And the therapies are incredibly difficult at times. Or I would say intense the therapies we give people. CAR T therapy is something that's been introduced. It's been used in a variety of hematologic tumors. What we're going to talk about today is your work in CAR T therapy in lymphoma. Can you just say a few words though, for the audience, just in general, about CAR T therapies. What is it? How's it being used now?

Manali Kamdar:Absolutely. And may I digress, you are probably one of the best urological oncologists I've seen. I've referred so many patients to you. And we have co-shared a lot of patients.

But coming back to the topic of CAR T-cell therapy. It has been, in my opinion, the most promising breakthrough in the world of hematologic malignancies, particularly lymphomas. Historically, we have had patients who would have succumbed to their disease. And I would say within the subtype of aggressive lymphomas, about 40 to 50% of patients, would've succumbed to their cancer. So, as you can imagine, there is certainly a lot of promise within this treatment.

So, to really cut it down into non-medical terms, what is CAR T? So, as a way of background, we all have what we call fighter cells within our immunity, or our immune system, which have the ability to recognize foreign antigens, such as cancer, as an enemy. And we can identify certain proteins on these cancer cells as foreign, and basically kill it. In patients with lymphoma, the issue is that the ability to recognize these proteins on the cancer cells as foreign is lost by the patient's own fighter cells.

There are many fighter cells such as T cells, NK cells, macrophages. CAR T-cell therapy is basically a therapy which typically manipulates this inability to fight off cancer. So, what CAR T-cell therapy is, is that we take patients' own cells, we take them to the lab. And we isolate their fighter cells, which are T-cells. Now, we know that these T cells have lost the ability to fight off cancer, which is lymphoma. So, we genetically engineer them in such a way that we make them super-fighter cells. Basically, fighter cells will unleash on them, which can now recognize lymphoma cells as foreign.

This manufacturing takes about 3 to 4 weeks with the existing FDA approved constructs. Once we get the cell product back, we then give patients low-dose chemotherapy for 3 days, not to kill cancer, but basically to make space in the marrow so that these CARs can hone in on the marrow. The product is then infused and then, subsequently, the idea is that these T-cell or CAR T-cell, which are your super-fighter cells unleash upon the enemy here, the lymphoma cell, and destroy it. And that is the mechanism of how CAR T-cell therapy works.

Thomas Flaig:Yeah, I think one of the really striking things about this as I've kind of watched this, and it's not used in solid organs like prostate cancer, and colon cancer, has been this idea that it's an individual product. We talk about manufacturing, but it's essentially taking their cells, making these changes and re-infusing them in.

Manali Kamdar:Absolutely. I think it's one of the most phenomenal advances in science. And, I will have to say, some of the early work happened nearly three decades ago, but those CAR T constructs were preliminary because we could make them efficacious, but we couldn't make them last in the system. The idea is when we infuse these CARs they give memory to the existing T cells of the patients as well, and make them fighter cells and thus, wait off cancer forever. Over the last 4 1/2 years, there has been a lot of work with CAR T-cell therapy constructs. And I will have to say the leadership at the CU Cancer Center within the University of Colorado has been exceptionally supportive in helping us open some of the key clinical trials within patients for aggressive, large B-cell lymphoma, as well as for non-aggressive B-cell lymphoma. And I will have to say that I'm very proud that most of these clinical trials have been positive studies, thus leading to FDA approval.

What does it mean to really get on a clinical trial with CAR T? That basically means that our patients who enrolled on the trial had the ability to get this product at least 4 1/2 years before the FDA approved it. So, that is where we got an edge for our patients to be able to first tackle cancer. Number two, be in remission. And most of our patients are still in remission. Thus, basically, getting the advantage of the therapies through the clinical trials.

Thomas Flaig:So, maybe we could just shift gears a little bit with that great background on this complex topic and, frankly, a complex disease. And so, when the CAR T therapy, or any new therapies come into practice, they're typically integrated in the later stages of the disease, where there's fewer therapeutic options. And then, as we gain experience and learn about efficacy, we move things forward, and care for patients. So, there's recently an article in which you were the lead author looking at the use of CAR T therapy in specific lymphomas, which had, I think, a major impact. We'd like to hear more about that, if you could tell us?

Manali Kamdar:Absolutely. We are so pumped about the positive results from this trial. That again, as way of background, as Dr. Flaig just mentioned, CAR T-cell therapy previously has been FDA approved for patients with aggressive, large-cell lymphoma who have failed two lines of treatment. What that means is patients who have failed chemotherapy after chemotherapy, or patients who have failed an autotransplant. An autotransplant is basically chemo times seven. That's the intensity of the autotransplant.

