so drugs targeting STAT3 could be used in cancer therapy. However STAT3 is also important in the development of the immune system.
The issue has been tackled by Dagmar Gotthardt and colleagues in the Institute of Pharmacology and Toxicology of the University of Veterinary medicine Vienna (Vetmeduni Vienna.
Many cholesterol treatments currently in development rely on an injection, not a pill. With the option of an orally effective peptide, Ghadiri believes researchers are closer to developing an accessible new therapy for atherosclerosis.
#The dwindling stock of antibiotics, and what to do about it Michael Kinch Phd associate vice chancellor and director of the Center for Research Innovation in Business is among that number.
and then a second antibiotic while they worked on a diagnosis. They soon learned his son's appendix had burst
and was put on four newer antibiotics. When the lab tests for antibiotic susceptibility finally came in they showed the pathogenic bacteria were susceptible to only two of the six antibiotics Kinch's son had been given.
Stunningly the two that worked were the older drugs he had been given at the clinic. I can only assume that
if we had gone straight to the academic medical center he might not have survived Kinch said. It's not that my son had had extensive exposure to antibiotics Kinch explained carefully.
We're all just colonized by resistant bacteria now. Three weeks later I was asked to join a nonprofit organization working on new models for drug development called the Institute for Life sciences Collaboration Kinch said.
The institute was picking the therapeutic areas that would be their focus. They were considering various exotic diseases
and I said'Antibiotics.''Antibiotics are crashingin his last position as managing director of the Center for Molecular Discovery at Yale university Kinch had assembled a huge database of information about drug discovery and development in the pharmaceutical industry.
He has been able to excavate story after story from this storehouse of data. The crash of antibiotics is one of the best known and scariest
since losing antibiotics would force changes in almost every area of medical practice. In an article in Drug Discovery Today Kinch summarized the financial constraints that have led to the current crisis in antibiotic supply.
The number of antibiotics available for clinical use Kinch said has declined to 96 from a peak of 113 in 2000.
The rate of withdrawals is double the rate of new introductions Kinch said. Antibiotics are being withdrawn
because they don't work anymore because they're too toxic or because they've been replaced by new versions of the same drug.
Introductions are declining because pharmaceutical companies are leaving the business of antibiotic discovery and development. Pfizer or its predecessors developed 40 of the 155 antibiotics ever sold in this country Kinch said
but is no longer in the antibiotic space. Eli lilly Astrazeneca and Bristol-myers squibb have also left the antibiotic field
which is now dominated by small companies such as Cubist Pharmaceuticals formed in 1992 specifically to focus on drugs for resistant bacterial infections that could have higher price points.
His count Kinch said if anything overestimates the number of antibiotics still available because some of the new drugs are not general-purpose antibiotics.
They include for example an acne medication and a treatment for anthrax developed for use in case of a bioterrorist attack.
One reason pharmaceutical companies are said withdrawing Kinch is that our patent law squeezes them for time.
A patent gives a company 20 years of protection for a new drug but it takes 11 years of clinical trial experience on average to get a drug approved.
That means the typical company has nine years under patent to earn back the development costs before a generic comes in.
If the drug is an antibiotic there is an additional catch. Because of rising resistance doctors hold new antibiotics in reserve using them only in cases of dire need.
This happened for example in the case of vancomycin which has long been used as a drug of last resort.
When you hold a drug in reserve Kinch said you're eating into the patent time a company has to recoup its development costs.
If you've got this vancomycin-like situation where the drug is sitting on a shelf--quite literally sitting on a shelf--how is a company going to make its money back?
It can't price the drug at $10000 a dose. Companies have decided consistently there is no exit from this trapas long as we hold to the current model for drug development.
What to do about it? In the U s. we're used to turning to the NIH to solve problems like this
but the NIH budget which doubled in 2009 has fallen continuously ever since. It is now 30 percent below 2009 levels in constant dollars.
Since the NIH has fallen victim to congressional gridlock people in the biomedical community are starting to organize on their own.
The group Kinch helped found the Institute for Life sciences Collaboration recently convened an expert panel at the United nations to discuss the need for innovative partnerships
and financing models to deal with antibiotic resistance. One popular idea is de-linkage or finding a way to disconnect the costs of development from the sale of pills.
