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A clue to the causes of kidney disease: It’s in your cells – Sanford Health News

Posted: February 19, 2021 at 1:44 am

More than than 30% of Americans are at risk of kidney disease, and nearly 20% of all Medicare spending is for kidney disease in patients 65 and older. Yet there is still much not known about the development of kidney disease.

Dr. Indra Chandrasekarand her team of researchers recently published an article in the biomedical research journal JCI Insight, highlighting the impact of key cellular processes on kidney health and function. The discovery allows researchers to better understand how kidney disease forms.

The kidney carries out many functions that are necessary to maintain overall health. As a result, any disruption to those functions can cause kidney disease. To find where kidney disease starts, the Chandrasekar Lab chose to study functions at the cellular level.

When researchers turned off the genes for certain proteins in mice at 4 weeks of age, the mice began to exhibit worsening dilation of the kidney tubules accompanied by eventual kidney degeneration and cyst formation by 12 weeks of age. Along with these structural changes came functional changes within the kidneys, including more acidic urine, excretion of protein and salts, and inflammation as the disease progressed.

This work highlights a new and major role for the proteins, called nonmuscle myosin II (NM2A and NM2B), in maintaining the health and function of the kidneys. This finding provides key knowledge to the kidney disease field as the pursuit of a cure continues to drive the valuable work being performed at Sanford Research.

Dr. Indra Chandrasekar sat down to talk with Sanford Health News about her history with Sanford Research and her recent work.

The myosin motor family, and NM2 proteins in particular, has been studied for over five decades. NM2s role in cell migration, adhesion and cell division has been carefully examined in vitro as well as with organismal and developmental context. Work in the Chandrasekar Lab is focused on understanding the physiological and cell-type specific role for NM2 mediated cellular transport mechanisms using mouse kidney as a model. Turning off the NM2 genes in adult mouse kidney tubular epithelial cells demonstrates that NM2 function is critical for the transport of two important proteins within kidney. These two proteins are called uromodulin (UMOD) and sodium, potassium, chloride cotransporter (NKCC2), that are essential for maintaining electrolyte balance and blood pressure in our body.

Mutations in UMOD and NKCC2 genes in humans lead to kidney disease. Membrane-associated NKCC2 has been the target of several blood-pressure regulating medicines currently on the market. Therefore, it is critical to further explore and understand how NM2 proteins regulate UMOD and NKCC2 transport and function in within the kidney cells.

Personally, this published work has been our teams mission for the past several years. As the Nobel-prize winning neurobiologist Rita Levi-Montalcini once said, I dont believe there would be any science at all without intuition. The findings described in this manuscript began as an intuition that stemmed from my postdoctoral work. I am very happy with how it turned out and extremely grateful for our teams hard work.

As a cell biologist, I am fascinated by the molecular and cellular complexity of the kidney. Considering that mutations in MYH9 (NM2A protein) in humans are linked to kidney disease, and that the epithelial cells of the kidney are great models to study cellular transport pathways, it was an easy organ of choice. Moreover, the availability of excellent mouse genetic tools to perform cell-type specific, inducible and conditional gene inactivation in the kidney is also a positive.

The impact of our published work is twofold:

I worked at a local clinical laboratory in town during the first year of my undergraduate biochemistry program. My job was to prepare, stain and perform microscopic analysis of peripheral blood smears from patient blood. I was fascinated by the cellular morphology, staining characteristics and intracellular organelles present in the varying types of blood cells. I wanted to understand how different cell types in our body function and what happens when they do not perform their assigned jobs. This interest led me to Dr. Brigitte M. Jockushs laboratory in Germany for my Graduate work. Professor Jockusch is a well-respected expert in the field of cytoskeletal research and cell biology. Being in her lab was a great privilege. I continued my training with prominent cell biologists such as Dr. John A. Cooper and Dr. Paul C. Bridgman at the Washington University in St. Louis.

During my training as a post-doctoral scientist at Washington University in St. Louis, I had determined a new, critical role for nonmuscle myosin 2 (NM2) motors in processes by which proteins are transported into and within cells. At Sanford Research, I got the opportunity to follow on my previous findings and to start an independent research program to understand the molecular mechanisms underlying kidney tubular transport defects to human kidney diseases. The excellent, state-of-the-art facilities to conduct basic and clinical research at Sanford Research has led us to publish a manuscript of high impact that reports that the loss of NM2 proteins in adult kidney epithelium results in progressive chronic kidney disease.

I enjoy thinking about new ideas and concepts and testing those using experiments in the lab to gain insights into cellular mechanisms. I love performing advanced microscopy experiments. However, the most enjoyment comes from passing along the valuable techniques and scientific concepts to future scientists who are trainees and let them excel in whatever they desire in their life.

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A clue to the causes of kidney disease: It's in your cells - Sanford Health News

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Amgen : After 39 Years With Amgen, She Calls It a Career – Marketscreener.com

Posted: February 19, 2021 at 1:44 am

It was supposed to be a temporary gig.

Avantika Patel was 25, newly married and still learning how to speak English after arriving in Southern California from a small town in India. Her husband was working as an engineer, she had a degree in microbiology and a plan to attend graduate school.

'They had those classified ads back then and my husband pointed one out,' she said. 'He said: 'Do you know this place in Thousand Oaks - Applied Molecular Genetics?''

She didn't.

Applied Molecular Genetics had just started the prior year with George Rathmann as the chief executive officer and had just three staff members. When she went for the interview at the small, modest building in the Spring of 1982, there were barely two dozen. She said it went well, but then she didn't hear from the company for months.

Patel didn't think much more about the job.

But Applied Molecular Genetics had been thinking about her and contacted Patel in November. They asked if she'd like to work as a research associate. She was already working at Jafra Cosmetics and the new job meant a pay cut of a few thousand dollars. But it looked interesting and exciting and it seemed to mesh with her graduate school goal.

Patel decided to give it a chance. A year turned into five. She had her first child. Five turned into 10 and she soon had a second child. The company was also growing. Fifty staff. Then 150. Then about a thousand. A first major drug to reach market that treated kidney disease exploded the company onto the map. Then came a cancer-related drug in 1992. Staff grew to 2,500. Money wasn't an issue anymore with early stock shares and several splits since.

By now the company was known as Amgen. Patel was making a name for herself with a straightforward, no-nonsense approach to the job and becoming an invaluable asset in learning how to guide drugs through the rigorous U.S. Food and Drug Administration approval process. The temporary job she'd applied to a decade prior was becoming a permanent part of her life.

Avantika Patel, second from the right, pictured in front of the building she began working in 39 years ago. She retired this year as Amgen's longest-tenured employee. Amgen file photo.

For the next three decades, she would help steer three major drugs to market, become a go-to person to salvage drug studies that were off-track and become a mentor and friend to what she called 'my Amgen family.'

But that ended Jan. 29, when Patel retired as the longest-serving staff member at Amgen.

'It was the hardest decision I've ever made,' she said.

A Passage from India

Patel was the daughter of a coal mine owner and a housewife, who married at 18. Neither had finished college. The town she grew up in was small and had limited options for a girl who had a keen love of science - specifically microbiology.

She left home at 16 to study, ultimately obtaining a degree in microbiology and with thoughts that she would put her education to work in India. But she was also part of traditional Indian culture and had an arranged marriage that set her up with a man who was already in the United States studying engineering at Fairleigh Dickinson University in New Jersey.

As he moved to Southern California for a job, she left India to be with him. A new husband. A new country. A new life.

'It was difficult,' she said. 'I was a girl who came from a small town in India where women were not highly educated. I thought I would never know my potential without furthering my education. But being at Amgen, I learned how to overcome my fears and be self-taught.'

