Archives: 2020-01-29

EC approves Siponimod for secondary progressive multiple sclerosis

Mayzent (siponimod) has been approved by the European Commission (EC) for adults with secondary progressive multiple sclerosis (SPMS) based on the results of the EXPAND trial. The European Commission (EC) has approved Mayzent (siponimod) for the treatment of adults with secondary progressive multiple sclerosis (SPMS) with active disease evidenced by relapses or imaging features of inflammatory activity. Approximately 80

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R&D plans are the stars in new EU industrial strategy and “Wholly Inclusive” European Research Area

A draft plan, for adoption in Brussels on 4 March, highlights the importance of research and innovation in making EU industry more competitive Source Science Business The new European Commission is putting research and innovation at the heart of its ambitious new industrial strategy. A draft memo on the strategy, dated 14 January, for a

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Mapping the Wuhan Coronavirus (2019-nCoV) Johns Hopkins CSSE Online Dashboard

Source CSSE Online Dashboard Background On December 31, 2019, the World Health Organization (WHO) was informed of an outbreak of “pneumonia of unknown cause” detected in Wuhan City, Hubei Province, China – the seventh-largest city in China with 11 million residents. As of January 23, there are over 800 cases of 2019-nCoV confirmed globally, including cases in

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Patient in Osaka University 1st to have iPS cell heart muscle transplant

A patient who received the world’s first transplant of cardiac muscle cells using artificially derived stem cells known as iPS cells this month is in stable condition, an Osaka University team said Jan. 27. After surgery, doctors closely monitored the patient, who had ischemic cardiomyopathy, a condition in which clotted arteries cause heart muscles to

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FDA Announces Key Actions to Advance Development of Novel Coronavirus Medical Countermeasures

Today, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) announced critical actions to advance development of novel coronavirus medical countermeasures. As with any emerging public health threat, the FDA will collaborate with interagency partners, product developers, international partners and global regulators to expedite the development and availability of medical products needed to diagnose, treat, mitigate and

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Six patients with rare blood disease are doing well after gene therapy clinical trial in UCLA

Treatment uses person’s own stem cells instead of donor cells UCLA researchers are part of an international team that reported the use of a stem cell gene therapy to treat nine people with the rare, inherited blood disease known as X-linked chronic granulomatous disease, or X-CGD. Six of those patients are now in remission and

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Mount Sinai Surgeons Perform First Surgery in New York City Using FDA-Approved Spinal Tethering Device

Mount Sinai surgeons have performed the first-ever spinal tethering surgery in New York City to correct idiopathic scoliosis—a sideways curvature in the spine—in children and adolescents. The procedure performed by Baron S. Lonner, MD, Professor of Orthopedic Surgery, and Pediatrics, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, and Chief of Minimally Invasive Scoliosis Surgery, Mount

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