Recently, the State Administration for Market Regulation issued a work plan to organize and carry out special actions on advertising supervision in the field of people’s livelihood across the country from April to November 2024. Among them, the first thing to bear the brunt is to maintain a high-pressure and severe crackdown on illegal medical beauty advertising. The document emphasizes that the release of medical beauty advertisements should be strictly regulated, and illegal behaviors such as publishing medical beauty advertisements without advertising review, creating anxiety about appearance, and exaggerating the effects of medical beauty will be severely cracked down on. Seriously investigate and deal with the behavior of platforms, live broadcast rooms, beauty anchors, and celebrities publishing illegal medical beauty advertisements in live broadcast marketing. No.9 Observation will continue to observe the medical beauty industry and the general health industry. Under the strong supervision of the medical beauty industry by ...
Affecting over 500,000 people in the UK, IBD comprises Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis The study, published in Nature Immunology, could help identify new ways to treat inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Collectively known as IBD, Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis are incurable conditions that involve excessive inflammation in the gut and affect over 500,000 people in the UK, according to Crohn’s & Colitis UK. In this study, researchers deleted two proteins, c-Maf and Blimp-1, from T cells in mice to understand their role in maintaining gut health via IL-10. Mutations in the cytokine IL-10 or its receptor can result in IBD in children and it has previously been shown that c-Maf and Blimp-1 can drive the activity of the IL-10 gene in T cells. They found that, when combined with an environmental trigger – an infection with the Helicobacter hepaticus bacterium – IL-10 activity in T cells was reduced and ...
Approximately 14% of the competition-submitted proposals were selected to receive funding Nine researchers from University College London (UCL) have secured nearly £560m in funding from the European Research Council’s (ERC) Advanced Grants to advance researchers in fields including biochemistry, nanotechnologies and regenerative medicine. Approximately 14% of the competition-submitted proposals were selected for funding, comprising 255 researchers, and could create over 2,000 new jobs. Set up in 2007 by the EU, the ERC has been funding research via the Advanced Grant to universities and research centres across 19 EU member states and associated countries, including the UK, Germany and France. The funding will be used for projects including the study of the roles of priority proteins in cellular quiescence and ageing, the thymus gland’s functions within the immune system and lung cancer. UCL professor Charles Swanton from the UCL Cancer Institute, along with UCL professor Paola Bonfanti and senior group leader ...
Pharmaceutical companies use Feel Therapeutics’ technology to monitor the mental state of participants in clinical trials of behavioral medications. But the startup envisions its technology eventually also finding a place as a part of clinical care. By Frank VinluanWhen it comes to evaluating the health of a patient, each therapeutic area has its own data-gathering tools. Think glucose monitors in diabetes and heart monitors for cardiovascular disease. But in mental health, a clinician relies on what a patient says. Self-reporting is incomplete and lacks objectivity, says George Eleftheriou, CEO and co-founder of Feel Therapeutics. Feel is trying to bring more complete and objective data collection to the field of mental health. The San Francisco-based startup does it with wearable technology that continuously collects data and provides recommendations. “One of the things we hear is how poor storytellers people are and [how they] cannot truly depict what happened over the past ...
Don Tracy, Associate Editor Partnership also includes an agreement for Arvinas to sell its preclinical AR-V7 program to Novartis. Novartis and Arvinas announced that they have agreed to terms on a collaboration to develop and commercialize ARV-766, Arvinas’ advanced Protac androgen receptor degrader designed for prostate cancer treatment. Per terms of the deal, Novartis will focus on worldwide clinical development, commercialization, and will obtain all associated rights for ARV-766 and the AR-V7 program. In turn, Arvinas will receive an upfront payment of $150 million, with the ability to receive up to $1.01 billion based on developmental, regulatory, and commercial milestones, plus royalties on sales of ARV-766. Completion of the deal depends on when regulatory approvals are met, which requires acquiescence with the Hart-Scott-Rodino Act.1 “We are thrilled to partner with an organization that shares our dedication to delivering transformative medicines to patients with significant unmet need,” said John Houston, PhD, ...
