Medical research not addressing patient and clinician priorities
- Details
- Category: Research
Research on treatments for health problems, such as diabetes, stroke and schizophrenia, is not being focused on the treatments considered most important by patients and clinicians, according to a study published in the open access journal Research Involvement and Engagement. The study suggests that current research is instead favoring drug treatments over physical or psychological therapies, or interventions to improve educational approaches or service organization.
Generic heart disease medications offer promise for Ebola treatment
- Details
- Category: Research
Generic medications used frequently in the management of heart disease patients also have the potential to bolster the immune systems of patients with Ebola virus and some other life-threatening illnesses, researchers report this week in mBio®, the online open-access journal of the American Society for Microbiology.
Soft core, hard shell - the latest in nanotechnology
- Details
- Category: Research
Nanoparticles are the smallest particles capable of reaching virtually all parts of the body. Researchers use various approaches to test ways in which nanoparticles could be used in medicine - for instance, to deliver substances to a specific site in the body such as a tumor. For this purpose, nanoparticles are generally coated with organic materials because their surface quality plays a key role in determining further targets in the body.
Discovery may lead to targeted melanoma therapies
- Details
- Category: Research
Melanoma patients with high levels of a protein that controls the expression of pro-growth genes are less likely to survive, according to a study led by researchers at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai and published online in the journal Molecular Cell. The research team found that the protein, called H2A.Z.2, promotes the abnormal growth seen in melanoma cells as they develop into difficult-to-treat tumors.
Restoring natural immunity against cancers
- Details
- Category: Research
Scientists at the Institut Pasteur and Inserm have successfully increased the infiltration of immune cells into tumors, thus inducing the immune system to block tumor growth. In an article published in Nature Immunology, the scientists show that, in combination with existing immunotherapies, this process efficiently destroys cancer cells.
Nut consumption associated with reduced risk of some types of cancer
- Details
- Category: Research
Cancer and type 2 diabetes are two of the most significant public health burdens facing the world today, and currently available data suggests their prevalence is expected to continue to increase. Nut consumption has long been hypothesized to have a role in preventing both of these diseases, but until now evidence has been inconsistent.
Behavior matters: Redesigning the clinical trial
- Details
- Category: Research
When a new type of drug or therapy is discovered, double-blind randomized controlled trials (DBRCTs) are the gold standard for evaluating them. These trials, which have been used for years, were designed to determine the true efficacy of a treatment free from patient or doctor bias, but they do not factor in the effects that patient behaviors, such as diet and lifestyle choices, can have on the tested treatment.
More Pharma News ...
- Vitamin D shows promise for treating Crohn's disease in pilot study
- New drug can clear all psoriasis symptoms
- Gold-standard clinical trials fail to capture how behavior changes influence treatment
- Single dose of HPV vaccine may prevent cervical cancer
- NIH researchers pilot predictive medicine by studying healthy people's DNA
- Triple treatment keeps cancer from coming back
- Bacteria may cause type 2 diabetes