So, clearly, if a product works for patients who have failed an autotransplant, intuitively within the world of science, we'd like to move it forward. As a result, the next advance was to really test the current standard of care for relapsed aggressive, large B-cell lymphoma is that we give patients more chemotherapy. And, if they respond, then we take them to an autotransplant. Unfortunately, patients with high-risk, large B-cell lymphoma who have relapsed, although the intention is to take them to an autotransplant, only about a quarter are able to successfully go through the procedure. As a result, most of these patients will succumb to their disease. Or get CAR T in the third-line setting.

So clearly, the next advance was to prove and find out if CAR T can take over autotransplant in the second-line setting. And this is where I will have to say, again, thanks to the leadership within University of Colorado and the Division of Hematology, we opened a clinical trial here, which was called the TRANSFORM study. The TRANSFORM study uses a CAR T construct called lisocabtagene maraleucel. And this construct was compared head-to-head with an autotransplant in patients with high-risk, relapsed, large B-cell lymphoma in the second-line setting.

They enrolled a total of 232 patients over 47 global sites. And I'm, again, very proud to say that we ended up being the largest site in terms of patient enrollment. And our patients, we enrolled a total of about 11 patients on this study. And these patients were high-risk, large B-cell lymphoma, which had come back very quickly after getting initial chemotherapy. And most of our patients, although it was a randomized phase III study, our patients were randomized to CAR T. And these patients ended up getting CAR T in the second-line setting.

The primary endpoint of this study was what we call event-free survival. And at a median follow up of six months, the study was positive. The primary endpoint was met. And the event-free survival was statistically significant and superior on the CAR T arm versus patients who got an autotransplant. Event-free survival was 10 months on the CAR T arm versus only two months on the autotransplant arm. There were many other endpoints within this study that were also positive: meaning complete response rate was higher. Patients were able to remain progression free for a longer period of time. And most impressive, and striking here was the side-effect profile.

As you can imagine, with patients who get an autotransplant because they get high-dose chemotherapy, they do encounter infections, low blood counts, need for blood transfusion. And they're just very, very tired. On the CAR T study, they found that the incidence of the side-effect profile of the toxicities were actually comparable to patients who went through an autotransplant. But there are certain unique toxicities that patients who go through CAR T can actually experience. And these unique toxicities are not chemo-like toxicities. They really happen because these immune cells unleash on the cancer cells, they kill the cancer cells, and that releases substances called cytokines.

So, there is a syndrome called cytokine-release syndrome, which constitutes low blood pressure, shortness of breath, fevers. Patient could also have neurological toxicities. And I will have to say, as compared to the other FDA approved molecule, the molecule here that was tested within this clinical trial, which is lisocabtagene maraleucel, was exceptionally well tolerated. Some of our patients could actually get this therapy outpatient. And we look at side effects in terms of grade. And whenever we look at a clinical trial experimental product, we look at how many patients had high-grade toxicities. And I'm, again, super pumped to say that they absolutely had no high-grade toxicities with regards to cytokine-release syndrome and neurological toxicity. So grade 4 or grade 5 side effects were zero on this clinical trial which is, again, exceptional and impressive.

At the end of the day, this trial was presented at one of our premier meetings called the American Society of Hematology meeting last year. And I got the opportunity to represent these 47 global sites on behalf of the University of Colorado. And it was just fantastic very well received. And on the 24th of June, we finally found that the FDA reviewed the data, and accepted this as the new standard over autotransplant in patients with second-line relapse, large B-cell lymphoma. So for patients who now have a high-risk relapse, DLBCL, or large B-cell lymphoma, autotransplant is no longer the standard of care. Thanks to all the effort here of the team, as well as all the exceptional resources that were available at the University of Colorado, we led this trial, we championed it. And, at this point, the FDA has approved it.

Chris Casey:That's fantastic. Dr. Kamdar, and you mentioned the resources that are available here. Can you expound on that as far as what resources you took advantage of on the CU Anschutz campus to enable the research, for example, the CAR T cells reprogrammed here on the campus.

Manali Kamdar:So, within the context of a company-sponsored trial, like the TRANSFORM study, I will say it takes a village. And the village here will constitute my team, my clinical trials team. And it's just so many people, including transfusion medicine doctors, nurses, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, data coordinators. The list just goes on and on, besides just the medical providers like MDs, and DOs, who take care of patients. So, it just is impossible without this large team.

