Archives: 2019-09-17

Gene Therapy Trials

Applications and the limitations of real-world data. Source Contract Pharma There are approximately 7,000 distinct rare diseases that exist affecting 350 million people worldwide, and approximately 80% of those rare diseases are caused by faulty genes. Scientific advances such as the CRISPR/Cas9 genome-engineering system1 have simplified the pharmaceutical and biotech industry’s ability to develop gene therapies,

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Novartis’ Phase III studies of ofatumumab achieve primary goals in relapsing multiple sclerosis

Novartis has reported positive findings from the Phase III ASCLEPIOS I and II clinical trials of ofatumumab (OMB157), which met their primary endpoints in relapsing forms of multiple sclerosis (RMS) patients. Ofatumumab is an anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody (mAb) designed to cause B-cell lysis and depletion. It has been formulated for once-monthly, subcutaneous self-administration. The identical

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University of Pennsylvania Announces Completion of Exclusive R&D Alliance With Novartis and Development of New Focused Relationship

Penn to Broaden Pathways for Development of New CAR T Cell Therapies Following a landmark, first-of-its-kind collaboration that spawned the global CAR T cell therapy industry, the University of Pennsylvania and Novartis have concluded their seven-year research and development alliance, which resulted in the world’s first approved gene therapy for cancer. They will continue to

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Gene therapy may help functional recovery after stroke

A new gene therapy turns glial cells — abundant support cells in the brain — into neurons, repairing damage that results from stroke and significantly improving motor function in mice. A paper describing the new therapy, which uses the NeuroD1 gene, appears online in the journal Molecular Therapy. Once further developed, this NeuroD1-based gene therapy potentially

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Report: Providers need strategy for disruptive digital health tech

If healthcare organizations want to succeed in an environment of digital transformation, they must bring about participatory health. That shift will require providers to be grounded in patient engagement and patient-centered care—by being “on-demand, connected and data-driven.” That’s the contention of a new report from the American Hospital Association’s Center for Health Innovation, and EY, which examines

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Army Medicine Europe teaches how to treat patients virtually

Source Army.mil Doctors from 12 specialties taught 26 participants on required virtual health presentation skills at the eighth tri-service, inter-agency Virtual Health Patient Presenter course Sept. 9 – 13 at Landstuhl Regional Medical Center. The one-week course gave nurses, Army medics, Air Force medical technicians and Navy corpsmen hands-on instruction from specialty physicians and physician

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#ECTRIMS2019 — Promises and Warnings About Stem Cell Therapy in Multiple Sclerosis

Stem cell therapy, or stem cell transplant, is an emerging yet controversial treatment approach for multiple sclerosis (MS). While some data uphold it as one of the most efficacious MS treatments, to date there have been no controlled studies comparing it to conventional medicines and providing more robust evidence regarding its safety and clinical benefit. Under the topic

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Fedratinib Approval Further Validates JAK Inhibition for Myelofibrosis Treatment

Source Targeted Oncology JAK inhibition continues to drive progress in myelofibrosis treatment as fedratinib (Inrebic) now joins ruxolitinib (Jakafi) in the treatment landscape for myelofibrosis. Since its FDA approval in August 2019, fedratinib has become both an additional treatment and a second-line option for patients who respond poorly to ruxolitinib. The approval of fedratinib was

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