Some have suggested that large prizes of $1 billion or more be offered for the development of new drugs
which would then be sold for modest prices by other companies. The Infectious diseases Society of America (ISDA) has launched a 10 x 20 initiative
whose goal is to create global antibacterial drug research-and-development enterprise with the power in the short-term to develop 10 new safe and effective antibiotics by 2020.
Britain is offering a prize of £10 million called the Longitude Prize 2014 (after the prize once offered for an accurate way to determine the longitude of ships at sea) for a rapid test that would allow health professionals to identify bacteria quickly
and so administer only the right antibiotics at the right time. Newly arrived at Washington University in St louis Kinch is just beginning to think about the role the university might play in redefining its role.
He points out that the university excels in biomedical research but is losing brilliant ideas in the Valley of Death between the lab and the market.
In the past the hunting ground for new antibiotics was often the soil. Vancomycin for example was found in a soil sample from Borneo.
Antibiotics are not the only drug class heading for trouble--Kinch mentions that HIV/AIDS drugs are following a similar trajectory
--but they have become the poster child for the larger problem of drug discovery and development in part because they underpin every part of modern medical practice from surgery to cancer treatment and pretty much everything in between.
Early detection and treatment typically with antibiotics and intravenous fluids is critical for survival. The Penn prediction tool dubbed the sepsis sniffer uses laboratory
two to threefold increase in orders for tests that could help identify the presence of sepsis 1. 5 to twofold increase in the administration of antibiotics
in the kind of massive quantities needed for cell transplantation and pharmaceutical purposes, human insulin-producing beta cells equivalent in most every way to normally functioning beta cells.
and opened the door for drug discovery and transplantation therapy in diabetes, "Fuchs said. And Jose Oberholtzer, M d.,Associate professor of Surgery, Endocrinology and Diabetes,
the study offers a blueprint for development of a drug specific to the task k
Jewelers in India are required by law to test the purity of gold using an optical emission spectrometer that analyzes the composition of the metal on the basis of the emitted light spectrum.
if they need antibiotics...or just patience It's that time of the year where a perfect storm of fall allergies
and a prescription for antibiotics--despite evidence showing that in most cases, the medication won't help.
Now, researchers from The Ohio State university Wexner Medical center and Nationwide Children's Hospital have developed a new rapid screening test that could help physicians know exactly what type of sinusitis they are dealing with
and less than 5 minutes later, physicians will be able to more confidently prescribe antibiotics for the estimated 10 percent of sinusitis sufferers who actually need them,
"The use of the test could translate into 18 million fewer people getting antibiotics that they don't need,
and a positive step towards addressing the major public health issue of antibiotic overuse.""Investors seem to agree.
"Research has shown that people with chronic sinusitis often have bacteria in their sinuses that have created biofilms--communities of bacteria with sticky protective covers that help them evade antibiotics and flourish unchecked.
not only help dramatically reduce the overuse of antibiotics in sinusitis, but could also be used to identify other types of pathogenic respiratory bacteria
"Das says the research also helps explain why viral infections appear to promote bacterial infections--a primary reason physicians will often"preemptively"prescribe antibiotics."
"Eighty to ninety percent of the time these symptoms will subside without any antibiotic needed,
Kilmer and co-author Jesse Sussell examined one-year rearrest rates among those arrested for eligible offenses--such as theft, vandalism, drug offenses, assault and disorderly conduct--inside and outside the catchment area both before and after the Community Justice Center opened.
such as smoking status and medication use. Since 1991 and every four years thereafter, NHSII investigators have collected diet information,
which we now plan to use to screen the impact of drugs and antibodies that can shut it down,
Dry powder inhaler formulation Despite advances in vaccination and antimicrobial therapy, community-acquired pneumonia remains a leading cause of morbidity and mortality, even in highly developed countries.
ciprofloxacin hydrochloride (CIP), an antibiotic commonly used to eliminate pathogenic bacteria, and beclomethasone dipropionate (BP), a corticosteroid commonly used to inhibit inflammatory responses.
The novelty of this formulation lies in the combination of the two drugs. Previous clinical trials have evaluated the efficacy, safety and tolerability of CIP on human patients.
and excellent antimicrobial activities,"explains Heng.""Our follow-up microbial assays show that a concentration as low as one microgram per milliliter is enough to inhibit three of the bacteria known to cause this type of pneumonia.""
Dry powder inhalers exhibit several advantages over traditional drug delivery methods, including improved formulation stability, enhanced delivery efficiency, excellent portability and ease of use.