CAR T-cell therapy is resource intensive. And that's why most of the times CAR T-cell therapy gets offered at an academic site like ours, which is experienced and has dealt with many, many trials like this in the past as well. To piggyback on what resources here are currently available, I will have to say that within this world of CAR T everything's looking great. But we are still not at 100% cure. And that's what we aim for. As a result, with that one, single-minded focus, the University of Colorado, the Gates Biomanufacturing Facility, GBF, here has championed the idea of making CARs that are even more efficacious than the existing product.

The first instance of this was what we call the UCD19 trial. And the UCD19 trial has so far enrolled about 10 to 11 patients.

We're actually now moving a step further because we now also know that cancers can outsmart us and what can we do to outsmart them. So at this point, we develop CARs against one antigen called CD-19, and the cancers develop resistance against them by becoming CD-19 negative. As a result, the CAR can no longer recognize cancer as foreign. So how do we trick them? We basically now are trying to make products with two antigens on it, and the GBF as well as the University of Colorado campus have been exceptionally helpful. And the team that they have put in place is just so astute that we are now making what we call Bicistronic CARs, which attack two antigens, naming UCD 19/22.

So we have now opened this clinical trial called UCD 19/22 and we have so far enrolled two patients on it. We await their responses, but the hope is that if we do find good efficacy, as well as excellent toxicity profile, the hope is that patients who go through the routine FDA CARs, if they were to fail, which can happen in 40% of patients, we are also going to be now enrolling them on the 19/22 CARs as well.

And this is just the beginning. I think, the idea of cell therapy continues to evolve. And, at this point, we have some excellent scientists, clinicians on campus, not to mention Dr. Terry Fry. Under his leadership, the idea is to really continue to develop more novel products. Like I said, there are just simply three goals here: a cure, make sure that the novel therapy is durable, and make sure that it is not toxic to our patients. I think our patients have had chemotherapy far too long enough that it's time to move on beyond chemo.

Thomas Flaig:So often in oncology, we see therapeutic advances with better efficacy. So, it works better against the cancer. And the downside is there's a lot more toxicity for our patients. That's been the traditional paradigm. You can talk to a patient say, "I can do better and try to control your cancer, but there's been more side effects."

One of the things I just want to bring out about the article we're talking about. And the thing here is that you did not see terrible toxicity with this. You actually saw, compared to the standard, really acceptable toxicity. And so, to me, someone that's been in oncology for 15 or 20 years, that's been a big change. And just I think a very welcome change.

Manali Kamdar:Absolutely. And I think it's really important. Like I do believe that what's the point in killing cancer if the end result is making a patient wheelchair bound? If I can give that patient a good quality of life along with curing the cancer, that's where the true impact lies.

And I will have to say, within the world of cell therapy, that's exactly what we are shooting for. In fact, within the TRANSFORM study, there was what we call a quality-of-life analysis, or a patient-reported outcome analysis. And it did show that lisocabtagene maraleucel was way superior to an autotransplant from a quality-of-life or patient-reported outcome standpoint. So, absolutely, I agree with you that it's important to now start focusing on treatments that are not just efficacious, but also less toxic.

Chris Casey:And I can tell just by the way you talk about patients, Dr. Kamdar, that you probably develop quite a rapport with your patients. The fact that you enroll patients in clinical trials where potentially a novel therapy can emerge, could you just speak to what you think of your patients? Or how that conversation goes with your patients? And what you think of patients when they volunteer to go into this?

Manali Kamdar:At the cost of sounding sappy, I truly believe that my patients are my extended family. And I would do everything to give them the best product. Then, whether it's on a trial, whether it's FDA approved, it's always going to be a conversation. It's never a one-way street. And I think it's a relationship that develops over time. And because we are doing so well in lymphomas, the relationship with our patients is actually long-lasting. I see so many patients. I joined the University of Colorado in 2015, and I'm seeing a lot of patients since 2015, doing absolutely well. This is, of course, thanks to novel therapeutics and clinical trials, which, at the campus level, have worked. And therefore, our patients have gotten the benefit.

But to really talk about patients and their ability to trust in a clinical trial, I want to reiterate that I am in awe of the fact that they have the courage to participate in a clinical trial that's number one. The reason they have that courage is because we, as physicians, as providers, definitely want to help them understand where they are in their patient journey. Where is their cancer? What are their options? And what is the possibility of a response? Or even better with the clinical trial enrollment?

