Archives: 2024-09-26

Single-Dose Gene Therapy is Potentially Life-Changing for Adults with Hemophilia B

Study results formed the basis of the therapy’s FDA approval in April 2024 Adults with hemophilia B saw their number of bleeding episodes drop by an average of 71 percent after a single infusion of gene therapy, according to the results of an international Phase III clinical trial published today in the New England Journal of Medicine by researchers from the University of

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Cells programmed to target brain tumors

Scientists from UNIGE and HUG have developed CAR-T cells capable of targeting malignant gliomas while preserving healthy tissues. Glioblastoma is the most common and aggressive primary brain tumor—average survival after diagnosis is less than two years—and current treatments remain ineffective. In recent years, immunotherapies have been giving patients hope, albeit with relatively modest success. A

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Trial of cell-based therapy for high-risk lymphoma leads to FDA breakthrough designation

In an early Stanford Medicine study, CAR-T cell therapy helps some with intractable lymphoma, but those who relapse have few options. Modifying the therapy’s molecular target improved response. CAR-T cell therapy, which targets a specific protein on the surface of cancer cells, causes tumors to shrink or disappear in about half of patients with large

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A prosthesis driven by the nervous system helps people with amputation walk naturally

A new surgical procedure gives people more neural feedback from their residual limb. With it, seven patients walked more naturally and navigated obstacles. State-of-the-art prosthetic limbs can help people with amputations achieve a natural walking gait, but they don’t give the user full neural control over the limb. Instead, they rely on robotic sensors and

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Presence of specific lipids indicate tissue ageing and can be decreased through exercise. Exercise is medicine.

Scientists have discovered that a type of fat accumulates as tissue ages and that this accumulation can be reversed through exercise. Researchers from Amsterdam UMC, together with colleagues from Maastricht UMC+, analysed both mice and human tissue before and after exercise allowing them to draw this conclusion. The results are published today in Nature Aging.  

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Immune response study explains why some people don’t get COVID-19

Using single-cell sequencing technology, researchers provide the most comprehensive timeline to date of how the body responds to SARS-CoV-2 exposure. Scientists have discovered novel immune responses that help explain how some individuals avoid getting COVID-19. Using single-cell sequencing, researchers from the Wellcome Sanger Institute, University College London (UCL), Imperial College London, the Netherlands Cancer Institute

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