Study finds that Ebola vaccine is safe and stimulates strong immune response
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- Category: Research
A clinical trial of a new Ebola vaccine (ChAd3-EBO-Z) that resulted from an unprecedented global consortium assembled at the behest of the World Health Organization has found that it is well tolerated and stimulates strong immune responses in adults in Mali, West Africa and in the US, according to a study published in the latest issue of the journal Lancet Infectious Disease.
Big pharma inconsistent with disclosure of information on clinical trials
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- Category: Research
Despite legal and ethical requirements, information on clinical trials for drugs approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) varied widely among some of the world's largest drug companies, according to a new study led by a researcher at NYU Langone Medical Center's Division of Medical Ethics in the Department of Population Health.
Scientists trace activity of cancer-fighting tomato component
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Years of research in University of Illinois scientist John Erdman's laboratory have demonstrated that lycopene, the bioactive red pigment found in tomatoes, reduces growth of prostate tumors in a variety of animal models. Until now, though, he did not have a way to trace lycopene's metabolism in the human body.
Diabetes drug reduces risk of heart failure and may prevent it
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For the first time, research shows that a type 2 diabetes drug significantly reduces hospitalizations and death from heart failure. The findings, from a large clinical trial known as EMPA-REG OUTCOME, were presented by Yale professor of medicine and clinical chief of endocrinology, Dr. Silvio E. Inzucchi, at the 2015 American Heart Association (AHA) Scientific Session in Orlando, Florida on Nov. 9.
Drug may delay, prevent blindness for millions of older Americans
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A drug already used safely to treat Parkinson's disease, restless leg syndrome and other movement disorders also could delay or prevent the most common cause of blindness affecting more than 9 million older Americans - age-related macular degeneration (AMD).
Scientists use dead bacteria to kill colorectal cancer
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Scientists from Nanyang Technological University (NTU Singapore) have successfully used dead bacteria to kill colorectal cancer cells. Harvesting the Clostridium sporogenes bacteria found commonly in soil, the NTU team was able to harness the bacteria in its dead form, and its secretions, to destroy colon tumours cells effectively.
Researchers want to turn acid-loving microbes into safe drug-carriers
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Usually the microbe S. islandicus is found in hot and acidic volcanic springs, but now the microbe has also found its way to the labs of University of Southern Denmark. Here researchers have for the first time showed that the exotic microbe is capable of delivering drugs to the human body.
More Pharma News ...
- Formation of new blood vessels may explain intractable symptoms of Parkinson's disease
- New class of DNA repair enzyme discovered
- Landmark clinical trial shows gene-targeted drug can treat prostate cancer
- Drug-device combination opens potential new path to treat stroke
- New role for insulin: Studies tie the hormone to brain's 'pleasure' center
- Gene therapy treats all muscles in the body in muscular dystrophy dogs
- Cancer drug improved cognition and motor skills in small Parkinson's clinical trial