I want to also underscore that we do not do clinical trials, wherein patients get a placebo, or a sugar pill. That is unethical within the world of lymphoma, especially if patients have relapsed lymphoma. Also, there are many, many patients who initially could be averse to getting on a clinical trial because they feel like they're a guinea pig. But I do want to let you know that clinical trials are very robustly taken care of. We have eyes from the FDA every time we open a clinical trial.

And there are different phases of a clinical trial. Phase I is when it's never been tested in human beings. It's the first time that we are actually testing the molecule that's looking exceptionally promising in a lab. Phase II is when we actually find that it's not that toxic, we now want to see if it's efficacious. That's when it's been tested in human beings, but now we want to enroll a larger cohort and see if it's efficacious. And then phase III, like the TRANSFORM study which was positive, finally, compares it to the existing standard.

So, of course, this is something that takes time, that takes a lot of energy, both from the standpoint of a patient, as well as the provider. But that is what really keeps us going on campus here. And I, again, have to say hats off to the patients that they are so open to understanding where they are in their patient journey. And then, very open to also accepting of this possible new therapeutic that eventually has led to FDA approval.

Chris Casey:This is pretty amazing work that's been done. And Dr. Kamdar, like you say, a big team effort. And as you say, Dr. Flaig, very complex. Do you have any final thoughts about Dr. Kamdar's work into this lymphoma?

Thomas Flaig:Well, I'd just like to personally say that the work you've been doing here, the leadership you've shown in this trial, I think, is just really outstanding. And at the center of all this, as you've said, and I've watched you as you put in your practice, are the patients the patients in the trial, the future patients that will benefit from those who have volunteered to be in a trial.

I think it's a great conversation. It's such an exciting topic. I don't know if there's anything that we didn't touch on today in terms of the future of where CAR Ts are going, or next steps that you'd like to add to the conversation?

Manali Kamdar:I think the future is bursting with just so many new things that are coming down the pike. We hope to continue the winning streak. And we hope to offer exceptional treatments to our patients. Like you said, and I completely second that, the center or the core of our aim is just improving patient outcomes. And that is where the entire focus of the campus is. All these thousands of providers at whatever level they are working, that is the focus of care. So, I couldn't be more proud to be associated with this campus, with my team. And I really, really hope that we continue our journey with finding many, many more novel treatments.

Chris Casey:Well, thank you, Dr. Kamdar for sharing your story into this area of research, and the fantastic success you've had, and where you see things going. Thank you for your time. And also thank you, Dr. Flaig.

Manali Kamdar:Thank you so much for having us.

Outro:CU Anschutz 360 is produced by the University of Colorado CU Anschutz Medical Campus. Story editing and production by Chris Casey, Matt Hastings and Kelsey Peters. Digital design by Sarah Adams and Jenny Merchant.

Special thanks to the rest of the Office of Communications team for support and edits. Special thanks to Denver band Splitstep for our theme music featuring School of Medicine student Matt Golub, class of '22, Daniel Carillo and Kevin McKinnon.

We'd also like to thank our guests this week, Manali Kamdar and Tom Flaig, for co-hosting. You can read about the latest stories on our campus at news.cuanschutz.edu.

This is CU Anschutz 360.

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Why Is CAR T-Cell Therapy One of the Most Phenomenal Advances in Science? - University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus

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Porton Advanced Solutions completes a Series B financing round to expand its end-to-end Gene and Cell Therapy CDMO Platforms – PR Newswire

Posted: August 22, 2022 at 2:12 am

SUZHOU, China, Aug. 21, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- On August 19, 2022, Porton Advanced Solutions (Porton Advanced) announced the completion of its Series B financing round with over US$80Million. Current round of financing was led by China Merchants Groups' healthcare PE fund Merchant Health, along with its sister fund China Merchants Capital, China Merchants Securities Investments. In addition, a number of renowned venture and private equity firms participated in the current round of financing, including Fosun Health Capital, Gortune Investment and SDICTK. Apart from the new investors, current Porton Advanced shareholders, Porton Pharma Solutions, CS Capital, HM Capital, Ruilian Investment and Momentum Venture, also participated in the current round. Porton Advanced will use the proceeds to continue its business expansion into different markets, with investment in core manufacturing infrastructures and in global commercial operations. Such expansion would put Porton Advanced in a great position to become a global end-to-end gene and cell therapy (GCT) CDMO platform to help bring cutting edge therapies to patients.