Her husband, Chandrakant Patel, said she was driven to learn and work. 'I didn't know much about genetics, but it was all she talked about - genetics, genetics, genetics. I knew she was going to get into it somehow and be successful.'

Avantika Patel works in the lab in her first year at Amgen. Amgen file photo.

Working in clinical trials and cutting-edge studies, the plan of getting a doctorate couldn't compete with what she was learning at Amgen - while helping her balance raising a family. Amgen was with her along the way - as her son was one of the first to stay at Amgen's new childcare center in 1993 - known as Camp Amgen. She celebrated birthdays, anniversaries and the birth of her second son in that first decade.

Besides, the work at Amgen had become personal in another way.

She was beginning her own battle with kidney disease.

Scientist and Patient

Patel said her mother had kidney disease and it wasn't shocking to her that she developed it as well. In 2003, her doctor put her on a drug she had worked on at Amgen before it went to market in 1989.

The study was personal to her - both from her own health and from what had happened with her mother. She said the importance of scientific advancements are driven by empathy and a desire to ease suffering of others.

She was put on an organ transplant list. But being O positive meant the wait could be long due to its commonality.

Deb Lium, who began working with Patel in 2000, said she knew about a year before Patel started dialysis that things were rough for her.

'I remember she would leave during the day sometimes because she was in pain,' Lium said. 'But she is so strong and the work is so important to her, she couldn't stop. It's just who she is.'

The dialysis treatments began in 2009 and the routine was brutal.

Three days a week, Patel would get up early to be at work by 7 a.m. She would leave work around 4 p.m. to make a half-hour drive to Simi Valley for dialysis. She remembered the big needle to take blood out. There were excruciating cramps in her body. She said sometimes she would scream and cry from the pain.

'She was tired and exhausted, but she was tough,' Chandrakant said. 'She wouldn't complain, either.'

But then she'd be at work the next morning. Sometimes, when she'd travel for work, she would find a dialysis center in the city she was at just so it wouldn't interrupt her work.

'She always kept the pain to herself,' Lium said. 'But I could tell sometimes it was hard for her.'

Then Patel got the call in 2014. There was a kidney available. Dialysis would mercifully be over.

Her husband said he remembered the call. He was driving home from work and she had arrived home before him. The phone rang and she answered and got the news and immediately called him while he was in the car.

'I remember she said it was a perfect match,' Chandrakant Patel said. 'I drove home as fast as I could. We were so excited.'

Patel got the transplant a few hours later.

She struggled with sepsis for the first year, but as the kidney settled into its new home, it adapted and she continued to work.

'After the surgery, you realize how fragile life is,' Patel said. 'Mentally, I'm a strong person so the physical discomfort didn't bother me as much. I could distract myself from it by diving into the work. But I also noticed I didn't have as much energy as I used to and so I started to think about leaving.'

Long Legacy

When Patel told Maryam Huber she was contemplating retirement, Huber wasn't surprised. She had known the physical toll of the kidney disease and the dialysis and surgery for the transplant had taken a cumulative toll on her.

Huber, who has known her for more than 15 years, said Amgen is losing a library of institutional knowledge and one of the most empathetic workers she has ever known - even though she could be abrupt and blunt with her pragmatism at the same time. She has helped see several major Amgen drugs come to market.

'It was all in service to get help to patients,' Huber said. 'She knew getting the job done meant helping people. She didn't want to waste time.'

From a 2005 Amgen file photo featuring the longest-tenured staff in front of Building 1, displaying the original Amgen logo. Avantika Patel is second from the right.

Patel said she knows she will have a lot more time on her hands once she leaves Amgen.

Susan Cupples, who is close to Patel and was at her son's baby shower 20 years ago, laughed when she thought about Patel spending time on a beach relaxing or sitting around doing nothing. 'She needs a purpose and I think she will find it.'

Patel said Amgen was 'my second family.' It was only the second employer she ever worked for and she said she gave it all she had. She said Amgen had returned the favor many times over and she can't imagine a better 39 years.

But she said she will probably do volunteer work involving clinical research. She will have more time to dote on her grandchildren and be with her family. She said she will miss Amgen terribly.

'I stayed because this is what I was meant to do and I loved what I did here,' Patel said. 'I worked as long as I could, but it finally was time to leave.'

And so, she will. After a long, temporary 39 years.

Avantika Patel retired from Amgen after working with the company for 39 years and was its longest-tenured employee, coming on board just one year after it was founded in 1980. Photo: Stacey Gleason.

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How soon will COVID-19 vaccines return life to normal? – Science Magazine

Posted: February 16, 2021 at 11:50 pm

The parking lot at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles serves as a drive-thru COVID-19 vaccine site open into the night.

By Jon CohenFeb. 16, 2021 , 5:45 PM

SAN DIEGOTwenty days into the new year, cars were entering a parking lot bumper-to-bumper in the shadow of Petco Park, home of the San Diego Padres baseball team. Arms waving, attendants directed the cars into three lines, which split into four more, and yelled as though the first pitch had already been thrown. Im going to load you up, Im sending you 10, you can stack them! one attendant hollered to another.

But the Padres dont play in January.

Instead, Petco Park was home field for this citys drive-thru COVID-19 vaccinations. For 9 days straight, health workers there had been injecting about 5000 people between 7 a.m. and 7 p.m. Run by infectious disease clinician Shira Abeles of UC San Diego Healthdubbed the vaccine czar by the 300 people she manages at the Petco operationit is the citys largest vaccination site, focusing on health care workers and anyone 75 or older. Cars moved through stations where workers checked people in, injected them, and then watched them for at least 15 minutes to make sure they didnt have immediate side effects.

The traffic flow was slow but steadyand no one honked. Above their masks, the visitors eyes were smiling. If vaccine hesitancy has an opposite, this was it.

By the end of January, nearly 100 million people around the world had received COVID-19 vaccines, and more than 1 million were getting shots each day in the United States and China. The effort was lagging in Europe, and staggering global inequities remain. The World Health Organization noted on 5 February that 75% of vaccinations have occurred in 10 countries. About 130 countries had yet to inject anyone with a COVID-19 vaccine. Still, the vaccines, shown in clinical trials to have efficacies of up to 95% against symptomatic disease, have finally given the world the prospect of an escape from COVID-19s long siege. There is so much hope, Abeles says.

Now, as vaccination campaigns gain speed, a raft of pressing questions have arisen: Does being immunized mean you wont spread the virus? When will the campaigns begin to curb the pandemic and allow daily life to return to normal? And what do the new variants of SARS-CoV-2, able to spread faster or evade immune responses, mean for the promise of vaccines? The reality here is this virus is evolving, says Lawrence Corey, a virologist at the University of Washington, Seattle, who co-leads the U.S. governmentsupportednetwork that tests COVID-19 vaccines.

Still, answers are emerging.

One month into the U.S. vaccination campaign, Abeles thinks she has seen its effect already. Beginning in mid-December 2020 some 11,000 UC San Diego Health employees began to receive the Pfizer-BioNTech or the Moderna vaccine, both of which contain messenger RNA (mRNA) that directs the bodys cells to make the surface protein from SARS-CoV-2, spike, to trigger an immune response. Despite reports of health care workers hesitant to get the vaccines, 96% of Abeless colleagues accepted the shots. Each week, those employees are tested for SARS-CoV-2, which exploded in San Diego county starting in December, even if they are feeling healthy.

At the peak, UC San Diego Health was detecting 20 to 30 infections each day in employees, many asymptomatic. By the third week in January, the number had fallen to just a handful. Abeles emphasizes that the evidence is far from conclusive, but says we are extremely hopeful that the link between the drop and the mass vaccination is real.

