This post was originally published on this site A new imaging technique that visualizes individual cells with high resolution may improve the understanding of key events in breast cancer development, including how and when cells turn invasive and spread elsewhere. The tool, which already has helped explain mechanisms used by cancer cells to evade treatment, was…
Author: Chris
Essa Pharma’s Androgen Receptor Inhibitor, EPI-7386, Selected as Lead Candidate Therapy
This post was originally published on this site EPI-7386, a new androgen receptor inhibitor, was selected as Essa Pharma‘s lead candidate therapy for metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC), the company announced. The company’s decision was supported by early preclinical data recently presented at the 2019 Genitourinary Cancers Symposium in San Francisco. The poster, “Next generation…
FasT CAR-T Is Faster, More Potent and Affordable Therapy, Gracell Bio Says
This post was originally published on this site Gracell Biotechnologies has developed a platform, called FasT CAR-T, that is able to manufacture its CD19-targeting CAR T-cell product in a single day, as opposed to 14 days for conventional CAR T-cell therapies. Manufacturing costs also were reduced. The low-cost treatment, the company says, also is safe…
PALS Uplifts the Spirits of Rare-Disease Patients by Offering Free Flights
This post was originally published on this site Cumbersome security procedures, rising airfares, and shrinking legroom have made commercial air travel difficult enough these days — even for healthy passengers. Imagine how much harder it is for patients with rare diseases who must get to doctors’ appointments or clinical trials that are hundreds of miles…
bluebird bio Opens Manufacturing, Research Facility in Durham, N.C.
This post was originally published on this site Bluebird bio has officially opened a facility in Durham, North Carolina, to make the lentiviral vector needed for its investigational gene and cell treatments, including the CAR T-cell therapies bb2121 and bb21217 for relapsed or refractory multiple myeloma. Some 50 researchers, engineers and others are employed at the 125,000-square-foot facility. Roughly…
Keytruda-Inlyta Combo Approved by FDA for Untreated Advanced Kidney Cancer
This post was originally published on this site The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved a combination of Keytruda (pembrolizumab) plus Inlyta (axitinib) for the initial treatment of patients with advanced renal cell carcinoma, the most common type of kidney cancer. The approval comes only two months after the combination received priority review…
Long-term Treatment with Thiazide Diuretics May Lower Risk of Bone, Hip Fractures, Study Suggests
This post was originally published on this site Long-term use of thiazide diuretics — a hypertension medication — may lower the risk of bone fractures, particularly hip fractures, in people with Alzheimer’s, a disease with a high risk of fractures due to falls, a Finnish study suggests. The study, “Long-term thiazide use and risk of…
Early Cancer Detection Test, Ccheck, May Reduce Number of Unnecessary Prostate Biopsies, Anixa Says
This post was originally published on this site Ccheck, a new test for early cancer detection under development by Anixa Biosciences, was able to identify patients with aggressive prostate cancer, and helped decide who should be recommended for a prostate biopsy, potentially reducing the number of unnecessary biopsies, the company announced. The test may be…
Ovarian Cancer Patients Being Recruited to Test HPN536 Immunotherapy in Phase 1/2a Trial
This post was originally published on this site Harpoon Therapeutics has begun dosing participants in its Phase 1/2a trial evaluating the investigational immunotherapy HPN536 in patients with advanced cancers that produce the mesothelin protein. The study (NCT03872206) will first enroll 20 ovarian cancer patients to determine the treatment’s safety and the best therapeutic dose. Then,…
Chemotherapy Improves Survival of AIDS-related Lymphoma Patients, Study Finds
This post was originally published on this site Patients with AIDS-related lymphoma have better survival outcomes when standard chemotherapy is added to their combined antiretroviral therapy (cART), a new study shows. The study, “The clinical features and prognosis of 100 AIDS-related lymphoma cases,” was published in Scientific Reports. Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection is known…