Focusing solely on gene and cell therapy CDMO services, Porton Advanced has rapidly established an integrated CDMO platform providing a spectrum of services covering plasmids, cell therapy, gene therapy, oncolytic virus, nucleic acid therapy and microbial vectors used for gene therapy (MVGTs). Current operational footprint includes a 40,000sqft R&D and GMP production facility already in operation for over two years, which successfully delivered a number of plasmids, viruses and cell batches to our sponsors. A 160,000sqft facility for commercial production will be operational in the end of 2022/early 2023. By then, Porton Advanced will have over 200,000sqft of PD, AD, and GMP manufacturing facility dedicated for gene and cell therapy. In total, Porton Advanced will have 10 GMP viral vector production lines, 10 GMP cell therapy production lines and hundreds of clean rooms. Such a scale and footprint would allow Porton Advanced to significantly upgrade its AAV, oncolytic virus and mRNA CDMO capacity and capability which in turn empower our sponsors and support the GCT industry.

Current round of financing will help Porton Advanced to further improve the development and manufacturing capacity in both China and overseas, with the aim of establishing a global end-to-end gene and cell therapy CDMO platform. Through its efforts to accelerate the development of GCT therapeutics, Porton Advanced intends to become a top player that help drive the transformation of medicine.

Dr. Wang Yangzhou, CEO of Porton Advanced, said, "we are very pleased and grateful for the recognition and trust by China Merchants Health and all the other new and current capital partners. With a talented and passionate team, proprietary technologies, state of the art production lines and equipment, as well as track records from both Porton Advanced and from our parent company, Porton Pharma Solutions, we will work hand in hand with our sponsors and partners to reach more milestones in the GCT field. In the coming months, we will continue to improve and optimize our internal quality and program management systems, enhance our ability to operate at overseas and domestic markets, and continue to provide best possible CDMO services to our customers with our open, innovative and reliable platforms, so that best medicine would reach the public sooner."

Representing the current consortium of investors, the lead investor China Merchants Health, expressed its great confidence in the GCT field and said that, "the cell and gene therapy holds great promises for patients as well as for long-term commercial success. Porton Advanced is a leading cell and gene therapy CDMO service provider with a very experienced, internationally oriented management and technical team. China Merchants Health is pleased to lead in this round of financing and looks forward to working with Porton Advanced to unlock the great benefit of GCT by serving global cell and gene therapy companies, and promote the development of the cell and gene therapy industry for the benefits of patients everywhere."

About Porton Advanced SolutionsEstablished in Suzhou Industrial Park in December 2018, by its parent company Porton Pharma Solutions Ltd. (Stock Code: 300363), Porton Advanced has built a CDMO platform integrating plasmid, cell therapy, gene therapy, oncolytic virus, nucleic acid therapy and microbial vectors used for gene therapy (MVGTs), providing end-to-end services from cell banking, process development and analytical development, cGMP production to final Fill and Finish , investigator-initiated clinical trials (IIT), investigational new drugs (IND), clinical trials to commercial production. Porton Advanced is dedicated to support sponsors advance their GCT drug development and market launches.

Porton Advanced focuses solely on gene and cell therapy services. Built on the professional experience of its cohort of world-class professionals, as well as on the successes of its parent company, Porton Advanced insists on "Customer First" and the tenet of "Compliance, Expertise, Focus, Open Collaboration". With its key focus on protecting IP for its sponsors, through its comprehensive project management and quality systems, Porton Advanced strives to bring gene and cell therapy products to the clinic and the market through its quality CDMO services, and help bring the best medicine to the public sooner.

About Porton Pharma SolutionsWith over 5000 customer-centric employees, and operations and commercial offices across the US, EU and China, Porton Pharma Solutions Ltd. provides global pharmaceutical companies with innovative, reliable and end-to-end process R&D and manufacturing services across small molecule APIs, dosage forms and biologics. We are committed to being the most open, innovative and reliable pharmaceutical service platform in the world and enabling public's early access to good medicines.

About China Merchants HealthChina Merchants Health Care Holdings Company Limited ("China Merchants Health"), is the major health care investment platform of China Merchants GroupThe vision of the China Merchants Health Fund is "Empowering better Health care in the new Digital Era", and its mission is "Lead with Technology, build better healthcare value chain ". Focusing on key & Core Technologies , China Merchants Health is committed to driving the transformation of health-care sector and health care ecosystem through investment and operational empowerment.