More compelling, if still preliminary, evidence comes from Israel, home to the worlds most aggressive and best studied immunization campaign so far. A country of 9 million people, Israel has universal health care provided mainly through four HMOs with excellent electronic medical records. The Israeli government negotiated with Pfizer to rapidly roll out its mRNA shots in exchange for sharing data about their impact with the company. Between 19 December and 4 February, 39% of Israelis had received at least one dose of the vaccine. Per capita, that is far higher coverage than in any country other than the similarly small United Arab Emirates (36%).

Nationally, COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations appear to be dropping faster among people 60 or older, the first to receive the vaccines, than among the 40- to 60-year-old segment. And in a 1 February press release, the Maccabi Research and Innovation Centeran arm of one of the four HMOsnoted it had tracked 132,015 of its members over age 60 who had received a vaccine dose in the first 9 days of the immunization campaign. Diagnosed SARS-CoV-2 infections in that group peaked about 10 days after immunizations began. By day 28, when most people had received their second, booster dose, diagnoses had fallen by two-thirds, and COVID-19related hospitalization had dropped from a daily high of seven people to one. In the general population, the team notes, reported cases dropped much more slowly.

Israels aggressive COVID-19 vaccine rollout targeted the elderly first, and an analysis of 132,015people 60 and older who received their initial dose in late December 2020 suggests the shots already started reducing the toll of the pandemic in that country 1 month later.

(Graphic) N. Desai/Science; (Data) Maccabi Research and Innovation Center

That finding constitutes persuasive evidence of real-world benefit of vaccination, especially since prior behavioral restrictions in Israel did not seem to selectively protect those over 60, says Roby Bhattacharyya, an infectious disease specialist at Massachusetts General Hospital.

In the United States, people living in long-term care facilities, most of them elderly, and facilities staff were put at the front of the line for vaccines. Those residents account for about 40% of the countrys COVID-19 deaths, so the impact of vaccinations on their hospitalization and mortality will probably be seen within a month or two, certainly, says Ira Longini, a biostatistician at the University of Florida (UF).

The effect may have already become visible. COVID-19 cases have been dropping nationwide since December, including at nursing homes. Interventions other than vaccines explain some of the fall. But a county-level comparison of facilities that got their first shots from 18 to 27 December and those that didnt showed the drop in daily cases was more than twice as large in the earlier vaccinated facilities (a 48% decline versus 21%).

Blunting COVID-19 cases nationwide is a long game, however, especially in a country such as the United States, where the vaccine rollout has not been as fast or uniform as in Israel. We have a big country. We have a lot of transmission, Longini says. I dont think well see a big impact on numbers of cases from vaccines until the summer.

If vaccines created whats known as sterilizing immunity all the time, no vaccinated person would transmit the virus. Vaccinated grandparents could safely play with their unimmunized grandchildren. Countries could welcome visitors who had proof of vaccination with little fear of introducing new viral variants or reigniting outbreaks.

That level of assurance is a tall order. Few vaccines, for any infectious diseases, create sterilizing immunityeven the most effective ones. The inactivated poliovirus vaccine developed by Jonas Salk did little to block infection or transmission of the virus, yet it powerfully prevented paralytic polio. By 1961, 6 years after it was licensed, only 54% of the U.S. population had received the vaccine, yet paralytic polio cases had dropped by more than 90%.

For practical reasons, the recent COVID-19 vaccine efficacy trials evaluated mainly the frequency of symptomatic disease, typically detected after participants feel sick and get a virus test. Its tougher to identify all SARS-CoV-2 infections, which remain invisible if they dont cause symptoms. Yet models suggest asymptomatic cases account for about half of transmission, so tracking them among vaccine recipients is key. There are easy ways to look at transmission and hard ways, says Ruth Karron, who runs the Johns Hopkins University Center for Immunization Research.

One approach, says John Mascola, who heads the Vaccine Research Center at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), is to ask: If youre vaccinated, could you have the virus in your nose and shed it? Thats how researchers studying the AstraZenecaUniversity of Oxford vaccine recently tried to get at transmission. In a U.K. efficacy trial of that vaccine, participants did weekly nasal swabs at home. Results showed vaccination reduced asymptomatic infections by 49.3%. The data suggest, but do not prove, that the vaccine stymies viral spread; misleading news coverage claimed the vaccine had cut transmission by two-thirds. Moderna has also reported a similar decline in asymptomatic infections after just one dose of its mRNA vaccine in a subset of its large efficacy trial, which found overall that the vaccine had 94% efficacy against mild disease.

Several COVID-19 vaccine studies have opted for a simpler, if less precise, look at the issue. They took repeated blood samples from people in both the placebo and vaccinated groups at different time points. The trials tested for antibodies against the viral N protein, which are triggered by infection but not by most vaccines. If the placebo group has more positive N antibody tests than the vaccinated group, that would suggest the vaccine had cut asymptomatic infectionsand therefore transmission. No group has yet reported results from those serosurveys.

Early data from Israel indicate vaccinated people who nevertheless became infected with SARS-CoV-2 have reduced levels of virus, which may make them less contagious. A research team from the Maccabi group and the Israel Institute of Technology measured viral loads in nasal samples taken from more than 1000 people who became infected between 12 to 28 days after their first dose, the period in which immunity begins to build. The amount of virus found was significantly less than in a similar group of unvaccinated, infected Israelis, the group reported on 8 February in a preprint on bioRxiv.

Israel has vaccinated more of its population than any countryand has already seen encouraging drops in COVID-19 cases, hospitalizations, and deaths.

Myron Cohen, an infectious disease clinician at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, and colleagues at the COVID-19 Prevention Network have a proposal at NIAID to study the question in college students. One group would receive the vaccine immediately and a control population would get it weeks later. Both groups of students would swab their noses daily to assess whether there are differences in the rate of asymptomatic SARS-CoV-2 infections and levels of the virus. Withholding vaccine would be ethically dodgy if doses were plentiful, but most college students are still not eligible for vaccination, and they are less likely to develop serious COVID-19 than older adults. Cohen is confident the trial will receive the necessary ethical approvals.

Knowing whether vaccines stop transmission may not matter to government officials. In the next 6 months, were probably going to have a menu of vaccines and each is going to have characteristics related to the cold chain, number of doses required, reactogenicity, and efficacy, Karron notes. Were going to make policy decisions about use based on all of those characteristics. I dont think that some superimprecise measure of transmission is going to be one of the things that goes into our calculus.

But Cohen contends that the difficult studies to evaluate whether immunized people spread the virus are worth doing. Unless we answer this question, we are a masked society. We need to address this to become maskless.

That depends on the definition of normal. To many people now, it means herd immunity, in which a high percentage of a population has either been vaccinated or naturally infected, leaving too few susceptible hosts for a virus to continue to spread. Its such a clean, beautiful concept, the tipping point idea, that if we can just get there, the virus will go away, and then we can just go about our business as if its gone, Longini says. Its kind of a pie-in-the-sky concept thats very, very attractive.

The idea of herd immunity, a term imported from livestock veterinarians, has become more beguiling as huge swaths of populations in parts of the world recover from SARS-CoV-2 infections, leaving them with some degree of immunity. In India, for example, serosurveys have found antibodies to the virus in about half of people in the city of Delhi and the entire state of Karnataka. And though no one is claiming this meets the herd immunity threshold, new cases have recently dropped precipitously.

Still unclear is what percentage of a population needs to be vaccinated or recovered from COVID-19 before herd immunity kicks in. Early predictions were between 60% and 70% and then rose as high as 90%but thats all based on modeling or even guesswork. Anthony Fauci, who heads NIAID, has been taken to task for changing his own estimates. Recently on CNN, Fauci acknowledged that: I think we all have to be honest and humble. Nobody really knows for sure.