And many drugs work by targeting specific membrane proteins.""Currently, scientists only know the structure of a small handful of membrane proteins.
Our research paves the way to understand the structure of the thousands of different types of membrane proteins to allow the development of many new drugs
#Universal Ebola drug target identified by researchers University of Utah biochemists have reported a new drug discovery tool against the Ebola virus.
This new tool can be used as a drug target in the discovery of anti-Ebola agents that are effective against all known strains and likely future strains.
and a group led by Brett Welch, Ph d. at Navigen, Inc.,a Salt lake city pharmaceutical discovery and development company.
and is currently screening for drugs against the target.)The Utah scientists designed peptide mimics of a highly conserved region in the Ebola protein that controls entry of the virus into the human host cell,
Importantly, the researchers were able to demonstrate this peptide target is suitable for use in high-throughput drug screens.
These kinds of screens allow rapid identification of potential new drugs from billions of possible candidates.
Current experimental drugs generally target only one of Ebola's five species."The current growing epidemic demonstrates the need for effective broad-range Ebola virus therapies,
Therefore, our target will enable the discovery of drugs with the potential to treat any future epidemic,
but a number of promising experimental drugs are being advanced aggressively to clinical trials to address the current crisis. Dr. Eckert notes,"
which are promising drug candidates. Unlike natural peptides, they are digested not by enzymes in the blood.
and may be key to developing new drugs and therapies. Specifically principal investigator Albert R. La Spada MD Phd professor of cellular and molecular medicine chief of the Division of Genetics in the Department of Pediatrics and associate director of the Institute for Genomic medicine
because not only have shown we this particular part of the protein is essential for necroptosis we also have a starting point in a drug discovery program.
Dr Murphy said institute scientists would now embark on a collaborative project with Catalyst Therapeutics to develop a potent new drug based on the small molecule identified in the study.
The optimal drug therapies we have today often aren't enough to manage this disease for some patients
Drug and device therapies that are currently available for heart failure improve that same quality of life score by only five or 10 points.
and antibiotic therapy could reduce that risk in future studies. There were no hospitalizations among the participants for stroke thrombosis sepsis or bleeding
"Hijacking the hijacker"A tempting premise is to use this same machinery to introduce drugs or genes into the nervous system,"Dr. Perlson added.
because it enables automatic calculation of the neural interconnection on the basis of their position inside the space and their projection directions.
and limit the spread of the virus. A drug of this type affects the physical properties of the virus's DNA
which means that the drug can resist the virus's mutations said Alex Evilevitch. The second study that Evilevitch and his colleagues have published recently is about bacteriophages
and demonstrated how the MFICS can size droplets precisely a useful function for drug delivery or studying microreactor chambers.
which means RRAM can be used as the basis of rewritable random-access memory. RRAM is under development worldwide and expected to supplant flash memory technology in the marketplace within a few years
If you want to use your boat sooner clean all surfaces with hot (over 104 degrees F.)water a high-pressure hose or a disinfectant like a household bleach solution.
and only one therapy has been approved by the Food and Drug Administration. While most of these vaccines are created with dendritic cells,
In 2014, Cowan identified two drugs with the potential to convert stem cells that make white fat into those that would make brown. his latest study gives us new tools and targets to use in the battle against obesity
-or right-handed form may have a multitude of practical applications, potentially leading to new and improved drugs, diagnosis methods, and pesticides.
The breakthrough could be important in developing effective molecules for use in a wide range of industries everything from the development of safer new drugs and disease diagnosis to less toxic pesticides.
for instance with chiral drugs. Presently, more than 50 per cent of all drugs produced are active in only one of their two handed forms.
The chemistry of life Dr Ivan Powis, Professor of Chemical Physics in the University School of Chemistry, who led the research,
In pharmaceuticals, handedness can be crucial because one form of a molecule can be associated with an effective result
for instance the well-known malformation of the limbs of infants of pregnant women taking the Thalidomide drug to relieve morning sickness that occurred around 1960.
In addition to the development of effective new drugs and diagnosis methods for diseases including cancer, it could potentially lead to new reenpesticides using pheromones tailored specifically to attract pollinators
or even stop their current HIV drug regimen and clear the virus from the body altogether,
Certain drugs help suppress the virus, but since the human immune system can clear the virus from the body,
people with HIV have the virus for life. espite increased scientific understanding of HIV and better prevention and treatment with available drugs, a majority of the 35 million people living with HIV,
#Yale Researchers Successfully Treat Eczema with Rheumatoid arthritis Drug A team of scientists at Yale university used a rheumatoid arthritis drug to successfully treated patients with moderate to severe eczema.