About China Merchants CapitalChina Merchants Capital Investment Co., Ltd (hereinafter referred to as "China Merchants Capital" or "CMC") specializes in alternative investment and asset management, and seeks opportunities across seven key sectors: green technology; healthcare; transportation, infrastructure and logistics; TMT; advanced manufacturing; real estate; financial services and fintech. At the end of 2021, China Merchants Capital manages 44 RMB funds and 8 Foreign Currency funds. Its total AUM exceeds 300 billion RMB, in which RMB AUM totals over 230 billion yuan, and foreign currency AUM totals over 70 billion yuan.

About China Merchants Securities InvestmentChina Merchants Securities Investment Co., Ltd. is a wholly-owned alternative investment subsidiary of China Merchants Securities, with a registered capital of CNY7.1 billion, mainly engaged in equity investment and financial product investment. Focusing on national policies and industrial layout, it is committed to providing financial services covering the whole industry chain for its investees. It has invested in more than 20 leading companies in the medical market.

About Fosun Health CapitalFosun Health Capital is a majority-owned subsidiary of Shanghai Fosun PharmaceuticalGroupCo., Ltd.. It acts as the general partner of a number of RMB-denominated funds that focus on the healthcare sector, including incubation angel funds, venture capital funds and growth private equity funds. These funds invest in various healthcare sectors, including biopharmaceuticals, advanced medical equipment, in vitro diagnostics, life sciences, and treatment technologies, and leverage various exit options to achieve capital appreciation subsequently. Taking advantage of Fosun's global R&D advantages and industrial layout, Fosun Health Capital performs effective value-add and nurture growth to its portfolio companies throughout their entire life cycle.

About Gortune InvestmentGORTUNE PRIVATE EQUITY FUND MANAGEMENT CO.,LTD. is the only private equity investment platform controlled by GORTUNE INVESTMENT CO., LTD. The key investment directions include life sciences, new energy, pan-consumption, agriculture and other fields. It is committed to long-term wealth management for investors.

About SDICTKSDICTK Trust aims to serving the real economy, cultivates high-quality equity projects with professional investment and research capabilities, and empowers invested enterprises at multiple levels with its core strengths, such as industry-financing combination. Such efforts have won advantages for the active transition of the trust company!

About CS CapitalCS Capital ("CSC") is one of the largest private equity investment firms headquartered in Beijing with over RMB 100bn of AUM from a diversified investor base. Riding on the need for advances in technology, tech-enabled services, smart devices, and next-generation communication networks in China's NEV and healthcare industries, CSC invests in companies with attractive prospects for growth driven by anticipated emerging trends and proven technological advantages and has generated strong returns for its LPs over a ten-year period.

About HM CapitalHM Capital is a healthcare -focused investment firmcommitted to building an investment platform with a global view and local execution. Through the investment mode of dual-currency and multi-strategy, we aim to help early and growth-stage healthcare companies achieve accelerated development by leveraging the ecosystems of HM Healthcare Management Services. We work closely with fast-growing, innovative healthcare companies to harness the power of breakthroughs in sciences and technologies globally, and create value for the leading entrepreneurs through empowerment by sharing our global business and resource network.

About Ruilian InvestmentRuilian InvestmentHainan Hongde Ruilian Consulting Management Co., Ltd. is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Huashan Ruilian Fund Management Co., Ltd. With accumulated AUM over RMB 15 billion, Ruilian Investment focus its investments on healthcare, advanced manufacturing and consumer goods.

About Momentum VentureMomentum Venture is a venture capital focused on innovative teams in the field of life and health, dedicated to mining and cultivating revolutionary and disruptive technologies. The fund's investors include listed companies, government guidance funds, market-oriented fund of funds, and high-net-worth individuals. Working closely with the industry, we provide our portfolio companies with resources to accelerate their development and promote the industrialization of science and technology.

SOURCE Porton Advanced Solutions

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Porton Advanced Solutions completes a Series B financing round to expand its end-to-end Gene and Cell Therapy CDMO Platforms - PR Newswire

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Cell Analysis Global Market Report 2022: Growing Focus on Personalized Medicine & Introduction of Advanced Technologies in Cell Analysis Presents…

Posted: August 22, 2022 at 2:12 am

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Dublin, Aug. 17, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- The "Cell Analysis Global Market - Forecast to 2029" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering.

According to analysis, the cell analysis global market is expected to grow at a low single digit CAGR from 2022 to 2029 to reach $38,020.6 million by 2029. The rising incidence of infectious and non-infectious diseases and demand for early detection, diagnosis & treatment, increasing government and private funding towards cell based research, increasing advancements in cell imaging technologies to reduce the cost & time during the drug discovery process are driving the cell analysis market.