Recent developments have been sobering. The COVID-19 vaccines rolling out are highly effective against hospitalization and death, but their success against mild and moderate symptoms plummets when faced with viral variants that can evade vaccine-triggered antibodies. And herd immunity, even if it emerged, could easily fade as immunity waned or new variants arose.

Yet there is growing recognition that even if widespread vaccination cant halt the spread of the virus, it promises a major step back toward normal. Preventing severe disease and death in the elderly and people with comorbidities such as obesity and hypertensionthe most vulnerableis still a resounding victory over the virus, many epidemiologists say.

A nursing home resident in Greece thanks a social worker after receiving a COVID-19 vaccine.

Large swaths of the population might still become infected and develop minor disease or asymptomatic infections. That prospect worries some scientists and clinicians, who note that even mild cases can lead to the long COVID phenomenon of lingering symptoms. Hospitals, though, will not become overwhelmed with emergency cases and deaths will become increasingly rare.

To Corey, those metrics are the most relevant. When will the ICU use and all of this decant so that were at the point where, yes, we can sort of tolerate this? he asks.

Were not going to shut down this virus and end transmission, agrees Nicole Lurie, an adviser to the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations. We have to make a decision as a society about how much of this we can and want to live with. Society lives with influenza, after all, which remains endemic despite a vaccine. But Lurie stresses that flu is not an appealing model. It kills up to 60,000 people per year in the United States alonea toll she would not want to accept from COVID-19.

Still, immunologist Brigitte Autran, a member of Frances Scientific Committee on COVID-19 Vaccines, says herd immunity isnt needed to bring back normalcy. The first goal is to have individual protection, and by summing the individual protections, to have a protection of the society that will allow countries to come back to almost real, true lives.

That concern quickly moved from the theoretical to the real world when multicountry studies recently revealed several vaccines were least effective against symptomatic COVID-19 in South Africa. Thats where 95% of infections now stem from a viral variant that in test tube studies could dodge antibodies against the viral spike protein. Novavaxs protein-based vaccine went from 89.3% protection in the United Kingdom, where the variant is rare, to 49.4% in South Africa. And South Africa even halted its planned rollout of the AstraZeneca-Oxford vaccine, which consists of a harmless viral vector carrying the gene for the spike protein, after a small trial there indicated the vaccine had 22% efficacy.

Still, the vaccine-triggered immune responses may retain plenty of muscle, enough to prevent serious symptoms. A third vaccine, from Johnson & Johnson, also fell short against mild disease in South Africa, but it prevented almost all severe diseasewith no hospitalizations or deaths. (The AstraZeneca-Oxford and Novavax studies were too small to address impact on severe disease.)

One explanation could be that the level of key spike antibodies, those capable of neutralizing SARS-CoV-2s infectivity, jumped so high after vaccination that there was a cushion: Even though several labs reported that the variant in South Africa reduced the impact of the vaccine-induced antibodies by up to ninefold, if those immune fighters rise to high enough levels they may still pack enough punch to thwart serious disease.

Other arms of the immune system less affected by the mutations in the variant likely contribute to protection. Pfizer and BioNTech have shown their mRNA vaccine triggers a steep increase in key T cells. One set, which carries the CD8 receptor, targets and destroys cells that SARS-CoV-2 manages to infect. Underscoring the importance of those cells, Pfizer and BioNTech found that even though neutralizing antibody levels triggered by their vaccine were minimal in the 21 days between the first and second doses, it still gave 52.4% protection against disease during that period. Vaccine-induced T cell responses are important for COVID-19 vaccines, particularly for resistant variants that might partially evade neutralizing antibodies, suggests Dan Barouch of Harvard Medical School, whose lab has documented the importance of CD8+ cells for protecting monkeys from coronavirus reinfection.

Mixing and matching COVID-19 vaccines may also boost both antibody and T cell responses to higher levels, creating bigger cushions. Studies of various combinations have begun.

Thats the realm of modelers like Longini. Often, they restrict their analyses to tight geographical areas, which makes it easier to amass high-quality data and to account for variables that can alter outcomes. So Longini and Thomas Hladish, also at UF, created a model for their home state that extrapolates from actual case numbers for COVID-19 and assumes a rapid rollout, starting with people older than 65, of vaccines that are 60% effective at preventing infection. Assuming the virus doesnt change, they found that a vaccination campaign reaching half the population would slash symptomatic disease and death by 30% by August.

Surprisingly, their Florida model shows COVID-19 cases would steadily decline even without vaccination. Thats because the states reproductive number for SARS-CoV-2how many other people each COVID-19 case infectshas dropped below 1. Its mostly masking, social distancing, and the slow buildup of natural immunity in the population, Longini says. Indeed, as in many U.S. states, Floridas cases began to drop steeply in January.

But that decline could quickly reverse if a mutant strain takes off thats 50% more infectious, such as the B.1.1.7 variant strain that exploded first in the United Kingdom and has come to the United States, including Florida. We will have a much bigger epidemic that starts happening now, Longini says. But with more viral spread, the impact of vaccination would be bigger, averting twice as many symptomatic cases and deaths.

Models suggest the impact of COVID-19 vaccinations in San Diego will be blunted by the fast-spreading B.1.1.7 variant, which already accounts for 5% of SARS-CoV-2 infections there. If other prevention efforts are relaxed, a surge of cases will swamp the gains from vaccination.

Swipe or click the arrows to view modeling of other vaccination and behavior scenarios.

(Graphic) N. Desai/Science; (Interactive) K. Franklin/Science; (Data) Kristian Andersen/Scripps Research Institute; Natasha Martin/UC San Diego

Modeler Natasha Martin and her team at the University of California, San Diego, have looked at the interplay of variants and vaccines in an even smaller area: their home county. Sequencing of COVID-19 cases in San Diego county has shown the highly transmissible B.1.1.7 variant has a 5% prevalence so far10 times higher than recently estimated for the nation. Martins model shows that if the variant takes over, as many researchers expect, aggressive vaccination campaigns over the next 3 months will still cut case numbers in half. But if the county drops its guard and people become lax about prevention efforts, COVID-19 cases will triple even with rapid vaccination. We are at a critical moment in the epidemic, where our progress in terms of declining cases could quickly be reversed as the B.1.1.7 strain expands, Martin says. We have the tools we need to fight the spread of this virus: masking, social distancing, vaccination. Now is the time to vaccinate as many people as fast as we can, and double down on masking and distancing.

Vaccine developers proved in 2020 that they can move from concept to candidate vaccine, ready to test in people, in as little as 2 months. Changing the genetic code used in an mRNA or vector-based vaccine, or making a new inactivated-virus preparation, should be at least as fast. (A genetically engineered protein, such as the Novavax vaccine, takes longer.)

But by far the biggest time sink and expense for getting COVID-19 vaccines into use were the large-scale efficacy trials, which took about 4 months. Would those need to be repeated for each updated vaccine? No, says Peter Marks, who heads the vaccine division at the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. All the agency would likely require, he says, is a modest size study in humans showing the immune responses elicited by the new vaccine resemble those triggered by the original and are likely to be protective.

Flu vaccines, after all, are updated yearly to keep up with the ever-morphing influenza virus and are quickly approved. Makers can pop out components from the old vaccine and replace them with new ones. Regulators require minimal evidence about the revised productoften just animal studies showing it performs as well as last years model.

But with COVID-19 vaccines, no one knows which immune responses correlate with protection. Many vaccine experts assume neutralizing antibodies to the spike protein are the most important driver of protection. To prove that, however, researchers need to compare immune responses between vaccinated people infected by viruses that broke through their protection and vaccinated people who did not become infected. A more in-depth sieve analysis of breakthrough cases refines the correlates of protection by looking at the genetics of the variants that break through. Those studies are underway, but the Moderna and Pfizer-BioNTech vaccines, the first approved, worked so well that it was difficult to figure out the protective immune responses. There werent that many vaccinated, infected people, explains Mascola, who is helping coordinate the analyses.