The same rheumatoid arthritis drug (tofacitinib citrate) has shown recently to reverse two other disfiguring skin conditions, vitiligo and alopecia areata.
Based on current scientific models of eczema biology, assistant professor of dermatology Dr. Brett King. hypothesized that a drug approved for rheumatoid arthritis,
In the new study, King and his colleagues report that treatment with the drug led to dramatic improvement in six patients with moderate to severe eczema who had tried previously conventional therapies without success. During treatment all six
Both Brandl and Bertrand are trained as pharmacists, and describe their discovery as a happy accident:
They initially sought to develop nanoparticles that could be used to deliver drugs to cancer cells. Brandl had synthesized previously polymers that could be cleaved apart by exposure to UV LIGHT.
But he and Bertrand came to question their suitability for drug delivery, since UV LIGHT can be damaging to tissue and cells,
and approved by the Food and Drug Administration as a food additive, and polylactic acid, a biodegradable plastic used in compostable cups and glassware.
The study also suggests the broader potential for adapting nanoscale drug-delivery techniques developed for use in environmental remediation. hat we can apply some of the highly sophisticated,
The multidisciplinary team drawing on their expertise in genetics, cancer, computational biology, pharmacology, and other disciplines also tested the response of tumor cells with specific mutations to anticancer drugs.
The researchers confirmed that a gene known as NF1 is a ajor playerin the development of skin cancer. he key finding is that roughly 45%of melanomas that do not harbor the known BRAF or NRAS mutations display loss of NF1 function,
in addition to loss of NF1, multiple factors need to be tested to predict the response to the drugs. t opens the door to more research,
Clinics have to track their drugs, generate tedious reports to get new supplies and deliver those reports to central facilities.
the clinic wouldn get the drugs it needed to treat its patients. The 3g technology has allowed clinics to computerize much of their administrative work,
since patients need close supervision to ensure they are taking their medications on schedule. 3g technology is making a difference People in developed countries may think that 3g is outdated technology for smartphones,
On an annual basis, the amount of serious crime was cut by nearly a quarter.
their treatment options are limited to antibiotics, blood transfusions, and fluid supplements to deal with the symptoms of the disease.
AEOL-10150 of Aeolus Pharmaceuticals is a small molecule that reduces inflammation associated with radiation exposure.
All of these drugs are being developed under the FDA nimal rule, which requires extensive efficacy data in animal models,
Since many of these drugs have passed already human safety testing they could be on the market before the next nuclear catastrophe strikes p
and usually require someone to monitor the soil on an ad hoc basis. Growflex can help farmers watering patterns based on other ambient factors,
and is priced on a monthly subscription basis. For example, an open field of 20 to 40 acres might use five nodes,
And this is what drives Eben Bayer crazy. Cofounder and CEO of Ecovative Design, Bayer is on a mission to replace all packaging foam with a new material made from agricultural byproducts and mushrooms.
Bayer and his cofounder invented Mycobond a patent-pending technology that uses a growing organism and byproducts from food production (oat hulls from New york, cotton hulls from Texas and rice hulls from Arkansas) to create a strong composite material.
The material is currently being used for shipping and insulating, but in the future you may see it on your TV or in your car.
I called Bayer Monday at his office in Green Island, NY. Excerpts of our conversation are below.
Ecovative COO Ed Browka, CEO Eben Bayer and Chief Scientist Gavin Mcintyre after winning the Picnic Green Challenge in The netherlands.
(and often paid for) on a device-by-device basis . Which means that for the time being it a bit of a stretch to say...
Traditional storage isn practical for this demographic as it expensive and difficult to access on a weekly or even daily basis. Companies like Boxbee (a Metamorphic portfolio company), Makespace, Urbin, Clutter,
(or might not) is that technology is cited as one of today most fraudulent industries along with pharmaceuticals.