Cancer treatment typically adheres to a standard of care—established, statistically validated regimens that are effective for the majority of patients. However, the disease’s inherent variability means that a one-size-fits-all approach often falls short. Individual responses to the same drug can vary dramatically. Personalized cancer treatment, which outperforms traditional treatment methods, increasingly relies on genomics—DNA profiling of a patient’s cancer—to tailor therapy. Current genomic profiling processes can analyze thousands of genes but might take weeks to deliver results and still fail to provide complete clarity on the optimal treatment strategy. For the first time, researchers have combined genetic testing with personalized drug screening directly on tumor samples to identify the right treatment for children with relapsed cancers, offering a timelier and effective approach. The functional precision medicine approach to target cancer has been developed by researchers at Florida International University (Miami, FL, USA) combines genetic testing with a new method of ...
When dermatologists spot an unusual mark on a patient’s skin, they face a choice: monitor it for some time or remove it for biopsy. Similarly, when removing breast tumors, surgeons must send excised tissues to pathologists who take several days to determine if any cancerous cells remain, leading to a second surgery for removing additional cells in about 20% of cases. Pathologists process these tissues by slicing them into thin sections and staining them with hematoxylin and eosin (H&E), which enhances the visibility of cellular structures and is crucial for diagnosing cancers and other diseases. However, this method is labor-intensive and irreversible; once a biopsy is sliced in one direction, it cannot be resectioned for alternative views. Now, a “virtual biopsy” could allow dermatologists to forego the scalpel and scan the skin to check for cancerous cells without an incision. Similarly, surgeons might soon be able to determine if they ...
Ahandful of UK charities and community pharmacists urged the UK government to find a fix for the ongoing drug shortage issue to prevent further patient suffering. The UK Epilepsy Society, SUDEP Action, Epilepsy Action and Parkinson’s UK, joined forces to call for a meeting with the Health Secretary, Victoria Atkins. The Association of Independent Multiple Pharmacies (AIMp) found that community pharmacists are spending an average of two hours every day to find patients’ medications due to the disruptions. In a 11 April press release, Dr. Leyla Hannbeck, AIMp’s CEO, said, “The system is overly complex and shrouded in secrecy – what we need is openness and transparency. Pharmacists are in the same position as patients – we are at the end of the supply chain but are the last people to find out about medication shortages. Consequently, we are unable to plan in advance and support the people who rely ...
South Korea-based SK Life Sciences has received US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval for two new forms of administration of its epilepsy drug Xcopri (cenobamate), as an oral suspension mixed with water for mouth administration or via a nasogastric tube. Discovered and developed by SK Biopharmaceuticals, Xcopri is an anti-epileptic drug indicated for partial-onset seizures in adults. The therapy reduces repetitive neuronal firing by inhibiting voltage-gated sodium currents, leading to a decreased occurrence of seizures. The oral form of the treatment is taken once daily. The FDA-approved label revision is based on findings from an open-label study comparing the bioequivalence of three ways of administering the medication: swallowing a whole tablet, taking a crushed tablet in water by mouth, and using a nasogastric tube to administer a crushed tablet in water. The approval addresses the needs of patients living with epilepsy, who are unable to swallow Xcopri tablets whole, ...
The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has granted Candel Therapeutics’ immunotherapy candidate CAN-2409 (aglatimagene besadenovec) orphan drug designation for the treatment of pancreatic cancer. Orphan drug designations are granted to medicines intended to treat rare conditions and come with benefits such as tax credits for US-based clinical trials and potentially seven years of market exclusivity in the designated indication upon agency approval. Pancreatic cancer is one of the most lethal forms of cancer, with a survival rate beyond ten years of around 5%. CAN-2409 was also granted fast track designation in pancreatic cancer by the FDA in December 2023, meaning the candidate is in line for expedited development and review times. CAN-2409 is an off-the-shelf immunotherapy that is a combination of a genetically modified adenovirus and the herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase (HSV-tk) gene. The drug works by inducing T cell response at both the targeted tumour and at ...
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