Still, Marks says he anticipates that by the time makers of vaccines formulate new preparations to combat variants and test them in small human studies, the key immune responses will have become clear. We may well have the correlate confirmed by March when it is really needed, he says. That could open the way for rapid approval and rollout of boosters designed to keep up with the evolving virusand ensure that any hard-won progress against the pandemic isnt undone.

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How soon will COVID-19 vaccines return life to normal? - Science Magazine

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Keep it Flowing: Combating COVID-19 Blood Shortages in Cancer Treatment – Curetoday.com

Posted: February 16, 2021 at 11:49 pm

When Marie Fuesel was treated for leukemia eight years ago, she needed donated blood products more than 100 times.

Theyd give me my chemotherapy, Id stay in the hospital for a week, then Id go home, get really sick and have to come back in for blood and platelets, says Fuesel, 53, a retired insurance agent who lives in suburban Chicago. I spent over 100 days in the hospital over eight months. The disease and treatments (affect the bone marrow and production of red and white blood cells and platelets), so many transfusions were required to achieve remission.

After eight months of chemotherapy, followed by a year on the targeted drug Sprycel (dasatinib) as part of a clinical trial, Fuesel went into remission. She no longer needs transfusions, but she still appreciates the need for blood donors. I wouldnt be alive if the blood wasnt available when it was needed, she says.

Back then, blood shortages werent common, but they are now. The stay-at-home orders at the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic forced the cancellation of numerous blood drives, and safety concerns arising from its spread have prompted some frequent donors to stay away from donation centers.

Thats been a source of worry for oncologists. Patients with cancer use nearly one-quarter of the nations blood supply, according to the American Red Cross, and donated blood is a vital resource in the treatment of hematologic cancers. Patients who receive stem cell transplants often need transfusions of oxygen-carrying red blood cells, infection-fighting white blood cells and platelets to control bleeding. Blood transfusions are common in the supportive care of patients undergoing chemotherapy that suppresses production of all the blood cells that results in anemia, because they relieve symptoms that ensue, such as fatigue and shortness of breath.

Between March and June 2020, 37,000 blood drives were canceled, according to the American Red Cross. The impact of the blood shortage varied across the nation but has hit some cities particularly hard. The New York Blood Center, for example, which supplies New York City

hospitals, reported in December 2020 that it had just three days of supply on hand, down from the five- to seven-day supply it normally has.

Ongoing shortages are forcing cancer centers to change some of their procedures for using donated blood. We all recognize that we are in the midst of a public health crisis and that we all have to do our part, says Dr. Mikkael Sekeres, chief of hematology at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine and a physician liaison in hematology at Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center.

In response to COVID-related blood shortages, several cancer centers adjusted their policies for transfusing blood. Moffitt Cancer Center in Tampa, Florida, for example, developed a blood shortage action plan, according to Dr. Kaaron Benson, director of the blood bank at Moffitt. It basically meant dropping some of the thresholds we would normally use for transfusion, Benson says.

Moffitt has not needed to implement the plan yet, but if it does, Benson says, the change would most likely have the biggest effect on patients with leukemia and lymphoma who are given platelets as a preventive strategy. Provided theyre not bleeding or engaging in activities that increase the risk of bleeding, studies have shown you can allow the platelet threshold to drop from our standard of 10,000 per microliter to 5,000, she says.

The technique was first suggested in a 1991 journal article and has since been widely accepted as an appropriate change to make during blood shortages, Benson says.

In recent years, many oncologists have set lower thresholds for red blood cell transfusions another change that has eased the strain on blood supply. They used to routinely order transfusions for patients with hemoglobin levels below 10 grams per deciliter. That number dropped to between 7 and 8 grams per deciliter after a series of studies showed that infusing red blood cells at the higher threshold did not improve treatment outcomes.

During the pandemic, Moffitt and other cancer centers are also delaying some stem cell transplants and elective surgeries, so that blood used during those procedures can be kept on hand for patients who urgently need it, such as trauma patients or those needing emergent surgery. But those decisions are made on a case-by-case basis, so patients should maintain a frequent dialogue with their oncologists to determine the best plan for managing their symptoms during the pandemic.

Patients with multiple myeloma, for example, can benefit from stem cell transplants, but its usually not urgent, says Dr. Stephanie Lee, a hematologist and professor at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle. We have very good treatments for multiple myeloma, so we can continue to give patients chemotherapy for weeks or months, Lee says.

However, she explains, patients with leukemia who need stem cell transplants may be advised to undergo the procedure as quickly as possible, even during the pandemic, because delaying it could cause the cancer to grow and become resistant to treatment.

And some patients with cancer who are simultaneously fighting other diseases should receive all the blood and platelet transfusions they need to manage their cancer, as well as to address any risks posed by chronic conditions. If you have heart disease, and your hemoglobin drops even further, youre more likely to get angina or suffer a heart attack, Sekeres says. So, for those people with serious comorbidities, we are more aggressive in transfusing blood products.

Growing the Donor Pool

Stephenie Perry, who works as the business operations coordinator for the American Red Cross of Northwest Georgia, knows firsthand the value of donated blood. Perry is a survivor of Hodgkin lymphoma who needed several transfusions during her treatment, which consisted of a round of chemotherapy and two stem cell transplants.

Perry, 31, has been in remission since February 2018, but sometimes her red blood cell count still runs low and she needs another blood transfusion. I feel sluggish, and when I stand up, I get really dizzy, says Perry, who lives in Rome, Georgia. When I get a transfusion, its like someone has just given me a shot of energy.

How can patients adapt when blood shortages mandate less frequent transfusions? Lifestyle changes can make a big difference, Sekeres says. If a patient is becoming progressively anemic, and its someone who usually goes for a 2-mile walk every day, maybe theyll reduce it to 1 mile or cut (exercise) altogether, he says.

Some patients may be eligible for iron infusions, which can relieve symptoms of fatigue and lengthen the period between infusions, says Abbey Fueger, clinical trial nurse navigator for the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society.

In addition, there are other small changes that can lessen the risk of anemia and improve symptoms. Some physicians are trying to limit blood draws for patients and recommending nutritional supplements that might help them feel better and lengthen the time between infusions, she says.

Meanwhile, an effort is underway to expand the pool of potential blood donors. In April, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) addressed blood shortages brought on by COVID-19 by easing up on some of its restrictions on who can donate. For example, people who are at risk of contracting HIV, and those who have a recent tattoo or piercing or possible exposure to an infected individual no longer have to wait one year to give blood. The new waiting period is three months.

The FDA also dropped the waiting period for donors who have traveled to malaria-endemic countries from one year to three months. And it no longer recommends that blood centers turn away donors who lived in certain European countries during the era when Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, a rare and fatal degenerative brain disorder, was thought to be spreading.

The hospital community is rallying around the cause, holding blood drives of their own and encouraging family members of patients to donate blood.

During the first few months of the pandemic, Fuesel helped put together five small blood drives in her town of Orland Park, Illinois. They were so successful the American Red Cross and a local news broadcaster asked her to help run the seventh annual Great Chicago Blood Drive. So, she did, and on Jan. 13, that event collected 330 units of blood at the Orland Park location and more than 2,000 units at other drives around the city.

For donors who might be nervous about giving blood during a pandemic, Fuesel has a message: Its safe and important. All the beds are spaced apart, and there are different stations when you walk in for getting your temperature checked and using hand sanitizer, Fuesel says. I know these are hard times, but it doesnt cost anything to give your blood. Its a way to help.