Doctors prescribe antidepressants in the Beehive state at nearly twice the average rate in the U s. Speculation as to
its Scanaflow device is an at home urine-testing apparatus that can test for drugs or even a possible pregnancy. lot more healthcare is going to happen in the home in the future,
and make the loans they want to on an a la carte basis, Ellman says. The marketplace model has been proven,
a first that could allow researchers to test drugs on working muscle without damaging a live host.
biochemical signals and pharmaceuticals. he beauty of this work is that it can serve as a test bed for clinical trials in a dish,
and responds to drugs just like regular human muscle as replacements for lost musculature, which suggests the samples are still too small to be useful.
and it looks like it will be a real boon for researchers trying to figure out the effects of various diseases and drugs on the body.
Not sure if that pill youe taking is Aspirin or Ibuprofen? Worried that your local pharmacy is slipping you some sort of generic drug instead of the real thing?
Well a new handheld scanning device called SCIO could ensure that the stuff youe putting in your body is actually stuff you want to ingest.
but powerful scanner that can be pointed at a thing like a pill or a liquid or even a piece of fruit and tell you exactly what it made of.
and drugs they eat. Using near infrared spectroscopy the device connects with a mobile app
whether your dealer pharmacist is honest about what theye selling to you. We chatted with the chief happiness officer of parent company Consumer Physics about the device and what it capable of.
The Regulatory Pathwaythe U s. Food & Drug Administration (FDA) has created three categories of MMAS: Of more than 43000 health-related apps available by 2013 only 103 were regulated FDA Tighe says.
The Regulatory Pathwaythe U s. Food & Drug Administration (FDA) has created three categories of MMAS: Of more than 43000 health-related apps available by 2013 only 103 were regulated FDA Tighe says.
That because just a month earlier, in November 2013, the Food and Drug Administration had cracked down on 23andme.
or take a drug overdose. Critics of the decision said it had more to do with questions about
or lower, their risk for drug reactions, common diseases, or personality traits such as a lack of empathy.
and avoid drugs like Novocain. think that how people should be using thiss a conversation-starter with medical professionals,
Ello on the other hand positions itself as an antidote to that: it doesn t include any ads and one of several manifestos posted on the site says that those behind Ello dislike ads more than almost anyone else out there.
#Gene-Silencing Drugs Finally Show Promise The disease starts with a feeling of increased clumsiness.
because it suggested a way to shut down the production of any protein in the body including those connected with diseases that couldn't be touched with ordinary drugs.
Never mind that no one knew how to make a drug that could trigger RNAI. In fact that challenge would bedevil the researchers for the better part of a decade.
But now Alnylam is testing a drug to treat FAP in advanced human trials. It s the last hurdle before the company will seek regulatory approval to put the drug on the market.
Although it s too early to tell how well the drug will alleviate symptoms it s doing
what the researchers hoped it would: it can decrease the production of the protein that causes FAP by more than 80 percent.
Alnylam has more than 11 drugs including ones for hemophilia Hepatitis b and even high cholesterol in its development pipeline and has three in human trials progress that led the pharmaceutical company Sanofi to make a $700 million investment in the company last winter.
Last month the pharmaceutical giant Roche an early Alnylam supporter that had given up on RNAI reversed its opinion of the technology as well announcing a $450 million deal to acquire the RNAI startup Santaris.
All told there are about 15 RNAI-based drugs in clinical trials from several research groups and companies.
The world went from believing RNAI would change everything to thinking it wouldn t work to now thinking it will says Robert Langer a professor at MIT and one of Alnylam s advisors.
The early mechanisms were too toxic at the doses required to be used as drugs. As a result delivering RNA through the bloodstream like a conventional drug seemed a far-off prospect.
The company tried a shortcut of injecting chemically modified RNA directly into diseased tissue for example into the retina to treat eye diseases.
because it didn t perform as well as up-and-coming drugs from other companies. By 2010 some of the major drug companies that were working with and investing in Alnylam lost patience.
Novartis decided not to extend a partnership with Alnylam; Roche gave up on RNAI altogether. Alnylam laid off about a quarter of its workers
Better nanoparticles improved the potency of a drug a hundredfold and its safety by about five times clearing the way for clinical trials for FAP a crucial event that kept the company alive.
This approach allows for the drug to be administered with a simple injection that patients could give themselves at home.
In addition to being easier to administer the new sugar-based drugs are potentially cheaper to make.
For all of their benefits the drug delivery mechanisms Alnylam uses have one flaw they re effective only for delivering drugs to liver cells.
but if it maintains its momentum the drugs currently in clinical trials could represent just a small portion of the benefits of the discovery of RNAI i
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