The market for cell analysis is segmented based on technique, product, application, end-user and geography. The cell analysis techniques global market is segmented into PCR, Sequencing, Microfluidics and Microarrays, Spectrometry, Microscopy, Cytometry, High Content Analysis, Electrophoresis and Others. Among the techniques, the PCR segment accounted for the largest revenue in 2022. The Sequencing segment is expected to grow at a double digit CAGR from 2022 to 2029.

The cell analysis products market is mainly segmented into consumables, instruments, software and services. Among these, consumables segment commanded the largest revenue in 2022 and is expected to grow at a low single digit CAGR from 2022 to 2029. The software and services segment is expected to grow at a mid single digit CAGR from 2022 to 2029.

The consumables market is further sub-segmented into reagents, assay kits, microplates and others. Among the consumables sub-segments, the assay kits held the largest revenue in 2022. Reagents sub-segment is the fastest growing segment with a mid single digit CAGR from 2022 to 2029.

The application market is categorized based on processes, field, and by therapeutic area. In the process of application, the market is segmented into cellular processes, signal transduction pathways, circulating tumor cells, single-cell analysis, epigenetic target analysis, subpopulation characterization, and drug and candidate screening.

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Based on field of application, the market is further segmented into forensic, therapeutics, cell imaging, biomarker research, genomic analysis, stem cell analysis, and diagnostics. Diagnostics held the largest revenue of in 2022. Stem cell analysis is the fastest-growing segment at a mid single digit from 2022 to 2029.

The end-users market is segmented into hospitals & diagnostic laboratories, academic and research institutes, contract research organizations (CROs), pharmaceuticals and biotechnology companies, cell banks, and others.

Market DynamicsDrivers and Opportunities

Rising Incidence of Infectious and Non-Infectious Diseases and Demand for Early Detection, Diagnosis & Treatment

Increasing Government and Private Funding

Increasing Advancements in Cell Imaging Technologies Reduce the Cost and Time Consumption for the Drug Discovery Process

Growing Focus on Personalized Medicine

Introduction of Advanced Technologies in Cell Analysis

Increasing Merger and Acquisition Activities in Cell Analysis

Restraints & Threats

Lack of Skilled Personnel to Use Advanced Cell Analysis Instruments

Expensive Cell Analysis Instruments

Maintaining Consistency, Reproducibility of Assays and Lack of Standardization

Availability of Alternative Technologies

Stringent Regulatory Framework Limits Advancements in Cellular Analysis Market

Key Topics Covered:

1 Executive Summary

2 Introduction

3 Market Analysis

4 Cell Analysis Global Market, Based on Techniques

5 Cell Analysis Global Market, Based on Products

6 Cell Analysis Global Market, Based on Application

7 Cell Analysis Global Market, Based on End-Users

8 Regional Market Analysis

9 Competitive Landscape

10 Major Player Profiles

Companies Mentioned

10X Genomics

1CellBio

Abbexa Ltd

Abbott Laboratories, Inc.

Abcam Plc.

Abnova Corporation

ABP Biosciences LLC

Adaptive Biotechnologies Corp.

Agilent Technologies Inc. (U.S.)

Aigenpulse

Akadeum Life Sciences

Akoya Biosciences, Inc.

Alit Lifesciences Co., Ltd

Altona Diagnostics GmbH

Analytik Jena AG (CyBio AG)

ArrayGen Technologies Pvt Ltd (India)

Art Robbins Instruments LLC (U.S.)

Aviva Bioscience (U.S.)

Axion Biosystems (CytoSMART Technologies B.V.) (U.S.)

Azenta Life Sciences (Brooks life sciences)

Becton Dickinson and Company

BennuBio Inc.

Berry Genomics Co., Ltd

BGI Group

Bico (Cellenion)

Bio View Ltd.

BioAgilytix Labs, LLC (Cambridge Biomedical Inc.)

Biochrom Ltd.

Biofluidica

BioinGentech

Bioneer Corporation

Bio-Rad Laboratories Inc.

Bioron GmbH

BioSkryb, Inc.

Bio-Techne Corporation

Biotium

bitBiome, Inc.

Blue-Ray Biotech

Brand GMBH

Bruker Corporation

Carl Zeiss AG

Etaluma Inc

Eurofins Scientific

Fluent BioSciences

Fluidigm Corporation

Fluxion Biosciences

GC biotech B.V.

Genomatix AG

GenXPro GmbH

Hamilton Company

Hausser Scientific

Helena Laboratories Corporation

Herolab GmbH

Hettich Lab Technology

HighQu GmbH

Horiba, Ltd

Illumina Inc.