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Hormone Replacement Therapy Market By 2027 Top Winning Strategies, COVID-19 Impacting Factors, Busin – PharmiWeb.com

Posted: February 16, 2021 at 11:48 pm

VALLEY COTTAGE, N.Y. Impact of COVID-19 on the Healthcare Industry

The COVID-19 pandemic has causedsevere impacts on the global economy at various levels and which can be seen onthe Healthcare industry as well. The thriving market of health care research anddevelopment is expected to exhibit a steep decline in the sales during thelockdown period owing to the shutdown of the manufacturing units, acuteshortage in the supply of raw materials and absence of potential manpower. Itcan be deduced from the current situations brought about by the pandemic thatthe production, and supply chain activities have experienced minor hurdles.However, the market is projected to gradually recover post-COVID-19, which willpresent attractive opportunities for sales across various regions of the worldin the following years.

Future Market Insights (FMI) adopteda multidisciplinary approach during the pandemic-era to focus on the growth anddevelopment of the HormoneReplacement Therapy Market. The study features insights on the currentgrowth dynamics and the major revenue reforms prevailing in the market as alongwith the key takeaways over the forecast.

The team of analysts at Future MarketInsights are focussing on research and market study to produce different HormoneReplacement Therapy Market forecasts and predictions at both national andinternational levels. They have considered several leads of informationpertaining to the industry like market figures and merger estimations to assessand produce reliable and informative insights on the Hormone ReplacementTherapy Market.

To remain ahead of your competitors, Ask aQuestion >> https://www.futuremarketinsights.com/ask-question/rep-gb-3871

Key Players

The writer will create content on thegeneral strategies of market players. And then will write the key players inthe market are: Bayer AG, Pfizer, Merck & co., BioSante Pharmaceuticals andAmgen, QuatRx Pharmaceuticals, Noven Pharmaceuticals

Segmentation

The report provides insights on the important highlights and currenttrends prevailing in the market. This helps the readers to gain a deeperunderstanding and form an unbiased opinion on the market. Numeroussegmentations have been provided for this market based on:

Based on TherapyType,

Based onApplication

Based onDistribution Channel

ProductSegmentation

Theinvestigation offers a top to bottom evaluation of different clients journeyspertinent to the market and its segments.The studyendeavours to assess the current and future development possibilities, undiscoveredroads, factors that shapes their income potential in the global market bybreaking it into di such as its types, applications, and region-wiseassessment.

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By RegionalAnalysis Covered

Fullin-depth analysis of the parent market

The analysts at FMI are dedicated toprovide insights after extensive research and study. The study also includesestimations, projections and evaluation of the market dynamics.

Importantchanges in market dynamics

The report has beencreated after detailed and exhaustive studies by the analysts at FMI takingseveral factors into consideration like monetary, ecological, social,mechanical, and political status of a particular demography. They study the keydata to assess the revenue and production of manufacturers across variousregions. The report also covers an in-depth analysis ofthe key changes in market dynamics in the recent past and the near future.

Segmentationdetails of the market

Queries Solved

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Table of Content

Reasons to Buythe report

Explore Wide-ranging Coverage of FMIs HealthcareLandscape

Respiratory Inhaler Devices MarketA slew of new drugs were launched for the management of asthma and COPD overthe last decade and development of more are currently underway. With leadingdrug manufacturers expecting the demand to surge amid COVID-19, respiratoryinhaler sales are set to grow steadily through 2030.

Microbial Therapeutic Products MarketThe global microbial therapeutic products market is poised to expand robustlyat a value CAGR worth 7% across the 2020-2030 assessment period. Risingprevalence of lifestyle induced chronic disorders as well as antimicrobialresistance are primarily driving the markets growth.

Transradial Closure Devices MarketAccording to Future Market Insights (FMI), the demand from hospitals,independent catheterization centers, and healthcare clinics will continuerising. Spurred by this, the global transradial closure devices market is setto grow by 6.5% CAGR during the forecast period from the year 2020 to 2030.

About FMI

Future Market Insights (FMI) is a leading provider of marketintelligence and consulting services, serving clients in over 150countries.FMIisheadquartered in Dubai, the global financial capital, and has delivery centersin the U.S. and India. FMIs latestmarketresearch reportsand industry analysis help businesses navigatechallenges and make critical decisions with confidence and clarity amidstbreakneck competition. Our customized and syndicated market research reportsdeliver actionable insights that drive sustainable growth. A team of expert-ledanalysts at FMI continuously tracks emerging trends and events in a broad rangeof industries to ensure that our clients prepare for the evolving needs oftheir consumers.

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Hormone Replacement Therapy Market By 2027 Top Winning Strategies, COVID-19 Impacting Factors, Busin - PharmiWeb.com

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Global Hormone Replacement Therapy Market Research Report Covers, Future Trends, Past, Present Data and Deep Analysis 2020-2026 KSU | The Sentinel…

Posted: February 16, 2021 at 11:48 pm

The report byZion Market Researchtitled Hormone Replacement Therapy Market: Global Industry Analysis, Size, Share, Growth, Trends, And Forecast, 2020-2026 presents aprofound comprehension regarding the functioning and expansion of theHormone Replacement Therapy Marketon regional and global level. This analysis report is the collation of all the wide-ranginginformation relating to the market statistics during the recent years as well as forecasts for coming years. To begin with, the report comprises the major players actively participating and competing within the Hormone Replacement Therapy market; it entails several companies, manufacturers, suppliers, organizations, and so on. Thus, the report will assist in understanding the initiatives and approaches implemented by these players to create and reinforce their market presence. The thoroughanalysis presents a wide-ranging comprehension of the global market in a knowledgeableway. The client can merely point out the steps of the firm by having details regarding their global revenue, market share, price, production & capacity, andrecent developments during the forecast period.

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Global Hormone Replacement Therapy Market: Competitive Players

Pfizer, BioSante Pharmaceuticals and Amgen, Noven Pharmaceuticals, Bayer AG, Merck & co., and QuatRx Pharmaceuticals.

The research report includes the outline of the global Hormone Replacement Therapy market such as definition, classifications, and applications. Apart from this, it entails the comprehensiveassessment of a number of factors like constraints, opportunities, drivers, challenges,and risk. Further, it the global Hormone Replacement Therapy market is bifurcated on the basis of diverse parameters into respective segments as well as sub-segments. The report alsoencompasses the existing, previous, and likely growth trends within the market for each segment and sub-segment. Additionally, the market is also segregated based on regions North America, Europe, Asia-Pacific and Latin America. along with detailed evaluation of their growth, key developments & strategies, opportunities, and the key patterns influencing the market expansion in those regions.The report will further also entail a particular part putting forth the changes and of the ongoing COVID-19pandemic. It comprisesin-depth market analysis rooted on the predictions of post-COVID-19 market circumstances together with data on the existing impacts on the Hormone Replacement Therapy market of the pandemic.

Promising Regions & Countries Mentioned In The Hormone Replacement Therapy Market Report:

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The research report also highlights the wide array of tacticalsteps, such as latest business deals, joint ventures, partnerships, M&As, technological developments, and launch of new products taking placing in the market. In addition, it scrutinizesseveral patterns of the global Hormone Replacement Therapy market, entailing the rules, criteria, and policy deviationsimplemented by the private companies and government on the market over the last few years. As a final point, the analysis includes forecasts and historic data making it a beneficial asset for experts, industry executives, presentation, sales & product managers, consultants, and every other person or organization looking for essential market data and statistics.

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Global Hormone Replacement Therapy Market Research Report Covers, Future Trends, Past, Present Data and Deep Analysis 2020-2026 KSU | The Sentinel...

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Dar Bioscience to Participate at the Women’s Health Innovation Series: Contraception Innovation Summit to be held Virtually on February 23, 2021 -…

Posted: February 16, 2021 at 11:48 pm

SAN DIEGO, Feb. 16, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- DarBioscience, Inc. (NASDAQ: DARE), a leader in womens health innovation, today announced thatSabrina Martucci Johnson, its President and Chief Executive Officer, will participate in a live panel discussion titled, The Evolution of Birth Control: Considerations from Product Development to End-User Adoption from Leading Innovators, at 12:30 p.m. EST / 9:30 a.m. PST on Tuesday, February 23, 2021, at the Womens Health Innovation Series: Contraception Innovation Summit, which will be held virtually.

The panel will discuss the opportunities and challenges faced by innovators when advancing new methods of birth control. As a featured speaker, Ms. Johnson will share Dars commitment to addressing unmet needs in contraception and the Companys own journey with three innovative product candidates under development: Ovaprene, an investigational hormone-free, monthly contraceptive that the Company is advancing towards a pivotal contraceptive study and whoseU.S.commercial rights are under a license agreement with Bayer; DARE-LARC1, an investigational user-controlled long acting reversible levonorgestrel drug delivery system designed to store in a single implant and precisely deliver hundreds of therapeutic doses over months or years, whose development has been supported by $20.5 million in grant funding from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation; and ORB-204 and ORB-214, investigational injectable formulations of etonogestrel being developed as longer-acting (6- and 12-months) methods of contraception with a more predictable return to fertility compared to currently marketed injectable contraceptive products.

The Contraception Innovation Summit is part of the 2021 Womens Health Innovation Series. The Summit is about putting women at the center of contraceptive research, innovations,and education to improve womens contraceptive journeys throughout their lives. Participants will include a leading network of pharma, biotech, medical device companies, start-ups, investors, researchers, and health care providers driving innovation at the convergence of healthcare and technology.

Find out more by downloading the agenda

About Dar Bioscience

Dar Bioscience is a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company committed to the advancement of innovative products for womens health. The companys mission is to identify, develop and bring to market a diverse portfolio of differentiated therapies that expand treatment options, improve outcomes and facilitate convenience for women, primarily in the areas of contraception, vaginal health, sexual health, and fertility.

Dars product portfolio includes potential first-in-category candidates in clinical development: Ovaprene, a hormone-free, monthly contraceptive intravaginal ring whoseU.S.commercial rights are under a license agreement with Bayer; Sildenafil Cream, 3.6%, a novel cream formulation of sildenafil to treat female sexual arousal disorder utilizing the active ingredient in Viagra; DARE-BV1, a unique hydrogel formulation of clindamycin phosphate 2% to treat bacterial vaginosis via a single application; and DARE-HRT1, a combination bio-identical estradiol and progesterone intravaginal ring for hormone replacement therapy following menopause. To learn more about Dars full portfolio of womens health product candidates, and mission to deliver differentiated therapies for women, please visitwww.darebioscience.com.

Dar may announce material information about its finances, product candidates, clinical trials and other matters using the Investors section of its website (http://ir.darebioscience.com),SECfilings, press releases, public conference calls and webcasts. Dar will use these channels to distribute material information about the company, and may also use social media to communicate important information about the company, its finances, product candidates, clinical trials and other matters. The information Dar posts on its investor relations website or through social media channels may be deemed to be material information. Dar encourages investors, the media, and others interested in the company to review the information Dar posts in the Investors section of its website and to follow these Twitter accounts: @SabrinaDareCEO and @DareBioscience. Any updates to the list of social media channels the company may use to communicate information will be posted on the investor relations page of Dars website mentioned above.

Contact:Investors on behalf of DarBioscience, Inc.:Tom MastersonAllele Capital Partnerstmasterson@allelecapital.com646.573.3216

Source: DarBioscience, Inc.

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Dar Bioscience to Participate at the Women's Health Innovation Series: Contraception Innovation Summit to be held Virtually on February 23, 2021 -...

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Have you heard of male menopause? Andropause explained – DTNEXT

Posted: February 16, 2021 at 11:48 pm

New Delhi:

This condition is referred to as andropause or in other words it is called as male menopause. It affects up to 30 per cent of men in their 50s and becomes more prevalent with age, says Dr Chandrika Kulkarni, Consultant Obstetrician Gynecologist and fertility specialist; Cloudnine Group of Hospitals.

''Unlike menopause in women, when hormone production stops completely, testosterone decline in men is a slower process. The testes, unlike the ovaries, do not run out of the substance it needs to make testosterone. However, subtle changes in the function of the testes may occur as early as age 45 to 50 and more dramatically after the age of 70 in some men," the doctor tells IANSlife.

Male menopause differs from female menopause in several ways. Not all men experience andropause and also it doesn't involve a complete shutdown of the reproductive organs. Sexual complications may arise as a result of lowered hormone levels. Male menopause can cause physical, sexual, and psychological problems. The symptoms typically worsen as one gets older, she warns.

Watch out for the Symptoms

The doctor points out: "The symptom most associated with hypogonadism (low level of hormones) is low libido. Other manifestations of hypogonadism include: erectile dysfunction, decreased muscle mass and strength, increased body fat, decreased bone mineral density and osteoporosis, and decreased vitality and depressed mood. Osteoporosis is twice more common in hypogonadal (low level of hormones) men as compared to eugonadal (normal level of hormones) men (6 vs 2.8 per cent)."

How is Andropause diagnosed and what is its treatment? Dr Kulkarni answers:

It is recommended to test older men for low testosterone levels only if they have signs or symptoms. If an initial test shows low testosterone, the test should be repeated to confirm the results.

The initial treatment for symptoms of male menopause is making healthier lifestyle choices.

Healthy diet

Regular exercise

Adequate sleep

Reducing stress levels

These lifestyle habits can benefit all men. After adopting these habits, men who are experiencing symptoms of male menopause may see a dramatic change in their overall health. It's normal to experience a decline in testosterone levels as one gets older. For many men, the symptoms are manageable even without treatment. If the symptoms are cause hardship, consultation with the specialist is advised. They can provide recommendations to help manage or treat symptoms.

Hormone replacement therapy is another treatment option. However, testosterone replacement therapy has its own potential risks and side effects. Replacing testosterone may worsen prostate cancer and increase the risk of heart disease.

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Have you heard of male menopause? Andropause explained - DTNEXT

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Like women, men too suffer from menopause, its called Andropause – Free Press Journal

Posted: February 16, 2021 at 11:48 pm

Some people use the term male menopause to refer to hormonal changes that men experience as they get older. Men experience symptoms resulting from a decrease in the male hormone called as testosterone. This condition is referred to as andropause or in other words it is called as male menopause. It affects up to 30 per cent of men in their 50s and becomes more prevalent with age, says Dr Chandrika Kulkarni, Consultant Obstetrician Gynecologist and fertility specialist; Cloudnine Group of Hospitals.

Unlike menopause in women, when hormone production stops completely, testosterone decline in men is a slower process. The testes, unlike the ovaries, do not run out of the substance it needs to make testosterone. However, subtle changes in the function of the testes may occur as early as age 45 to 50 and more dramatically after the age of 70 in some men, the doctor said.

Male menopause differs from female menopause in several ways. Not all men experience andropause and also it doesn't involve a complete shut-down of the reproductive organs. Sexual complications may arise as a result of lowered hormone levels. Male menopause can cause physical, sexual, and psychological problems. The symptoms typically worsen as one gets older, she warns.

Watch out for the symptoms: The doctor points out: "The symptom most associated with hypogonadism (low level of hormones) is low libido. Other manifestations of hypogonadism include: erectile dysfunction, decreased muscle mass and strength, increased body fat, decreased bone mineral density and osteoporosis, and decreased vitality and depressed mood. Osteoporosis is twice more common in hypogonadal (low level of hormones) men as compared to eugonadal (normal level of hormones) men (6 vs 2.8 per cent)."