Immunai

IncellDx

Inscopix

Insightful Science

IsoPlexis

Jasco Analytical Instruments

JEOL Ltd

Keyence Corporation

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Cell Analysis Global Market Report 2022: Growing Focus on Personalized Medicine & Introduction of Advanced Technologies in Cell Analysis Presents...

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Cell Stress and Mitochondrial Dysfunction Found in Early Alzheimers Disease Patients, Findings Published in Science Translational Medicine – BioSpace

Posted: August 22, 2022 at 2:12 am

NEEDHAM, Mass.--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- Invicro LLC (Invicro), a global, industry-leading imaging CRO, and a subsidiary of REALM IDx, Inc., today announced the publication of the paper Widespread cell stress and mitochondrial dysfunction occur in patients with early Alzheimers disease1 in Science Translational Medicine.

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Figure 1: Mean PET images demonstrating AD patients have widespread increases in sigma 1 receptor, along with regional decreases in mitochondrial complex I and SV2A. (Graphic: Business Wire)

The study provides novel in vivo evidence for widespread, clinically relevant cellular stress and bioenergetic abnormalities in patients with early-stage Alzheimers Disease (AD) and highlights the potential value of mitochondrial imaging in longitudinal studies of AD.

Invicros research and novel biomarkers are significant for the progression of clinical trials in AD and neurodegenerative disorders, and we are delighted to see this important work published in Science Translational Medicine, said Dr. Roger Gunn, CSO, Neuroscience, for Invicro. This work further extends Invicros repertoire of biomarkers for use in AD clinical trials.

Position emission tomography and magnetic resonance imaging markers were utilized to show that cell stress and impaired oxidative phosphorylation are central to mechanisms of synaptic loss and neurodegeneration in the cellular pathology of AD. Compared to controls, AD patients had widespread increases in sigma 1 receptor, along with regional decreases in mitochondrial complex I, SV2A, brain volume and cerebral blood flow. Furthermore, significant reductions in mitochondrial density were seen in AD patients over a 1218-month period, indicating this biomarker may be suitable for use in early-stage trials of novel disease-modifying treatment for this devastating disease.

This study was led by Professor Paul Matthews of the UK Dementia Research Institute and Imperial College London as part of the multi-arm, pre-competitive consortium, Molecular Imaging of Neurodegenerative Disease Mitochondria Associated Proteins and Synapses (MIND MAPS) AD cohort. The MIND MAPS consortium was developed and is headed by Dr. Eugenii Rabiner, EVP for Translational Imaging at Invicro.

MIND MAPS is an important industry-academic collaboration that is bringing together experts from across the globe. It was developed with the aim of characterizing imaging biomarkers of the neurodegenerative process to address important problems in the development of novel medication for neurodegenerative disease, said Dr. Rabiner. Together, we have shown that mitochondrial and cellular stress biomarkers open the promise of better monitoring of the therapeutic potential of these drugs.

Science Translational Medicine is the leading weekly online journal publishing translational research at the intersection of science, engineering and medicine. The goal of Science Translational Medicine is to promote human health by providing a forum for communicating the latest research advances from biomedical, translational and clinical researchers from all established and emerging disciplines relevant to medicine. Science Translational Medicine published Widespread cell stress and mitochondrial dysfunction occur in patients with early Alzheimers disease on August 17, 2022.

About Invicro

Headquartered in Needham, MA, Invicro, a subsidiary of REALM IDx, was founded in 2008 with the mission of improving the role and function of imaging in translational drug discovery and development across all therapeutic areas. Today, Invicros multi-disciplinary team provides solutions to pharmaceutical and biotech companies across all stages of the drug development pipeline (preclinical through Phase 0-IV), all imaging modalities and all therapeutic areas, including neurology, oncology and systemic and rare diseases. Invicros quantitative biomarker services, advanced analytics and AI tools, and clinical operational services are backed by Invicros industry-leading software informatics platforms, VivoQuant and iPACS, as well as their pioneering IQ-Analytics Platform, which includes AmyloidIQ, TauIQ and DaTIQ.

Invicro operates out of nine global laboratories, clinics and sites within the United States in Massachusetts, Michigan, California, Connecticut and globally in the United Kingdom, India, Japan and China. For more information visit http://www.invicro.com

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Cell Stress and Mitochondrial Dysfunction Found in Early Alzheimers Disease Patients, Findings Published in Science Translational Medicine - BioSpace

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