How is Andropause diagnosed and what is its treatment? Dr Kulkarni answers:

It is recommended to test older men for low testosterone levels only if they have signs or symptoms. If an initial test shows low testosterone, the test should be repeated to confirm the results.

The initial treatment for symptoms of male menopause is making healthier lifestyle choices. Healthy diet, regular exercise, adequate sleep, reducing stress levels. These lifestyle habits can benefit all men.

After adopting these habits, men who are experiencing symptoms of male menopause may see a dramatic change in their overall health. It's normal to experience a decline in testosterone levels as one gets older. For many men, the symptoms are manageable even without treatment. If the symptoms are cause hardship, consultation with the specialist is advised. They can provide recommendations to help manage or treat symptoms.

Hormone replacement therapy is another treatment option. However, testosterone replacement therapy has its own potential risks and side effects. Replacing testosterone may worsen prostate cancer and increase the risk of heart disease.

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Like women, men too suffer from menopause, its called Andropause - Free Press Journal

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Menopause Treatment Market Expected to Reach USD 3049.97 Million | Current Trends and Research Devel – PharmiWeb.com

Posted: February 16, 2021 at 11:48 pm

Pune, Maharashtra, India, February 12 2021 (Wiredrelease) Brandessence Market Research and Consulting Pvt ltd :The global Menopause Treatment Market is valued at USD 2406.0 Million in 2017 and expected to reach USD 3049.97 Million by 2027 with a CAGR of 2.4% over the forecast period.

Scope of Global Menopause Treatment Market Report:

Menopause is a natural process which marks the end of menstrual cycles and it is also known as Climacteric. It can also be associated by decrease in estrogen and progesterone levels. The typical age for experiencing menopause is 45 55 years and varies individually. Some women will find it difficult while going through this stage; symptoms include weight gain, hot flashes, and vaginal dryness. These symptoms continue for around 4 years after last period and for 12 years for around 10% of women. Menopause requires treatment for relieving the signs and preventing the chronic conditions related to it or occurs due to aging. In order to curb these symptoms there is a growing demand in medication and technology which can be the key benefits in menopause treatment market.

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Global Menopause Treatment Market report is segmented on the basis of non-hormonal treatment, hormonal treatment, distribution channel and region & country level. Based on the non-hormonal treatment, the menopause treatment market is segmented into progesterone, estrogen and combination. Based upon hormonal treatment type, Global Menopause Treatment Market is classified into anti-migraine, anti-depressants, and anti-anxiety. Based upon distribution channel Global Menopause Treatment Market fragmented into Retail Pharmacies, online pharmacies, and hospital pharmacies.

The regions covered in this Global Menopause Treatment Market report are North America, Europe, Asia-Pacific and Rest of the World. On the basis of country level, the market of Menopause Treatment is sub divided into U.S., Mexico, Canada, U.K., France, Germany, Italy, China, Japan, India, South East Asia, Middle East Asia, Africa, etc.

Key Players for Global Menopause Treatment Market Report:

Some major key players for Global Menopause Treatment Market are Fervent Pharmaceuticals, Pfizer, Merck, Novartis, Novo Nordisk, Cipla, Emcure Pharmaceuticals, Allergen plc, Teva Pharmaceuticals and others.

News: New Telemedicine Service

July 15th, 2020; The Cusp, new startup offering telemedicine services to predict the menopause. These services include, at-home hormone tests reducing the hospitals and labs costs. The telemedicine will cost up to $159 comparatively less with $500 for lab test and hospital consultations. The Cusp is providing care to around 200 patients and expanding its launch with other startups like CurieMD, Elektra Health and Geneve. Till date, company has raised around $4 million from the investors.

Changing lifestyle and increasing awareness among middle aged women are key driving factors for the growth of Global Menopause Treatment Market.

The major factor driving the growth of global menopause treatment market is awareness among middle aged women and their changing lifestyles. On the other hand, there is tremendous growth in menopausal symptoms and it is estimated that around 80% of women experience common symptoms like mood change, joint pain, headaches, hot flashes and night sweats. Therefore, NICE has recommended Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) for hot flashes and night sweats. Moreover, rising investment in R&D activities along with new product launches in the market is expected to fuel the growth of menopause treatment market. In some developing countries, discussing about menstrual cycles considered as taboo as well as lack of developed healthcare infrastructure is expected to hamper the growth of menopause treatment market. In addition, herbal and natural treatment options turn out to be the major opportunity and support the market growth in a long run.

North America is dominating the Global Menopause Treatment Market

North America is expected to dominate the Global Menopause Treatment Market within the forecast period attributed to the presence of developed healthcare infrastructure and supportive government initiatives for womens health. Moreover, surge in female population with menopause symptoms are also likely to raise the demand for treatment. According to the study published in journal of The North America Menopause Society (NAMS) the symptoms of menopause is correlated with job environment which affects the working women aged between 45 to 65 years. These symptoms affect them physically, psychologically and sexually. Furthermore, growth in R&D investment and development of novel treatment options are also expected to enhance the market growth.

Europe is the second largest developed region in menopause treatment market followed by North America. Asia Pacific is expected to develop at significant rate owing to surge in working female population supported by rising awareness. IN addition, increase in strategic collaborations in the region is also expected to fuel the market growth. Moreover, growth in technology and development in healthcare infrastructure is also expected to contribute the overall market growth.

Key Benefits for Global Menopause Treatment Market Report:

Global Menopause Treatment Market report covers in-depth historical and forecast analysis.

Global Menopause Treatment Market research report provides detail information about Market Introduction, Market Summary, Global market Revenue (Revenue USD), Market Drivers, Market Restraints, Market Opportunities, Competitive Analysis, Regional and Country Level.

Global Menopause Treatment Market report helps to identify opportunities in marketplace.

Global Menopause Treatment Market report covers extensive analysis of emerging trends and competitive landscape.

Global Menopause Treatment Market Segmentation:

By Non-Hormonal Treatment:

Progesterone

Estrogen

Combination

By Hormonal Treatment:

Anti-Migraine

Anti-Depressants

Anti-Anxiety

By Distribution Channel:

Retail Pharmacies

Online Pharmacies

Hospital Pharmacies

Menopause Treatment Market By Regional & Country Level:

North America

U.S.

Canada

Europe

U.K.

France

Germany

Italy

Asia Pacific

China

Japan

India

Southeast Asia

Latin America

Brazil

Mexico

Middle East and Africa

GCC

Africa

Rest of Middle East and Africa

Table of Content

1. Chapter Report Methodology1.1. Research Process1.2. Primary Research1.3. Secondary Research1.4. Market Size Estimates1.5. Data Triangulation1.6. Forecast Model1.7. USPs of Report1.8. Report Description

2. Chapter Global Menopause Treatment Market Overview: Qualitative Analysis2.1. Market Introduction2.2. Executive Summary2.3. Global Menopause Treatment Market Classification2.4. Market Drivers2.5. Market Restraints2.6. Market Opportunity2.7. Menopause Treatment Market: Trends2.8. Porters Five Forces Analysis2.9. Market Attractiveness Analysis

3. Chapter Global Menopause Treatment Market Overview: Quantitative Analysis

4. Chapter Global Menopause Treatment Market Analysis: Segmentation By Type

5. Chapter Global Menopause Treatment Market Analysis: Segmentation By Application

Continued.

Complete Report Details @ https://brandessenceresearch.com/healthcare/menopause-treatment-market

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Menopause Treatment Market Expected to Reach USD 3049.97 Million | Current Trends and Research Devel - PharmiWeb.com

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